|
By Thea Jarvis
(Father Gerry Conroy is part of a three-man team of Glenmary
priests involved in promoting justice in Appalachia and the deep south. He left
his home in Atlanta recently for a week-long trip to Nicaragua as the
southeastern representative of the Conference of Major Superiors of Men
Religious.)
In the Nicaraguan border town of Jalapa, a peasant woman rushed up
to Father Gerry Conroy and threw her arms around him. Weeping, she recounted
her loss of two sons and a daughter to the revolution that toppled the ruling
Somoza regime four years ago.
She did not regret her sacrifice, she said, but was distraught
because of American opposition to the present Sandinista government.
You have to tell the American people that since the
revolution we are free, she pleaded.
The woman was one of countless Nicaraguans Father Conroy met
during a week-long July stay in that troubled Central American nation. The
Glenmary priest was one of 160 Americans from 31 states organized by the
Carolina Interfaith Task Force on Central America (CITCA) who went south to
investigate the political turmoil in Nicaragua and pray for peace in the
region.
In Jalapa, a village close to the Honduran border, the group
conducted a prayer vigil that earlier had been threatened due to fighting in
the area.
We went not knowing whether we could do it or not,
Father Conroy admitted, citing a talk by a Nicaraguan military officer warning
the Americans that there had been border action two days earlier and if more
surfaced the vigil could not be held.
The Honduran border is Americas launch pad for their support
otherwise known as covert action of the rebel
Contras, former members of the Somozan national guard and others
who work toward the overthrow of Sandinista rule. (Another group of
Contras operate out of Costa Rica and are opposed to the border
Contras.)
In addition to their prayerful plea for peace, the ecumenical
group toured Nicaragua, traveling in a line for Jalapa to Managua, talking to
workers, government officials, missionaries and army officers. They wanted
answers to questions about popular support for the Sandinistas, human rights
violations and economic survival for the poor.
The government leaders had a sense of honesty and humility
that I found just incredible, Father Conroy said, adding that such
openness was a happy surprise.
There was not an issue or area of investigation that we were
denied, he continued. No door was closed to us.
The group found the government to be doing an incredibly
good job, Conroy observed, following the goals of popular liberation
promoted by the famed Nicaraguan peasant leader of the thirties, Augusto
Sandino. Such goals include agrarian reform, opposition to foreign intervention
and, most importantly, the welfare of those who toil in agricultural and
industrial production.
Moreover, Father Conroy related, almost all those he spoke to
during his trip were supportive of the Sandinista government.
On a bus trip in the mountains, the groups transport became
stuck in a river bed. When a nearby farmworker emerged from the fields to help,
Father Conroy asked him, in his fluent Spanish, what he thought of the
Sandinistas.
The farmworker, like most of those Conroy interviewed casually,
without preliminary introductions, responded with enthusiasm for the
government.
In a similar conversation with two coffee pickers, Father Conroy
asked about the army presence in the country, which, he claimed, was the
least militarized of all Central American nations in terms of the
visibility of the armed forces.
He had spent eight months traveling through Central American a
year and a half ago and had become acutely aware of an expanded military
presence in most of the region. It was a presence that was usually accompanied
by popular fear and distrust.
The coffee-pickers, however, reflected a widespread national
affection for the Sandinista armed forces. The army is wonderful, they
are our friends, they had told Father Conroy. These are our people.
They are here to defend us.
Present-day Sandinista rule, in fact, shows no inclination toward
the abuses that abound in other Central American revolutionary efforts, Conroy
said.
There are no disappearances, no torture, no systematic
elimination of opposition groups, he said, adding that the government
officials themselves admitted some mistakes in dealing with the Miskito Indians
involved in border disputes.
Not a single priest or sister from North America has been
killed on Nicaraguan soil since the revolution, although 22 such priests
and sisters have lost their lives in other parts of Central America, said
Father Conroy.
The (Sandinista) revolution is thoroughly rooted in
Christianity, he said. The people are thoroughly Christian
people.
During the groups stay in Manague, a prayer service was held
in which the Nicaraguans present sang their national anthem and invited their
American guests to do the same. Following the singing, the Nicaraguans sent up
a traditional cheer, There is no contradiction between Christianity and
the revolution, attesting to their belief that the current rule is
founded on Christian principles.
Nicaragua is establishing a middle ground between U.S.
capitalism and Russian communism, according to Father Conroy, that is
uniquely chosen and suited to their economic, political and religious needs.
They have rejected the laissez-faire capitalist model promoted by
Somoza, he said, which put wealth and privilege in the hands of a few and put
profits before the welfare of the general population.
It is this fact that the Sandinistas are breaking the
mold and that other Central American nations will follow suit that
motivates the United States government in its goal to subvert current
Nicaraguan rule, Father Conroy believes.
Because Nicaragua is refusing to follow North American style
capitalism, but is instead developing something that is not capitalism as
we know it, but a form of socialism, American economic interests are at
stake, he said. Where before the Somoza rule guaranteed free reign for growth
of the American economy in Central America, the Sandinistas are putting
national needs first, Father Conroy said.
Nicaraguan socialism, he further claimed, is not Russian
dominated, although in the revolution four years ago 12% of the total military
and economic support came from the eastern bloc.
Its a pittance, he observed, and certainly
not enough to claim Russian domination or control.
Yet it is this claim which is promulgated by the American
government as its cause for concern in Nicaragua. The United States has
repeatedly charged that Nicaragua is exporting its revolution, sending arms and
men to nearby El Salvador to maintain the strength of rebel guerrilla forces
fighting to overthrow the U.S. supported Salvadoran government.
Although the charges continue to flow, and indeed, are the
backbone of expanded U.S. military support for the Contras, such an arms flow
to El Salvador has never been substantiated, Father Conroy said.
A $19 million expenditure by the U.S. to investigate such an arms
flow the covert action so often referred to in press reports
went directly to supply arms to Contras on the border, he said.
Tomas Borges, the Nicaraguan minister of the interior, in a
briefing session with the American interfaith mission to Nicaragua, said that
we must be the best smugglers in history, since the United States
could never offer any substantive proof of such an arms flow from the
Sandinistas to El Salvador, Father Conroy said.
The (Sandinista) government said they support the goals of
the Salvadoran revolution, but they say they have never sent arms to El
Salvador, he said.
The bottom line remains the U.S. economic interests, Conroy
continued, although they say the arms flow is what motivates them. What
the current administration is most afraid of is that U.S. economic interests
will deteriorate.
The 160 Americans traveling in Nicaragua came to a unanimous
conclusion at the end of their visit, calling for an immediate halt to
United States support for the Contras fighting the border war against
Sandinista rule.
United States support of this war is an outright immoral act
on the part of our government, concluded Father Conroy, who said it is an
intrusion on the national sovereignty of Nicaragua and a distortion of facts to
the American people. It is like England or France funding the Ku Klux
Klan.
Pointing out that the most reliable sources of internal
information are the church workers in Nicaragua, Father Conroy noted that out
of 87 Catholic missionaries in that country, only two oppose the Sandinista
government, he said.
Calling the first line of defense against such an intervention
U.S. public opinion, and particularly American church opinion, Father Conroy
hopes to communicate the information gathered during the Nicaraguan visit
using every form possible.
It is so manifestly clear that the United States is not the
defender of freedom and democracy in Nicaragua, he said sadly. It
is the enemy of freedom in Nicaragua. |