Saturday, January 14, 2012

Marv Davidov

by Randy Furst

Marv Davidov, an iconic figure in the Minnesota peace movement who founded and led the Honeywell Project in a decades-long campaign to halt the production of anti-personnel weapons by the Honeywell Corp., died Saturday afternoon, January 14, 2012, at Walker United Health Care Center in Minneapolis.

Davidov, who also was active in the civil rights movement in the 1960s and beyond, was 80, and had suffered from a number of health problems.

A chain smoker until recent years, he was an immediately recognizable figure at protests, with his large mustache, blue skipper's cap, almost always wearing a T-shirt with a protest slogan on it.

In 1983, nearly 600 protesters were arrested outside Honeywell's Minneapolis headquarters in a civil disobedience action, the type of demonstration that Davidov and his allies had organized so many times that it was honed to a fine art.

For years during the Vietnam War era, Davidov carried around a deactivated cluster bomb, the size of a softball, to show anyone who would listen that Honeywell was creating weapons being used by the U.S. military. He said the weapons indiscriminately killed innocent civilians in Southeast Asia.

Honeywell eventually spun off its defense contract work to Alliant Techsystems.

Davidov estimated that he was arrested 40 or 50 times, mainly in antiwar and civil rights demonstrations.

He was one of the original Freedom Riders, young people who rode on buses through the South in 1961 to desegregate bus transportation and terminals.  He and five other white youths from the Twin Cities were arrested at a blacks-only lunch counter in a Greyhound bus station in Jackson, Miss., when they refused to comply with police orders to move on.

In a hospital room interview Thursday, January 12, Davidov, although sedated with pain medication for a worsening circulatory problem, spoke with animation about being locked up for 40 days with other civil rights demonstrators at a Mississippi prison farm. Black and white protesters were incarcerated together, he said.

"We were the first group of integrated prisoners in Mississippi state prison history," Davidov said with a smile.

'An inspiration to many'

In an autobiography he wrote with Carol Masters, he described himself as a "nonviolent revolutionary."  One of Davidov's admirers was Daniel Ellsberg, the White House consultant who leaked the Pentagon Papers about U.S. military decision-making in Vietnam to the media. Ellsberg, who later became a peace activist, helped raise money for the Honeywell Project at Davidov's invitation.

"Thanks to people like him, we're still hanging on as a species," Ellsberg said. "His nonviolence and his indefatigability and energy are an inspiration to many people.

"He's lived a good life, and I told him so" when he spoke to Davidov by phone on Friday, Ellsberg said.

Last week, as Davidov's medical condition worsened, a number of peace activist friends kept a hospital vigil. "It's one of those great things that happens," Davidov said. "This kind of solidarity and love and support that people give one another."

John LaForge, an antiwar activist friend, had brought a small refrigerator to his room with a bumper sticker on it that read, "No more war."

Bill Tilton, a St. Paul attorney, said he first met Davidov in 1969 at a sit-in at the University of Minnesota in support of the African American Action Committee, which was demanding more scholarships for blacks.

"Marv is one of my heroes," Tilton said. "He never took his eye off the ball of advocating for the rights of the underprivileged and accountability of government."

For years Davidov taught a class on "active nonviolence" at the University of St. Thomas. Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer, who taught the class with him, said, "There was a warmth that came across when he related to students, a deeply respectful interaction in which Marv would share parts of his life story that awakened within students a possibility that they too could impact society."

Barbara Mishler said she got to know Davidov when she took a class of his at St. Joan of Arc Catholic Church in south Minneapolis 30 years ago.

"When I first met him, I was so terrified of nuclear war," she recalls. "He said, 'Settle down and read and inform yourself, before you hit the streets.' "

Nothing to say? Hardly

Lying in bed, barely able to sit up on Thursday, Davidov welcomed a reporter.

Asked if he had any thoughts that he'd like to pass on to young people, Davidov thought for a moment, smiled and said, "I've been waiting for this interview my entire life, and now I've got nothing to say."

But as anyone who has ever known Davidov knows, he was never really at a loss for words, including on Thursday.

On the current presidential election campaign: "It reminds me of one of the books that Paul Goodman wrote in the 1950s -- 'Growing Up Absurd.' Once again the needs of the people who have most everything are satisfied first."

On this election year: "Find the people in your community who are probing reality and talking about how to fundamentally change it and work at a local level on these problems, creating peace, freedom and justice."

On the Occupy protests against Wall Street: "I thought it was great. The people were locating what their needs were and going out in the streets without compromise."

On the kind of memorial gathering he'd like: "I want people to remember and tell funny stories about me and the struggle, and try to create a deeper, more profound movement and build the numbers."

He is survived by a brother, Jerry Davidov, a retired Minneapolis firefighter. Services are pending with the Cremation Society of Minnesota.

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An inspiring NPR interview with Marv before his death may be heard at this link:

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Sr. Claire O’Mara, OSU

Sister Claire O’Mara died peacefully at Andrus on January 8, 2012. She was 89 years old and resided at Andrus on Hudson in Hastings, NY.

She entered the Ursulines in 1945 and made her final vows in 1951. Her Ursuline life of service extended beyond the United States to Mexico City, from 1954 to 1966, with 1 year of tertianship in Rome during those years, and again in 1974 to 1976. She studied Spanish at Salamanca Pastoral Institute in Madrid in 1966-1967, and she went from there to serve in Miramar, Peru for 3 years.
When Claire returned to the United States, she found ways to use her language skills, her joy in life, and her ardent commitment to social justice by teaching, interpreting, and pastoral service at St. Angela Merici School in the Bronx, Hostos Community College, Mount St. Ursula Speech Center, Casita Maria, the Adult Learning Center n New Rochelle, and with migrants in Encinitas, California and Apopka, Florida.

In a demonstration calling for the close of the (then) School of the Americas in Fort Benning, Georgia that trained foreign military, Claire was arrested and from May 31, 1996, served 2 months at the Danbury Federal Correctional Institution.

Claire held a bachelors’ degree in Spanish from the College of New Rochelle and a Masters in romance languages from Fordham University. The College of New Rochelle honored her along with Rosa Parks as a Woman of Conscience.

Claire was born May 20, 1922 to Mary Martha and John O’Mara in Worcester, Mass. She had five siblings: David, John, and Anne Ahearn, who predeceased her, and Christine Sullivan of Dedham, Mass. and Lucille Murphy of Harwichport, Mass.

Memorial gifts may be given to the Ursuline Retirement Fund, 1338 North Avenue, New Rochelle, NY 10804.


Wednesday, January 4, 2012

LA Catholic Worker Volunteer Daniel Jiru Dies

Daniel Jiru was more than just a religion teacher at St. Paul High School, but was a symbolic icon to the many youths who walked the hallways of St. Paul from the early 1970s to the late 2000s.

Jiru spearheaded the school's March for Hunger, where he encouraged students to take a stance against the existing social injustice in the United States.

The activist suffered from a malignant brain tumor for two years before he died on Dec. 22. He was 73.

Jiru was born in Janesville, WI., in 1938 and had one brother, Richard.  He belonged to the Salesians of Don Bosco and worked at St. Paul High School from 1972 until he retired in 2007.

Jiru founded the March for Hunger in 1972 where, according to the group's Facebook page, his mission was to, "Serve the poor of the Los Angeles area buy fund raising for the Catholic Worker Soup Kitchen in downtown. They serve 1800 meals a day."

"I think for me the most precious thing about Dan was that he always had the ideological sense of justice and compassion. What he gained from being at the kitchen was to have the time to be present to the lives of the poor and homeless," said close friend, Jeff Dietrich.

Jiru often spent his time sweeping the soup kitchen's garden and spoke with the the kitchen's visitors and got to know them.

According to Dietrich, over a period of close to 40 years, the youths at St. Paul raised about a million dollars for the soup kitchen.

"They are our biggest donors, contributors and supporters. Dan was not only someone who wanted to raise money for a good cause or charity, but he wanted to teach his kids about social justice and the disparity of wealth in our social system," said Dietrich.

Jiru designed the 26-mile walk to have participants walk from the poorest neighborhoods in East Los Angeles through Downtown Los Angeles and into Beverly Hills.

"He did this so those participating could gain a sense of how unjust our social system is and that we weren't just raising money for the homeless," said Dietrich.

Youths that Jiru taught would often visit the soup kitchen.

"We have parents who did this walk years ago as students at St. Paul and to this day they're still involved," said Dietrich.

"This was Dan's gift and his legacy continues with thousands of kids who are now adults and have a whole different world view and may not have had that had Dan not been there to teach them about compassion," he said.

Jiru lived in Whittier before moving to Long Beach eight years ago.

One of his greatest passions included running marathons in which participated in about 16 of them during his life.
"He participated in the Los Angeles Marathon 11 times until 2006 when we both ran it together," said Dietrich.

"He was the most profound human being in my life," said his son, Eric Jiru.

"This man lived such a wonderful and inspirational life that I feel others need to know and understand what this man brought to the world," said Jiru.

Jiru is survived by his wife, Irene, son, and granddaughter, Charlotte.

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