Sunday, July 17, 2016

JESUIT LEADER FOR JUSTICE


Continuing with the theme of great Jesuits I give you one of my favorites, a man of astute insight and humility
PEDRO ARRUPE, SJ, was the 28th Superior General of the Society of Jesus, leading the Society in the realities of serving the Church and people in the post-Vatican II world. Father Arrupe was a man of great spiritual depth who was committed to justice. 

Father Arrupe was born in the Basque region of Spain in 1907. After some years of medical training, he entered the Jesuits in 1927. In 1932, the Republican government in Spain expelled the Jesuits from the country. Father Arrupe continued his studies in Belgium, Holland, and the United States. After being ordained, he was sent to Japan in 1938 where he hoped to work as a missionary for the rest of his life.

After the December 7, 1941, bombing of Pearl Harbor, the Japanese security forces arrested Father Arrupe on suspicion of espionage. He was kept in solitary confinement. He described the privation and uncertainty he suffered as he waited for the disposition of his case. He missed celebrating the Eucharist most of all. In the midst of his suffering, Father Arrupe experienced a special moment of grace. On Christmas night, 1941, he heard a group of people gathering outside his cell door. He could not see them and wondered if the time of his execution had come.

“Suddenly, above the murmur that was reaching me, there arose a soft, sweet, consoling Christmas carol, one of the songs which I had myself taught to my Christians. I was unable to contain myself. I burst into tears. They were my Christians who, heedless of the danger of being themselves imprisoned, had come to console me.” (Pedro Arrupe: Essential Writings, Kevin Burke, Maryknoll)

After the few minutes of song, Father Arrupe reflected in the presence of Jesus, who would soon descend onto the altar during the Christmas celebration: “I felt that he also descended into my heart, and that night I made the best spiritual communion of all my life.”

When the security forces came after 33 days to release him from captivity, he was convinced that they were coming to execute him. The experience of captivity filled him with a deep inner calm founded on a radical trust in God.

Father Arrupe moved to Nagatsuka, on the outskirts of Hiroshima, where he resumed his duties as the master of novices for the Japanese mission. On August 6, 1945, he heard the sirens wail as a single American B-29 bomber flew over the city. He did not think much of it and expected to hear the all-clear siren soon. Instead he heard an enormous explosion and felt the concussion that blew in the doors and windows of his residence.
Moving outside Father Arrupe and his colleagues saw the first of the 200,000 casualties of the atomic bomb. Walking up the hill they saw the city of Hiroshima turning into a lake of fire.

Father Arrupe decided to use his medical training to help whomever he could. He and his colleagues were able to give aide to 150 victims. Knowing nothing of the dangers of atomic radiation, they were perplexed and distressed at the many deaths of people who seemed to have no external injuries. He and his fellow Jesuits had only the most basic food and medical supplies and had to care for people without anesthetics or modern drugs. Nevertheless, of the 150 people whom they were able to take in, only one boy died from the effects of his injuries.

When visiting a Jesuit province in Latin America, Pedro Arrupe celebrated the Mass in a suburban slum, the poorest in the region. He was moved by the attentiveness and respect with which the people celebrated the Mass. His hands trembled as he distributed communion and watched the tears fall from the faces of the communicants.

Afterwards, one man invited Father Arrupe to his home. The man’s home was a half-falling shack. The man seated him in a rickety chair and invited Father Arrupe to observe the setting sun with him. After the sun went down, the man explained that he was so grateful for what Father had brought to the community. The man wanted to share the only gift he had, the opportunity to share in the beautiful setting sun.

Father Arrupe reflected, “He gave me his hand. As I was leaving, I thought: ‘I have met very few hearts that are so kind.’”

Pedro Arrupe was serving as the Superior of the Jesuits’ Japanese Province when he was elected Superior General of the Society of Jesus in 1965. He held the position until 1983.

As the 28th Superior, or “Father General,” it was his task to guide the community through the changes following Vatican II. He was most concerned that the Jesuits make a commitment to addressing the needs of the poor. His work resulted in the decree from the 32nd General Congregation, Our Mission Today: The Service of Faith and the Promotion of Justice, passed in 1975. This led the Jesuits, especially in Latin America, to work in practical ways with the poor. In spite of threats against their lives - threats that led to the murder of six priests in El Salvador in 1989 - the Jesuits continued their justice work with the poor, with Father Arrupe’s support.

His belief in justice informed his understanding of the goal of Jesuit education. He said:
Today our prime educational objective must be to form men-and-women-for-others; men and women who will live not for themselves but for God and his Christ—for the God-human who lived and died for all the world; men and women who cannot even conceive of love of God which does not include love for the least of their neighbors; men and women completely convinced that love of God which does not issue in justice for others is a farce. 

In 1981 Father Arrupe suffered a debilitating stroke. An appointee named by Pope John Paul II served as interim superior until 1983, when Father Arrupe was forced to resign. He was wheeled in to the opening session of the 33rd General Congregation, and his final prayer was read to the community.

"More than ever I find myself in the hands of God. This is what I have wanted all my life from my youth. But now there is a difference; the initiative is entirely with God. It is indeed a profound spiritual experience to know and feel myself so totally in God’s hands."






 


1 comment:

  1. Mother Hildegard, is the photo of Father Arrupe in Japan from the book you cited? Thank you.

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