Berrigan brothers

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Berrigan brothers

Berrigan brothers (bĕrˈĭgən), American Catholic priests, writers, and social activists. Daniel Berrigan, 1921–2016, b. Syracuse, N.Y., was ordained in the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) in 1952. Travels in France exposed him to the worker-priest movement, and after teaching at secondary schools and at LeMoyne College (1957–63), he devoted himself in the 1960s to civil rights and antipoverty work, eventually becoming a leading activist against U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. His poetry had meanwhile appeared in several volumes, including Time without Number (1957). He ultimately wrote more than 50 books, and also taught at Fordham and other universities. Philip Francis Berrigan, 1923–2002, b. Two Harbors, Minn., served in Europe in World War II, grad. from Holy Cross College (1950), and was ordained (1955) in the Josephite order. After holding pastoral and teaching positions, in the 1960s he turned to peace activism.

In 1968 the Berrigans and seven others were arrested for destroying Selective Service files in Catonsville, Md., in an antiwar protest. While in hiding after their conviction, Daniel published a play, The Trial of the Catonsville 9 (1970). Both Berrigans served prison terms. Philip secretly married Sister Elizabeth McAlister, a fellow activist; the couple were later excommunicated. After being paroled in 1972, both brothers continued their involvement in such actions as “Plowshares” protests at weapons plants. They were repeatedly arrested and imprisoned, and continued to write prolifically.

Bibliography

See Daniel Berrigan's autobiographical To Dwell in Peace (1987), Night Flight to Hanoi (1968), The Dark Night of Resistance (1971), and his prison memoir, Lights On in the House of the Dead (1974); J. Dear, ed., Daniel Berrigan: Essential Writings (2009); Philip Berrigan's autobiographical Fighting the Lamb's War (1997), Prison Journals of a Revolutionary Priest (1970), and Widen the Prison Gates (1973). See also biography of Daniel by R. Curtis (1974); S. Halpert and T. Murray, eds., Witness of the Berrigans (1972); M. Polner and J. O'Grady, Disarmed and Dangerous (1997).

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Berrigan was not alone in this faith-based social action.
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Those of us who lived in that zestful decade we call the "Sixties" and flatter ourselves on having contributed, however modestly, to its cultural effusions, learned many lessons from the example set by Father Daniel Berrigan, the Jesuit priest, author, poet, teacher and virtuoso peace activist, who became a major figure in the anti-war movement in the 1960s and early 1970s, and left his stamp on the era.
Berrigan, who was a Jesuit for 76 years and a priest for 63 years, authored more than 50 books on scripture, spirituality, poetry and resistance to war.
Strain sets a laudable goal for himself in his recent volume The Prophet and the Bodhisattva: Daniel Berrigan, Thich Nhat Hanh and the Ethics of Peace and Justice.
The shadow of Daniel Berrigan, S.J., whom Stringfellow harbored as a fugitive for a time, looms large over the book.
Derry Berrigan, for example, has worked the drive-thru at McDonalds and the checkout counter at Walmart in hopes of improving the lighting for those spaces.
Faith, Resistance, and the Future: Daniel Berrigan's Challenge to Catholic Social Thought
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FORMER Australia international Shaun Berrigan resumed his career in the National Rugby League down under as another high-profile Super League import prepared to follow suit.
FORMER Australia international Shaun Berrigan yesterday resumed his career in the National Rugby League as another highprofile Super League import prepared to follow suit.