|
American
Handgun Owners
Seek Vatican Recognition
By
Alberto Carosa
Rome - The right to life of the unborn
and that of legitimate self-defense can be seen as two sides
of the same coin. Whereas the former is constantly under the
spotlight, the latter is not.
A recent event in Rome sponsored by
the St. Gabriel Possenti Society, Inc., sought to bridge this
gap. The US-based St. Gabriel Possenti Society, Inc., upholds
the right of law-abiding citizens to keep and bear arms. Its
president/founder John Michael Snyder came to Rome for the
first time to seek official Vatican recognition of St. Gabriel
Possenti (1838-1862) as the patron saint of handgun owners.
To better press the issue John Snyder,
a former associate editor of the National Rifle Association
of America's monthly publication The American Rifleman,
held a special awards conference in the shadow of the Basilica
of St Peter on February 27, the saint's feast day.
Awardees received a special medal honoring
their commitment to the principle of legitimate self-defense.
The medal features a profile of St. Gabriel Possenti with
the recipients' name and date on the back.
The awardees were Most Rev. Custodio
Alvim Pereira, Vice President of the Chapter of St. Peter's
Basilica; Jeff Cooper of Gunsite Ranch, Arizona; Francesco
Possenti, a descendant of the brother of St. Gabriel Possenti;
Piero Raggi, the distinguished author of Crociata,
a history of those who defended the Papal States in the 19th
Century; and Paolo Tagini, an Italian writer on the right
to self-defense in the Italian magazine Armi. Mario
Navarro da Costa, the head of the Tradition, Family Property
Washington Bureau, was unable to attend the Rome event but
received the medal later in the United States.
According to Mr. Snyder, the right
to self-defense must be seen in a positive light as an extension
of the right to life. In his opinion, the Catholic Church
is the most genuine and consistent defender of life and should
thus speak out in favor of legitimate self-defense just as
it speaks for the right to life.
For further information about the St.
Gabriel Possenti Society, read the following interview adapted
for the TFP website.
1. How would you describe your organization
vis-à-vis similar groups in the U.S.?
Answer:
The Saint Gabriel Possenti Society, Inc. is a non-profit international
entity, incorporated under the laws of the Commonwealth of
Virginia, 1989, to promote public awareness of the life and
activities of St. Gabriel Possenti, and to promote the study
and exposition of the historical, philosophical and theological
bases for the doctrine of legitimate self-defense.
The St. Gabriel Possenti Society, Inc.
is not a lobby, as that term is contemplated under American
law, does not officially support or oppose specific pieces
of legislation or candidates for public office. There is no
organic connection with the National Rifle Association of
America, although some individual NRA officials and members
have received Society recognition. A lot of media types like
to talk about the power of the gun lobby, but they really
do not understand the situation. Scores of millions of people,
voters in the USA, own guns for various legitimate purposes
but fewer than 10 percent of these people belong to all of
the gun organizations combined.
The so-called gun lobby really is a
people's lobby and every once in a while the politicians and
the publicists have to be reminded of that, as they were last
November on Election Day. Let me just state that the right
to self-defense and the right to the means necessary for self-defense
is under tremendous public political and rhetorical attack
and it is helpful, or even necessary, to hold up St. Gabriel
Possenti as a holy, historical example of the exercise of
this very right for this very purpose.
2. Why did you decide to name your organization
after a Catholic saint, and St Gabriel Possenti in particular?
Answer:
There are many fine reasons for memorializing
St. Gabriel Possenti. In 1860 St. Gabriel Possenti (also known
as San Gabriele dell'Addolorata, namely of the Sorrowful Mother)
rescued the villagers of Isola del Gran Sasso in the Abruzzo
region from a gang of twenty armed renegades with a striking,
one-shot, lizard-slaying demonstration of handgun marksmanship.
The incident occurred as militant renegades
following a battle at Castelfidardo, near Pesaro, stormed
into the village of Isola. Incidentally, they were attached
to the Piedmontese army who had just defeated the Papal troops
in their violent conquest of the Papal States, as part of
an egalitarian and markedly anti-Christian movement called
"Risorgimento." Their objective, my good and well
educated Italian friends inform me, was to unify Italy at
all costs, including the overthrowing of its previous legitimate
monarchs and rulers.
These armed renegades began to set
fire to the town, steal the people's possessions, and molest
the women. Possenti was a Passionist seminarian at a nearby
monastery at the time. Possenti, who had been a marksman with
handgun, rifle and shotgun before entering religious life,
asked his rector if he could try to do something for the Isolans.
The rector agreed, and Possenti hurried into town. He witnessed
a sergeant about to rape a young woman. Possenti ordered the
sergeant to cease and quickly removed the soldier's handgun
from his holster. Possenti also removed another handgun from
a second soldier's holster. The other soldiers, hearing the
commotion, approached Possenti expecting to overcome him.
It was at that moment that a lizard ran across the road in
front of Possenti, now armed with two handguns, one in each
hand. Possenti took aim and fired. The lizard rolled over
dead. Possenti then turned his guns on the soldiers who were
now terrified because they were faced with a marksman of God!
Possenti ordered them to put out the
fires that they had started and to return the possessions
they had stolen. He then marched them out of town at gunpoint
and warned them never to return. The grateful townspeople
escorted Possenti back to his monastery in triumphant procession.
Rev. Godfrey Poage, C.P., notes in his biography of Possenti,
Son of the Passion, that this action earned Possenti
the accolade, Savior of Isola.
When young Possenti pulled that trigger,
he not only defended a village against a band of brigands.
He also aimed a bullet at the heart of tyranny, at the heart
of a brute ideology that justifies the use of organized force
against the rights of the innocent. He fired a shot at the
heart of a burgeoning radical statism.
Although St. Gabriel Possenti died
nearly a century and a half ago, in 1862, and although he
was canonized by Pope Benedict XV in the last century, in
1920, he is very much a saint for our times. The terrorists
are still very much with us, as a reading of the daily newspapers,
or as a viewing of television will readily tell us. Radical
statism is still with us, too. It presents itself today as
a false globalism that would deny the right to life itself;
that would prevent people from protecting their own lives
and the lives of their loved ones; that would prevent people
from keeping and bearing arms for their own protection and
the protection of their loved ones; and that would do all
of this under the rubric of empowerment of the people!
Yes, St. Gabriel Possenti truly is
a saint for our times. With great courage and outstanding
concern for the safety and welfare of others, St. Gabriel
Possenti demonstrated his handgun marksmanship. In this day
and age, the Roman Catholic Church is in the forefront of
the struggle to preserve the right to life. St. Gabriel Possenti
shows us that concomitant with this struggle is the struggle
to preserve the right to defend life and property, of the
right to the use of the means necessary for the protection
of life and property, of the right to the individual use of
firearms for the protection of life and property. The Catholic
Church, as a genuine and consistent defender of the right
to life and property, also could speak out for the right of
the individual to self-defense, of the right to the means
necessary of self-defense, of the right to keep and bear arms.
Guns in the hands of good people may
be used to prevent crime. They also may be used in the fight
against tyranny. People understand the validity of the principles
manifested by St. Gabriel Possenti that day in 1860 when he
shot that lizard!
3.What has been thus far the reaction,
if any, by the Vatican?
Answer:
Thus far, the Vatican has not complied
with the Society's request. An Associated Press dispatch dated
February 28, 2001, quoted the "Sala Stampa" (The
Vatican press office) as having said the previous Monday that
naming a patron for gun lobbyists isn't "opportune."
The Vatican told me a few years ago that I needed to enlist
bishops around the world for my cause, but I would not be
discouraged.
While it may be true that some church
officials get weak in the knees at the sound of, or even mention
of the word of gunfire, the fact remains that the whole idea
faced opposition since its very inception. As far back as
the early 90s, the heads of the two Passionist US provinces
(St. Gabriel was a member of the Passionist order) strongly
protested the idea, "on the sheer lack of historical
evidence for the incident".
More recently, in late 1997, Cardinal
Roger Etchegaray, president of the Pontifical Council for
Justice and Peace, waged a personal, public attack on the
private possession of handguns or firearms of small caliber,
claiming in some Council papers that limiting the purchase
of "handguns and small arms would certainly not infringe
upon the rights of anyone" and all firearms "must
remain under the strict control of the state".
Over the years I have been puzzled
by the frightened attitude of some churchmen on the Possenti-self-defense
issue. Initially, some of them tried to say that the lizard
incident never happened. When evidence was quoted, such as
the account of the incident in Son of the Passion by
Rev. Godfrey Poage, C.P. (Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA, Bruce
Publishing Company, 1962), they said maybe it did not happen.
The latest is that they are saying that if it did happen,
it did not have much significance.
When the Religious News Service in
the United States brought this to the attention of Father
Poage, he said that he did the research for the book and he
knows what happened and that his critics on this issue do
not. The book carries the imprimatur of the Church and other
official designations of approval.
As to Cardinal Etchegaray, in a subsequent
letter I objected to his theses, saying that in the U.S. alone,
scores of millions of law-abiding citizens own firearms of
various types and for a number of legitimate reasons. There
are more gun owners here than there are people who vote for
the two majority party presidential candidates every four
years. Approximately 80 million law-abiding people own about
200 million handguns, rifles and shotguns and the available
record indicates quite clearly that the ability of law-abiding
citizens to possess firearms is a crime deterrent and a life
saver.
I was and am particularly critical
of the idea of state-controlled firearms, since civilian disarmament
has been one of the major factors leading to the horrible
metastasis of government-sponsored genocide in this unfortunately
bloody and murderous twentieth century. As shown by Jay Simkin,
Aaron Zelman and Alan M. Rice in Lethal Laws, published
in 1994 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, by Jews for the Preservation
of Firearms Ownership, Inc., genocides perpetrated in at least
seven cases, namely in Ottoman Turkey, Soviet Union, Nazi
Germany with occupied Europe, China, Guatemala, Uganda and
Cambodia, were all preceded by civilian disarmament. In each
case, the civilian disarmament was preceded by the enactment
of gun control legislation making possible the disarmament.
On the contrary Father Sebastian McDonald,
superior of a Passionist monastery near Detroit, favors gun
control and put forth three problems with recognizing the
saint as patron of handgun owners. First he questioned the
veracity of the handgun incident itself, arguing that Father
Poage, though a peritus (expert) at the Second Vatican Council
and a holy priest, is "an Irishman with a tremendous
imagination and a reputation for story telling". Secondly,
the designation as patron would be misleading and third would
be extrapolating a small incident in the saint's life and
giving it too much importance.
My reaction to this is that this allegedly
"good" father and others like him are more concerned
with being politically correct than they are with being historically
accurate. It also appears unseemly, to say the least, of him
to publicly criticize a fellow priest and fellow Passionist
in this particular manner.
4. You spoke about the promotion of philosophical
and theological bases for the doctrine of legitimate self-defense.
Could you give us few examples?
Answer:
Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ Himself
stated, according to St. Luke's Gospel (Luke 22:36), "The
man without a sword must sell his cloak and buy one!"
Furthermore, Our Lord said that "blessed are the peace-makers,
for they shall be called the children of God". Interestingly
enough, He said "the peace-makers" and not "the
peace-lovers".
The record indicates quite clearly
that the ability of law-abiding citizens to possess firearms
is a crime deterrent and a lifesaver. In the USA, 31 of our
50 states mandate the issuance of permits to carry concealed
firearms to qualified law-abiding citizens, and one other
state allows such carrying without the issuance of the permit.
Yale University Law School Professor John R, Lott, Jr. in
his book More Guns - Less Crime, published by the University
of Chicago Press, demonstrated that those states which have
enacted permits to carry concealed firearms provisions have
witnessed dramatic reductions in rates of violent crime.
The Catholic Church, as a genuine and
consistent defender of the right to life, also could speak
out for the right of the individual to self-defense, of the
right to the means necessary for self-defense, of the right
to keep and bear arms. In making this gesture, the Church
could find hundreds of millions of people throughout the world
recognizing it as a courageous institution. Courageous enough
to validate the selfless use of force in the defense of the
innocent. Courageous enough to stick its neck out for the
right of individuals to defend themselves against evil and
tyranny. Courageous enough consistently to be not afraid!
I am convinced that this lack of sensitivity
to the genuine interests of average people leads to an undermining
of our beloved Church's ability to attract to it more of the
same people. In promoting St. Gabriel Possenti as Patron of
Handgun owners, the Church would let this untold number of
people realize that "yes, we have the genuine article,
a holy example of the exercise of the right to self-defense
and the use of force for a beneficial social purpose."
5. You said that The St. Gabriel Possenti
Society is not a lobby and there is no gun lobby as such,
but how do you explain handgun owners' clout and influence?
Answer:
Although I indicated that the Society
is not a lobby, as that term is understood in American law,
I did not say that there is no gun lobby. What I said is that
what is referred to mistakenly as the gun lobby is not primarily
an organization or group of organizations but rather is a
vast number of people who themselves in reality constitute
what some media casually and somewhat inaccurately refer to
as the "gun lobby." There are several organizations
of supporters of the right to keep and bear arms in the United
States, which are registered with the United States Congress,
officially, as lobbying organizations. However, the people
who comprise unofficially the gun lobby are far, far more
people than belong to all of these organizations combined.
I think figures speak for themselves.
In the United States alone, my own country, where the Second
Amendment to our Constitution recognizes the right of the
people to keep and bear arms, approximately 80 million law-abiding
citizens own about 200 million handguns, rifles and shotguns.
In my country, more people own guns
than vote every four years for all of the leading presidential
candidates combined. There are more handguns alone in the
hands of law-abiding citizens in the United States than there
are people who vote for the winning presidential candidate
every four years. Former President Bill Clinton himself indicated
he realized the popularity and political potency of gun ownership
in the United States when the U.S. House of Representatives
switched from Democratic Party control to Republican Party
control for the first time in 60 as the result of voters'
opposition to the Democratic Party's support for Clinton's
gun control proposals.
Not many years ago a madman in Killeen,
Texas, murdered a number of innocent customers in a cafeteria,
including the parents of Suzanna Gratia Hupp. She owned a
handgun, which she had to leave in her automobile because
at that time Texas did not permit the carrying of concealed
handguns, and contended that she could have saved her parents
and others, had she had the handgun with her.
At around that same time as the cafeteria
killing, Governor Ann Richards vetoed a bill to mandate the
issuance of permits to carry concealed firearms to law-abiding
applicants and her political opponent campaigned against her
on that issue and won the election. The newly-elected governor
signed into law a similar bill: his name was George W. Bush.
To learn more about the St. Gabriel
Possenti Society visit their website at: http://www.possentisociety.com
|