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Fr. Carl Kabat, OMI
Enters N-8 Missile Silo on Good Friday
At approximately 10:30 a.m. (MDT) April 9, 2004, Rev. Carl Kabat, OMI,
entered missile silo N-8 nine mles west of New Raymer,Colorado, by means
of ladders. He destroyed nothing in the process. He was wearing his
trademark "clown's outfit," to prove he is still a "fool for God." He
was taken into custody by Weld County law enforcement at approximately
11:45 a.m. (MDT).
N-8 is the silo site where three Dominican nuns were arrested in 2002.
(Ardeth Platte, Jackie Hudson, Carol Gilbert) They are now serving
sentences for harming national security. N-8 is several miles from silo
N-7, where Kabat also trespassed in 2000. He received 83 days in jail
(time served) handed down by Judge Boyd Boland. However, because of
probation violation in Illinois, he subsequently served a year and a day
there. In all, Kabat has spent nearly 16 years of his life in jail for
various protests at nuclear WMD sites which he calls "evil." Since
Kabat's latest release from jail in 2002, he has been ministering to the
Catholic Worker Community of St. Louis.
Kabat is calling his protest "Silo Pruning Hooks II." At the missile
site he left a dysfunctional pneumatic jackhammer, symbolic of the
action he and three others took in Missouri 20 years ago when they
actually chipped at the concrete of a missile silo at Whiteman Air Force
Base. Also pinned to the chain link fence was a puppet bearing the
slogan, "The manufacturing, deployment or use of nuclear bombs is a
crime against humanity."
Another slogan next to the "no trespassing" sign was expressed in Latin:
"Cessante ratione legis, cessat ipsa lex," which loosely translated
means "a law lacking rationality, ceases to be law."
Kabat released a signed statement which reads: WE ARE FOOLS AND CLOWNS
FOR GOD AND HUMANITY'S SAKE: "I Carl Kabat, come to this evil place
today as a Roman Catholic priest to show what insanity is in this ground
here at N-8 and 48 other silos in the beautiful state of Colorado. The
nuclear bomb that is in the ground here is more than 20 times more
powe4rful than the atomic bombs we dropped on the Japanese 59 years ago.
Each of those bombs killed more than 100,000 people. Twenty times that
number totals more than 2 million people. The World Council of Churches
has proclaimed that "the manufacture, deployment or use of nuclear bombs
is 'crime against humanity.' The Roman Catholic Church of which I am a
priest, at the close of its Vatican Council II in 1965 proclaimed that
nuclear bombs are a 'crime against humanity.' The Bible says in the
words of Isaiah, 'they shall beat their spears into pruning hooks.' May
God have mercy on us for not doing so."
Several of Kabat's friends witnessed his action, including Rev. Larry
Rosebaugh, OMI, who also has served time in jail for similar protests.
Another item posted by Kabat was an "eviction notice" to the silo
operators signed by numerous individuals. Still another was a
water-color work of art (weather protected) done by Sister Pauline
Blandina, OP. It depicts a clown natiled to a cross.
Kabat's use of the clown suit began at another silo protest when Good
Friday happened to fall on April 1, "April Fool's Day."
Kabat took his action in the icy teeth of a rain/snow storm that roared
into northern Colorado between noon and 3 p.m., the time when Jesus is
supposed to have died. Kabat kept a sleeping bag for protection against
the elements while he prayed alone in a corner of the silo enclosure,
awaiting arrest. He had asked his friends to leave him there, the better
to focus his prayerful message for peace (and an end to war over, or by
means of) weapons of mass destruction.
--Bill Strabala
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