Slave Labor Common Where US Nun Was Murdered in Brazil

Sister Dorothy Stang, a Sister of Notre Dame de Namur from Cincinnati, was assassinated on Saturday, February 12, 2005 in Anapu, Pará. Sister Dorothy was 74 years old and lived in Brazil for more than 30 years. She was a member of the Catholic Church’s Pastoral Land Commission and worked with the Association of Ecological Solidarity in the Amazon area.

At the time of her death, Sr. Dorothy was on her way to a meeting about a project of small scale sustainable agriculture in Boa Esperança (Good Hope), an area that had been granted to landless peasants by the federal government.


She was accompanied by two rural workers when she was shot and killed. The two witnesses who escaped are suffering death threats and three more people have been killed in the area since Saturday.


The judicial system in Pará has ordered the arrests of four suspects in the case: Vitalmiro Bastos de Moura, the landowner who is accused of ordering the assassination, as well as three of his private security guards, two of whom carried out the assassination.


The town of Anapu, on the edge of the Amazon rainforest, is the place where Sr. Dorothy worked in trying to protect the rainforest and its people from disastrous and often illegal exploitation by logging firms and ranchers.


The area is notorious for violence, crime, and slave labor. Greenpeace estimates that 90% of the timber in Pará is illegally logged. Pará also has the country’s highest rate of deaths related to land battles.


Just a few days before her death, Sister Dorothy had met Nilmário Miranda, the Brazilian Government’s Human Rights Secretary, and told him of the death threats that she and others had received and asked for the government’s help. According to Miranda, “She always asked for protection for others, never for herself.”


The missionary received a number of awards for her work, including the “Human Rights Award” from the Bar Association of Brazil on December 10, 2004.


She truly lived the mission statement of the Sisters of Notre Dame in Cincinnati to “take our stand with poor people, especially women and children, in the most abandoned places. Many manifestations against the nun’s assassination have occurred throughout the country.”


The Brazilian federal government sent 2,000 military troops from the army to the area to quell the tensions. According to Bishop Tomás Balduí­no, the president of the Pastoral Land Commission, “the presence of the army is palliative. We do not think that this social problem will be resolved with a police or military base. The military dictatorship tried to do this.”


Joanne Blaney is the editor of Sejup.
SEJUP – Brazilian Service of Justice and Peace
www.sejup.org

Tags:

You May Also Like

Everything Seems Wrong, Yet Brazil Is an Agricultural Powerhouse

The record-breaking failure of 18.2 million tons, worth US$ 4.1 million (10 million reais), ...

Brazilian Indians Threaten to Kill Themselves After Being Thrown Off Their Lands

Over one hundred federal police evicted the Guarani-Kaiowa Indians of Ñanderú Marangatú, Mato Grosso ...

Brazil: Children’s Rights Are Just a Legal Fiction

Some jurists regard Brazil’s constitutional and statutory protection as a model for the world ...

How Brazil Has Learned Bangladesh’s Microcredit Lesson

When Muhammad Yunus, the economist who founded the influential Grameen Bank (which dispenses small ...

Brazil’s Itaú Gets in the Business of Tracking Stolen Cars

Cell-Loc Location Technologies Inc. a developer of network-based wireless location technology, announced on November ...

Brazilian singer-composer Milton Nascimento

Brazil’s Milton, the Planet’s Voice, in a Revealing Mood

Milton Nascimento had a big smile on and the majestic posture when we entered ...

Abbas Ends Visit to Brazil Defending Peaceful Coexistence in Holy Land

Just before leaving Brazil after a visit to Salvador, Bahia, where he met Brazilian ...

Come and Get It, Says Brazil’s BNDES with a US$ 22.2 Billion Stash

The director of Planning of Brazil’s National Bank of Economic and Social Development (BNDES), Antônio ...

Brazilian Airline Gol Celebrates 7th Birthday Flying 7 Million

Brazil Airline Gol, which also owns Varig Airline, has released passenger statistics for the ...

There Are Seven Types of Peace. Brazil Needs to Make Each One of Them

The Aymara people, who for centuries have lived around Lake Titicaca in the Andes, ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`