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Former Member

Jesuits commemorate priest murdered in Guyana

 

 

Jesuits commemorate priest murdered in Guyana | Father Bernard Darke SJ, Georgetown, Guyana, Working People's Alliance,Catholic Standard, Mike James,

Bernard Darke SJ

Sunday, 14 July 2013, marked the 34th anniversary of the death of a British born Jesuit of the Guyana Region, Father Bernard Darke SJ, murdered as he took photos of a demonstration in Georgetown, Guyana.

 

A gang of supporters of the then Government had attacked demonstrators from the Working People's Alliance and then turned on bystanders. Among them was the assistant editor of the Catholic Standard, Mike James, and Fr Darke, who was one of the newspaper's photographers.

 

At the time Bernard was a teacher at St Stanislaus College, a post he had held almost since he first arrived in Guyana in 1960. Prior to that, he had taught at Wimbledon College in South London. He had also been very active in the Scout Movement.

 

The headmaster of St Stanislaus College at the time, Fr John Hopkinson SJ, recalled shortly after Bernard's death: "Fr Darke introduced many boys to the wonders of the interior of Guyana through journeys and camps. He made these visits to the hinterland instructive field trips, and they were not without apostolic intent.

 

"It is easy to label Fr Darke as a scout leader, as a photographer, as a teacher, as a priest, but the labels should not mask the unity and motives of a likeable and hardworking Jesuit striving to do all for the greater glory of God."

 

Bernard Darke's funeral Mass in 1979 was celebrated in a packed Brickdam Cathedral, with Bishop Benedict Singh preaching. In his homily, the bishop addressed the young people in the congregation and said that Bernard Darke would not want any memorial except the young people themselves.

 

"Bernard would want you to become men and women who would never let hatred govern your actions," he told them, adding that they should be sorry not for Bernard but for the violence that caused his death and for those who supported violence by failing to speak out.

 

Fr Paul Martin SJ, the Regional Superior in Guyana, says: "The struggles that the Church and country confront in 2013 are different from those of 1979. However our commitment to the Gospel asks the same level of courage and commitment of us today as that which characterized the members of the Region in those dark and difficult days. Let us remember with gratitude the work of all those who have gone before us .. 'Paul planted ... Apollos watered ... but God gives the growth.'"

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Not only were there demonstrators from the WPA, as this report claims, but also from the PPP too.

I know because Gail Teixeira and I were holding the lead banner as we marched through Brickdam on our way to the police station. A House of Israel thug snatched my end of the banner first, then headed towards Gail. I saw other Israelites rushing towards us and I turned around to run. I saw blood gushing from the wrist of a WPA guy. Some drops spilled on my pants as I passed him. I ran south alongside the police compound, turned right in Hadfield Street, and then left in Breda Street. An acquaintance named Carl Rodney called me into his mother's yard and I stayed there  for about an hour and then walked to Freedom House. It was there I heard a Catholic priest had been stabbed.

Every year on July 14, including last Sunday, I remember what I experienced on that fateful Saturday in 1979.

FM

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