The Pope dies Saturday, and on Monday, Rev. Gerard Jean-Juste, a pro-Aristide Priest who is favorably compared to Martin Luther King, Jr., is in the US media considering a run for President of Haiti. How's that for a direct challenge to the Catholic Church ban on Priests seeking public office. Liberation theology may not be quite dead yet.
(AP story below fold)
Mon, Apr. 04, 2005
"Fiery priest may seek Haiti's presidency
STEVENSON JACOBS
Associated Press
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - Supporters call him Haiti's Martin Luther King Jr., a fiery Roman Catholic priest who electrifies the masses with populist sermons urging social equality and nonviolent protest.
The U.S.-backed interim government recently accused him of inciting violence and hiding gunmen loyal to ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, jailing him for weeks before freeing him because of a lack of evidence.
The mix of praise and condemnation has only fueled beliefs that the pro-Aristide Rev. Gerard Jean-Juste will seek Haiti's presidency in fall elections - a move that could re-ignite tensions with the United States.
Some among Aristide's Lavalas Family Party, including Jean-Juste, say they won't contest elections until their fallen leader - whom they claimed was deposed in a U.S.-backed coup - returns from exile in South Africa and dozens of his jailed allies are released at home.
But that hasn't stopped people wherever he goes from urging Jean-Juste to run for president, according to him.
"If you go anywhere abroad, in the diaspora or any place in this country, people all think that I'm running," Jean-Juste said with a laugh while sitting under a shade tree outside his St. Claire Church, a peach-colored structure perched atop a hill overlooking Haiti's gritty capital.
So will he?
The 58-year-old insists he isn't planning to swap his flowing robes for the finely tailored suits of a politician. But he said he'd "consider it" if asked by Lavalas, which is still led by Aristide, himself an ex-priest. Others say Jean-Juste lacks the national profile needed for a realistic bid for high office.
"I will consider it ... but I always would prefer somebody else," said Jean-Juste, wearing a white frock and occasionally glancing at his constantly buzzing cell phone. "My purpose is not power for power. My purpose is to serve as many people as possible."
Some believe an elections victory by a pro-Aristide hard-liner could again inflame Haiti-U.S. relations. But Jean-Juste, who lived in New York in the early 1970s, then went to Boston, and later Miami in the 1980s, said he's hopeful of better ties if U.S. officials fully support Lavalas' participation in elections.
"But if they go the Iraq way and try to force elections down our throat ... forget it," said Jean-Juste, who was ordained in the United States. "We'll be back in the streets marching."
The transition from priest to possible presidential contender follows a life of struggle for Jean-Juste, first in protests against oppression under the Francois "Papa Doc" Duvalier regime and later as an advocate for poor Haitian refugees in the United States.
His stature grew in October, when masked police stormed the presbytery of his church and seized him as he was handing out soup to scores of hungry children, touching off an international outcry.
Justice Minister Bernard Gousse accused Jean-Juste of being linked to criminals wanted for "barbaric" attacks against Aristide opponents, and of sheltering and organizing meetings in his home "with gang leaders."
He was freed nearly seven weeks later after a judge ruled there was no evidence to support the accusation, which Jean-Juste calls "a character assassination."
But his time in prison appears to have only bolstered support for the bearded, raspy voiced clergyman.
At Easter mass in the capital, hundreds packed the church to hear his sermon, which blasted Haiti's divide between rich and poor and denounced the United States and France for "kidnapping" Aristide in a coup last year - a charge both countries deny.
"He's a bright shining light for us," 60-year-old Deluce Delva said outside the church. "Only God knows if he'd make a good president, but we'd all support him."
But to get that far, Jean-Juste first would have to bridge a deep rift within Lavalas, between hard-liners wanting to skip elections entirely and moderates looking toward political life after Aristide, who was overthrown in a February 2004 uprising...."
http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/news/11305490.htm