Torture in his history taints Spanish martyr's beatification
Print Friendly Version| All Things Catholic by John L. Allen, Jr. | |
| Friday, Oct. 12, 2007 - Vol. 7, No. 6 | |
Declaring someone a saint, in Catholic theology, has never meant that he or she lived a perfect life, a point that applies with special force to martyrs. Even great sinners, the church believes, are redeemed by shedding their blood for the faith.
In principle, therefore, the discovery that a martyr has skeletons in the closet does nothing to weaken the value of his or her sacrifice. Yet in practice it can raise hard questions -- if not about the sanctity of their death, then the wisdom of publicly applauding their lives. Such may be the case with one of the 498 martyrs of the Spanish Civil War set for beatification in Rome on Oct. 28: Augustinian Fr. Gabino Olaso Zabala, who was among 98 Augustinian priests and seminarians executed by Republican forces from 1936 to 1939.
In a nutshell, the charge is that during a much earlier period in his life, when he was a young missionary in the Philippines, Olaso was guilty of torture.
According to written testimony from the victim, Olaso participated in the 1896 torture of a Filipino priest named Fr. Mariano Dacanay, who was suspected of sympathy for anti-Spanish revolutionaries. Dacanay's own account asserts that Olaso and a handful of other Augustinians encouraged guards who were administering the torture, and that at one point Olaso himself kicked Dacanay in the head, hard enough to leave the suffering priest semi-conscious.
Historians generally regard Dacanay's testimony as credible. Augustinian Fr. Fernando Rojo, the Rome-based postulator for the cause of Olaso and the other Augustinian martyrs, told NCR Oct. 10 that he does not see "any reason to doubt the basic historical accuracy of the facts" contained in Dacanay's account.
To be sure, Olaso's conduct must be understood in the context of his times, since the late 1890s were a violent era in the Philippines. Two years later, Olaso and other missionaries were themselves imprisoned by nationalist rebels and severely beaten, not in retribution for the torture of Dacanay, but simply because that's what the revolutionaries often did with Spanish priests. Rojo says the Filipinos evidently did not consider Olaso a prime villain, since they freed him after 18 months.
Moreover, whatever conclusion one reaches about Olaso, it has no bearing on the witness of the other 497 Spanish martyrs who will be beatified later this month, killed for refusing to renounce the faith four decades later and half a world away.
Nonetheless, the revelation that someone set for beatification by Pope Benedict XVI was a willing participant in torture may be disconcerting - in the first place for Filipinos, who see the 1896 rebellion as a key moment in the birth of their nation; and more broadly for those concerned with contemporary moral and legal debates over torture, especially in the context of the "war on terrorism." Despite clear official Catholic teaching against torture, some may wonder if the church is sending a mixed message by beatifying someone who apparently administered torture himself.
If nothing else, Olaso's story may serve as a sobering reminder that, under the right circumstances, even people of deep faith and personal courage are nevertheless capable of almost anything.
* * *
In the 19th century Philippines, protest against Spanish rule often had an anti-clerical edge, since many missionaries worked hand-in-glove with the colonial forces. Contemporary critics coined the term "friarocracy" to describe a system in which Augustinian, Franciscan and Dominican missionaries were responsible for education and health measures, keeping census and tax records, supervising the selection of local police and town officers, maintaining public morals, and reporting alleged acts of sedition to the regional authorities.
When revolutionary energies began to stir, according to Jesuit historian Fr. John Schumacher in his 1981 book Revolutionary Clergy, the reaction among the Spanish, including the missionaries, was one "of fury and hysteria, venting its rage on any prominent Filipino elements considered less than friendly, and ready to believe the most extravagant charges."
In this context, a number of Filipino priests regarded as potentially disloyal were arrested in late August 1896 and accused of being Masons, as well as being part of a conspiracy to massacre Spaniards. Nine of these priests, including Dacanay, were incarcerated at a seminary in Vigan, one of the oldest Spanish settlements in the Philippines. At the time, the seminary was run by the Augustinians.
Dacanay, who was released a year later, wrote a first-hand account of what happened to him while under arrest. Portions of it were published in the 1982 book Cracks in the Parchment Curtain, by an Episcopal missionary in the Philippines named William Henry Scott.
Dacanay wrote that on Oct. 29, 1896, he was visited by the Augustinian superior of the seminary, who urged him to confess his crimes. When he protested his innocence, civil guards were summoned who placed him into a posture called the "bamboo foot," which Dacanay described as "a barbarous punishment, not fit even for animals":
The victim is made to squat down on his haunches. A thick bamboo is passed beneath both knees, and then his two wrists are tied together in front with a rope, with his arms under the bamboo on each side. In this position, the victim is nothing but a ball, for if he attempts to move, he is sure to roll over on the ground. … In this contorted and painful position, [the guards] struck me many blows on the shoulders with a thick bamboo they call 'brute' every time I answered in the negative, leaving me horribly swollen and bruised.
Dacanay then described the role of the Augustinians during this torture, including Olaso.
Present during this heartrending and horrendous spectacle were the Provisor and seven superiors of the seminary, who, instead of sympathizing with my sufferings and cruel torture, much to the contrary watched my martyrdom with visible signs of pleasure. They even went to the extent of encouraging the guards to treat me more cruelly - Father Gabino Olaso, for one. … And when I fell over due to the blows and the fatigue, rolling over on the floor, they added to my sufferings by kicking me roughly as if I were a football. When I fell, I struck my head against a post, causing a wound. Another time I rolled over near Father Gabino, who was pacing quietly around the room, and he gave me another tremendous kick in the head which completely stunned me."
Dacanay said that the torture was repeated on Nov. 2 and 4, again in the presence of the Augustinians, and that all told he received some 300 blows while in the "bamboo" posture. He also reported that the Augustinians, including Olaso, repeatedly entered the cells of detained priests to demand that they confess to various crimes, even inspecting their bodies for scars from "blood oaths" administered in secret rituals by Filipino rebels.
Following his release, Dacanay's account was reported in the Filipino press. Shortly afterwards he was returned to priestly ministry by Archbishop Bernardino Nozaleda y Villa of Manila, a Spanish Dominican and later the archbishop of Valencia - an improbable step, according to Schumacher, had there been any doubt about the truth of Dacanay's report, or any credible evidence that he was actually a Mason or a member of any armed group.
* * *
Two years later, as the Filipinos were sweeping to victory, most of the remaining Spaniards in the country, including many missionaries, were arrested. In 1898, Olaso and a number of other Augustinians were taken prisoner by a rebel commander named Simeon Villa.
Olaso and the other missionaries were placed in the basement of a convent, where they were told that they would be killed if they did not give Villa money. When the priests said they had already turned over whatever they had, their arms were tied behind their backs. The rebels then kicked the priests and whipped them with rattan rods, according to an account later compiled by Spanish Dominican Fr. Julian Malumbres.
Olaso spent the next year and a half imprisoned by the rebels, subject to various forms of mistreatment, until he was eventually released and allowed to return to Manila. By that stage, the United States had defeated Spain in the Spanish-American War and, as part of the peace settlement, now regarded the Philippines as part of its own territory, initiating another round of revolutionary violence. The country would not achieve full independence until 1946.
From Manila, Olaso found his way back to Spain, where he continued teaching and held various leadership positions within the Augustinians until his martyrdom in 1936.
* * *
Olaso, to be sure, is hardly the first martyr with a checkered past. To take one recent case, St. Mark Ji Tianxiang of China, killed during the Boxer Rebellion, was canonized in 2000 despite the fact that he was an opium addict barred by his parish priest from the sacraments for almost 30 years. Likewise, Fr. Jean-Marie Gallot was executed during the French Revolution and beatified in 1955 by Pope Pius XII. In the early 1980s, the French press unearthed documents apparently showing that Gallot had belonged to a Masonic lodge in Laval, France, in defiance of church discipline forbidding Catholics from being Masons.
At the time, the Vatican issued a statement asserting that whatever Gallot may have done during his life, his death as a martyr rendered it moot.
"Even if the Laval lodge had been Masonic in the sense condemned by the church," the statement read, "and even if Gallot had given his allegiance to it (in any case, a thing that remains to be proven), with his martyrdom, he would have washed this away, as with other possible faults - even, hypothetically, serious ones of his past - by becoming a hero of the faith, professed even to the shedding of his blood."
Given this theology, Olaso's halo is not in doubt. Whatever his sins, they would have been wiped out on the basis of his martyr's death. That principle, however, doesn't resolve prudential doubts about the wisdom of singling him out for formal beatification.
Rojo, the postulator for the cause, said that the events of 1896 were not considered as part of the canonical investigation of Olaso's case, which was closed at the diocesan level in 1963 (well ahead of the 1982 publication of Scott's book), and which concerned only the final 35 years of his life. Officially, therefore, church authorities reached no judgment about Olaso's role in the Philippines.
Nonetheless, Rojo insisted upon two bits of context for evaluating what happened in 1896: first, that of "an authentic civil war," in which missionaries such as Olaso genuinely feared for their lives; and second, that of a young 26-year-old Basque priest "who had just arrived in the islands, and who could have understood the situation only from the point of view of his fellow foreigners."
Rojo concedes that none of that can justify "acts of abuse and violence, in this case inside a seminary," and he told NCR that what Olaso apparently did to Dacanay is clearly "to his discredit." Rojo said that Olaso's time in the Philippines represents "the darkest period of his life."
Yet, Rojo argued, whatever "debt of human justice" Olaso owed was paid in full, first of all by his grueling 18 months in prison, and then by the "holocaust of his life" in Spain four decades later.
Xaverian Bro. Reginald Cruz, a church historian and lecturer at the Maryhill School of Theology in the Philippines, said he has "no doubt" that Olaso is a legitimate martyr. Nonetheless, Cruz said, the Oct. 28 beatification may generate controversy.
"The 1896 revolution is generally viewed as the pivotal moment in Philippine nation-building," Cruz said. "From a symbolic point of view, Filipinos emotionally relate to the event as Italians and Mexicans do to the Risorgimento and Cinco de Mayo."
In that context, Cruz said, even though the nine priests imprisoned in the Viga seminary are not well known, the beatification "has the potential of becoming a cause célèbre, especially since Olaso would be awarded a halo by the church in spite of what he did to the Filipino clerics."
More generally, Cruz argued, "it's hard to reconcile" the church's teaching against torture "with the act of beatifying someone who committed the very act the church condemns."
"The Church needs to be very careful about the models of faith it is proposing for the faithful," Cruz said. "We need to tell the whole story of our martyrs and not make it look like we're glossing over the extremely embarrassing parts. Otherwise, we lose our credibility."
* * *
Whatever one makes of Olaso, his story inevitably invites reflection on contemporary controversies over torture, especially with regard to the U.S.-led war on terrorism.
The official Catholic judgment is clearly negative. The Catechism of the Catholic Church declares that "torture, which uses physical or moral violence to extract confessions, punish the guilty, frighten opponents, or satisfy hatred, is contrary to respect for the person and for human dignity."
In his 2006 message for the World Day of Peace, Benedict XVI appeared to indirectly apply this teaching to the war on terror when he wrote, "Not everything automatically becomes permissible between hostile parties once war has regrettably commenced."
Cardinal Renato Martino, President of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, was asked by reporters at the time if the pope was referring to accusations that the United States tortures terror suspects, or hands them over to other nations for torture.
While stressing that Benedict "was not condemning anyone," Martino said the pope was "inviting" all countries that have signed the Geneva Conventions governing the conduct of war to respect them. He also said the Vatican abhorred torture for whatever reason.
"Torture is a humiliation of the human person, whoever it is," Martino said. "The church does not allow these means to extract the truth."
In light of the apparent tension between Olaso's Oct. 28 beatification and this teaching, it's possible that church officials will face pressure to clarify that the beatification should not be read as an endorsement of Olaso's earlier conduct.
* * *
A final note about the church and torture.
Realists sometimes argue that in dire circumstances, especially when "the clock is ticking" on an alleged plot, torture may be the only way to compel terrorists to reveal their plans. Critics usually retort that torture doesn't work, since subjects will often confess to anything to make it stop. While it's a poor means of getting at the truth, these critics say, it is an excellent way of turning borderline radicals into convinced militants, burning with the desire for revenge.
Ironically, one of the most-discussed case studies regarding the use of torture involves the late Pope John Paul II, and once again the setting is the Philippines.
In January 1995, firefighters in Manila arrived at a downtown apartment where a chemical fire was burning. Police were called to the scene when sulfuric and nitric acids were discovered, along with beakers, funnels, and most ominously, fuses. Though the apartment was deserted when they arrived, police later arrested a Pakistani militant named Abdul Hakum Murad when he came back attempting to retrieve a laptop computer.
This was five days before John Paul II was due to arrive in the Philippines for World Youth Day, so the police suspected a plot against the pope. Murad refused to cooperate, and, according to news reports, was subjected to various forms of torture: most of his ribs were broken, cigarettes were extinguished on his genitals, he was forced to sit naked on ice cubes, and water was forced down his throat to simulate drowning. Eventually, Murad revealed details of plans to kill John Paul drawn up by Ramzi Yousef, a Kuwaiti terrorist linked to Al-Qaeda who was among the architects of the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center. Murad also provided information about a scheme to blow up 11 commercial airliners, and to fly another plane into the headquarters of the CIA.
Murad is currently serving a life sentence at a federal "supermax" prison in Florence, Colorado.
Some experts say the case illustrates that torture is occasionally necessary; others argue that virtually all of the useful information surrendered by Murad was on his laptop, or strewn among other evidence collected from the scene. Without such corroboration, they argue, it would have been difficult to know whether to take his confession seriously. Further, they note, Murad broke down only after interrogators posing as Mossad agents threatened to take him to Israel, suggesting it was psychological trickery rather than brute force that made the difference.
In any event, the story raises harrowing questions that can seem like something ripped from a spy novel, but which could realistically face future popes: If authorities think they're on to another plot to kill the pope somewhere down the line, would the pope want them to use torture to try to get the truth? To put that question differently, would a pope feel obliged to try to persuade them not to use torture, given Catholic teaching on the subject? Would the pope even have the right to express such a position - especially if, as in the Murad case, he was not the only intended victim?
These are hardly questions any pope would be eager to ponder, but they do unfortunately reflect the temper of the times.
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In most cases, isn't what
In most cases, isn't what the candidate for sainthood accomplishes after death more important to his or her being declared a saint than what he or she did in life? There seem to be many good people who are never declared saints and a considerable number of saints who weren't all that good in life. Perhaps, modeling one's life after that of a saint is not really the way to approach things. It might be better to meet one's own challenges by developing a close working relationship with God and using the examples of the saints to reassure oneself when things don't go smoothly, which is typical.
It is very difficult to live
It is very difficult to live with paradox, within the confines of institutional religion. I quote in the previous sentence Fr. Richard Rhor ia recent podcast with Tom Fox.
As a survivor and then convert to the faith of the '60's, I learned something of mystical contemplation by an undeniably iliicit means: LSD. What I learned, from that one good trip among the many meaningless that followed, was profound, and led to my conversion to Christianity and later Catholicism.
I am relating this because were I to say what I think without the above caveats I would risk sounding like a heretic or a fundamentalist. But here it is, clearly stated: much of what takes place in the Church is arbitrary, and it is truly a form of mauvais fois, (pardon my French) to claim that divine authority has decreed what is the result of human action.
Thus it is that the saint making process is an historical, traditional, and in our times, a nearly meaningless exercise in eclesiastical politics.
Nevertheless, I love the Saints, and think that many had more wisdom than the Popes.
Can we deal with the paradox of practicing a faith we know is imperfectly expressed in its institutional form, and yet put up with this same church's illusion of indefectibility, even in the face of such recent revelations as the canonization of a man guilty of torture?
I can. I can cope with the fact that reality is often arbitrary, because God is faithful. But who can seriously believe that human expressions of the divine are sufficient? Who can take seriously the idea of theological infallibility, where Revelation would show us a more important spiritual truth: love those who hate you and despise you, do good to them that abuse you. Did our prospective saint do that, or not?
One final thought: the MYSTERIUM TREMENDUM, which I ecountered quite by accident on my first "trip", led me on the quest for ultimate meaning to find the Christ. Thank god for that. But as any '60's radical knows, institutions of any kind cannot be given uncritical allegiance.
And as one who survived and grew past the irrational and the self-serving, I still feel strongly the call to challenge authority and to question reality.
Think about it. There are more things in Heaven and Earth than are dreamt of in your philosophy, Horatio, (Pardon my Hamlet). You may be obedient to the Pope, but if you are not first obedient to Jesus you have failed in your calling as a Christian. I can even quote a Pope to prove my point, who said, "First I am a Christian, then I am Pope."
I vote against this canonization, and swear faithful dissent as conscience dictates, from the institutional church.
I appreciate your candor
I appreciate your candor Robert H.
I especially take note of: "You may be obedient to the Pope, but if you are not first obedient to Jesus you have failed in your calling as a Christian."
God Bless You!
Americamba, your analogy is
Americamba, your analogy is way off. Fr Olaso was NOT killed in retaliation for his apparent approval and limited participation in the torture of the Filipino priest 40 years earlier. His murderers did not care about, and probably did not even know about that incident. As they did to thousands of other priests, nuns and monks, they murdered Fr Olaso purely out of hatred for Christ and His church.
But what about St. Paul, the
But what about St. Paul, the great Apostle, who persecuted Christians until he was thrown from his horse and heard Christ Himself say, "Saul, Saul, why do you persecute Me?"
Luk wrote: "It is highly
Luk wrote:
"It is highly important that a beatification for martyrdom be not given for someone who had done torture himself. It is good that this revelation come to light before the final announcement."
I would think that extent, intensity and depth the person's in question's conversion to God and doing God's Will as well as repentance and renunciation of the sins one committed before this conversion to God would be an important consideration in determining a person's saintly value.
I believe there are many people who live a life of error before they profoundly find God and repent and change their ways. How about Paul? Should he be condemned for how he treated Christians before his conversion? Or recognized for the GOOD he did in his life?
The more we discover how much we are Loved by God, the more we want to do God's Will
Thank you Mr. Allen for this
Thank you Mr. Allen for this article. It is highly important that a beatification for martyrdom be not given for someone who had done torture himself. It is good that this revelation come to light before the final announcement.
It's mistake to canonize any
It's mistake to canonize any "martyrs" of the Spanish Civil War because the politics were so bound up with all the tragic excesses on both sides. It was the result of the usual close relation of the institutional church with the forces of privilege. Olaso's behavior in the Phillipines showed his adherence to the cause of the conservative authorities. I would suspect that because he continued this way in Spain and was not a random victim but was executed as an political enemy, not as a "martyr" for his faith. It took the Vatican Council and many brave clergy and religious in Latin America to try to reverse this with their commitment to the poor. But they are not being canonized because they fought against the forces that Olaso was dedicated to saving. A case in point. Sister Dorothy Stang was killed in Brazil at the orders of a powerful local individual who saw her work with the poor as a threat to his rule over his turf. Yet when the pope was in Brazil recently he did not even mention her case despite the fact that Brazilians called for him to recognize her true martyrdom for she was not involved in defending privilege but was simply following the precepts of the Gospel. However, she will not be made a Saint because the conservative heirarchy will not displease the rich with whom they are connected at the hip.
Olaso's case was a foreshadowing of the role of the Argentinian priest recently sentenced to life for his role in torture in Argentina. If the modern torturer were assinated by one of the Madres de la Plaza de Mayo or by any other relative of the many killed by the goverment of "God, Homeland, and Liberty" of the Cursillista OnganÃÂa, would he be a martyr?
On the latter point, the
On the latter point, the question of whether torture works or not is a red herring. Torture is an intrinsically evil act, an attack on the intrinsic worth or God-given human dignity of a person, turning him into a means to an end. As such, it can never be permitted regardless of circumstance, and "circumstance" includes ticking bomb scenarios. To say otherwise is consequentialism. And since John Paul wrote an encyclical condemning consequentialism and proportional as modes of moral judgment (Veritatis Splendour) it seems quite clear what his answer to this particular question would have been.
Morning's Minion (http://vox-nova.com/)
If nothing else, Olaso's
If nothing else, Olaso's story may serve as a sobering reminder that, under the right circumstances, even people of deep faith and personal courage are nevertheless capable of almost anything.
Indeed, sobering reading
John Andersen
"Murad also provided
"Murad also provided information about a scheme to blow up 11 commercial airliners, and to fly another plane into the headquarters of the CIA"
...and what good did his having revealed that do?
It was probably dismissed because the combination of having extracted it by means of torture and its sounding so far-fetched made it too suspect. The way this worked out provides absolutely no support for torture. It is not a matter of getting the torturing thing to work better. Some things just have to be done in morally right ways despite the potential consequences. If staying alive in a world where people torture one another is better than being killed, then do God's promises mean anything? Is there even reason to believe in God?
Is it possible that Olaso
Is it possible that Olaso confessed his sin and was absolved at some point before being tortured and being killed himself?









The beatification of Zabala
The beatification of Zabala send a negative message to the public. There is no record that he apologized for his crime nor he ever repented. Everything that happened after his crime is merely conjecture. Yes, he was martyred for his faith and that exonarated his previous sins, but do we need to beatify or canonize him ? My answer is NO and NO. Isn't it that we emulate saints and holy people ? What can we emulate from Fr. Zabala for being a torturer ? For instance in the case of Mother Teresa we can emulate her by feeding the poor and sheltering the homeless. Zabala is a bad example. And worse he was a priest. He should have learn it in his seminary days how to be holy. Priests are Alter Christus who acts in Persona Christi. The Church teaches that hitting a consecrated person is a VERY SERIOUS OFFENSE. Was he aware of that ? A priest like Zabala supposed to be the agent of LOVE, RECONCILIATION, FORGIVENESS, COMPASION and MERCY. Instead he was an example of Violence, Hatered and a TORTURER. If you read the history of the Christianizaton of the Philippines is pretty ugly. Stories of tortures, opressions and prejudices was abound in the Spanish era Philippines. The Bible was never translated in the Filipino language and Spanish was never taught to the natives in more than three hundred years of Spanish presence in the Island because of fear that Filipinos will outsmart them. The abuses of the Sapnish missionaries towards Filipinos continued even up to the 1800's, in Zabalas time. Their abusive behaviors never stop until all the missionaries were kicked out of the country. Dr. Jose Rizal, the Philippines' national hero was killed by firing squad by Spanish authorities because he was agaisnt them.
Another controversial Spanish figure in the Philippines is a woman by the name of Mother Francisca de Fuentes del Espiritu Santo. Her cause for beatification was opened in 2003. Francisca was a Spanish born in Manila in 1647. She was the prioress of the Beaterio de Sta. Catalina now Dominican Sisters of Siena, Manila. The Dominican community was founded by a Spaniard, Father Juan de Sto. Domingo, OP. It was establihed in 1696. This Dominican community did NOT accept native Filipinos because of their skin. It was limited only to 15 SPANISH women including Francisca. We all know for a fact that discrimination is MORALLY wrong. Now the Dominicans are trying to make Francisca a saint. Worse, the Dominicans are telling people that Francisca was a Filipino and that the Dominican community was founded for Filipinos. To cover up the truth from facts, they twist the story to Francisca's advantage. It is recorded in the history of the Philippines that this community did pratice discrimination towards the natives.