>From the Joseph Naik Vaz Institute ...

Filomena Saraswati Giese, of the Joseph Naik Vaz Institute and an alum of the 
Jesuit School of Theology participated in a memorial service at the GTU on 
Wednesday, April 24, 2019 for the victims of the tragic Easter Sunday Sri 
Lankan bombings. 

See report at https://josephnaikvaz.org/archives/782 

It was especially poignant since Filomena’s 1987 M.A. thesis at JST was titled 
Sannyasa in the Spirituality and Mission of Ven. Fr. Joseph Vaz, Apostle of 
Kanara and Sri Lanka. She offered her reflections on the Sri Lankan tragedy and 
the inspiration to be drawn in today’s world of religious violence, from the 
inter-religious story of the founding of the present day Catholic Church in Sri 
Lanka.    

The Graduate Theological Union (GTU) in Berkeley, California, is a consortium 
of eight private independent American theological schools and eleven centers 
and affiliates. The GTU was founded in 1962 and their students can take courses 
at the University of California, Berkeley. The Jesuit School of Theology (JST) 
in Berkeley is an affiliate of Santa Clara University (SCU), the Jesuit 
University in Santa Clara in the heart of Silicon Valley, and is part of the 
GTU consortium of theological schools.  The Memorial was hosted by the Jesuit 
School of Theology, to give the theological community an opportunity to grieve 
and offer prayers and reflections.

Fr. Kevin O’Brien, S.J., Dean of JST and President- elect of SCU, was joined by 
the heads, faculty and students of the Schools of Theology and Centers of the 
Jewish, Buddhist, Islamic and Dharma (Hindu) Studies affiliated to the GTU. 

The President of the GTU, Rabbi Daniel Lehmann, opened the Memorial service, 
reciting the Kaddish for those who died. He spoke of the present day bombings 
and killings at places of sacred worship – mosques on a Friday, Jewish temples 
on a Saturday, and now Christian churches on their holiest of days, Easter 
Sunday. He prayed for peace and comfort for the families of the victims and for 
inter-religious tolerance.   

Mary Beth Lamb, Senior Assistant for Student Life at JST, and several others of 
the GTU community, offered a prayer for the Sri Lankan victims and for healing 
and hope for peace. Also attending were Munir Jawa, Founding Director of the 
Center for Islamic Studies, Associate Professor of Islamic Studies and 
Anthropology, and Sr. Marianne Farina CSC, Professor of Philosophy and Theology 
at CIS, as well as Dr. Rita Sherma, Director of Dharma Studies (Hindu). Dr. 
Sherma expressed the grief of the GTU community at these killings and prayed 
for peace. 

Filomena next spoke about how those Catholics killed at prayer on Easter Sunday 
were descendants of the converts made by St. Joseph Vaz, people who had kept 
their faith through one hundred and fifty years of Dutch persecution and 
deprivation of religious freedom. She outlined the history of the Catholic 
faith, first brought to Sri Lanka by the Portuguese in 1505 as part of their 
search for the spice trade and later conquest of Sri Lankan sea ports. This was 
followed by the Dutch conquest of the Portuguese territories in 1656. The Dutch 
were Protestant and rivals of the Portuguese for the spice trade. They set out 
to suppress the Catholic Church in order to destroy all Portuguese connections 
in Sri Lanka. They passed laws banning all practice of Catholicism. They banned 
all priests and missionaries from entering Sri Lanka under pain of death. 
Catholics caught practicing their religion and harboring priests were fined and 
imprisoned, even put to death. Their political and civil rights were taken away.

Before long, there were no more than a few underground Catholics left. After 
forty years of this rigorous persecution, a courageous Indian priest from Goa, 
Father Joseph Vaz, smuggled himself, dressed as a coolie, into Sri Lanka and 
set about re-establishing the Catholic Church.

At this painful time of inter-religious violence, Filomena brought home to 
those gathered, how the protection of the Buddhist King of Kandy and the help 
of people of other faiths made it possible for the Catholic Church to be 
re-built by St. Joseph Vaz:   

        Vaz spent two years in Jaffna where the Dutch were constantly trying to 
capture him, hidden by his underground Catholics. They decided to take him to 
the Buddhist kingdom of Kandy where they thought he would be safe from the 
Dutch. Initially, he was captured by the soldiers of its Buddhist king as a 
spy. But King Vimaldharma Surya II of Kandy observed that he was indeed a great 
saint without political and material ties. He released him from prison and gave 
him his protection, allowing him freedom to preach and build churches. 

        Even in Kandy, there were plots to have him banished from the kingdom 
of Kandy. On one occasion, one such plot was serious enough that the King was 
about to banish him from Kandy. It was the Muslim physician of the King who 
intervened on his behalf and saved him from banishment and certain capture by 
the Dutch.   

Many in the audience, composed of people of so many religious faiths, agreed 
that such examples of inter religious love and support show that peace among 
people of different religions is entirely possible. 

Filomena added that by a tragic coincidence, the day of the Sri Lankan 
massacres, April 21, was the 368th birthday of St. Joseph Vaz, born in Goa, 
India on that day in 1651. 

In a final prayer for the victims, JST doctoral student Fr. Louis Leveil S.J. 
from India and Filomena recited the Lord’s Prayer in Sinhala, the majority 
language of Sri Lanka.  

The Memorial concluded with the tolling of the JST bells nine times by Paul 
Kircher, Assistant Dean of Students at JST, in memory of the approximately 300 
Sri Lankan Christians and non-Christians, as well as tourists, killed in the 
bombings.   

Posted by George J. Pinto and Olvin Veigas, S.J. of the Joseph Naik Vaz 
Institute
Friday, April 26, 2019
 https://josephnaikvaz.org/archives/782

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