Dead Man Walking: The Journey Continued
4th Annual Prophetic Voices of the Church Lecture
Helen Prejean, CSJ
Author
ٲٱ:March 16, 2005
Event Recap
In a rare moment in the cacophony of college life, over 600 students packed into Robsham Theatre on the evening of March 16th and sat in absolute silence. The only voice was that of Sister Helen Prejean, world famous anti-death penalty activist and author ofDead Man Walking: An Eyewitness Account of the Death Penalty in the United Statesand the recently releasedDeath of Innocents: An Eyewitness Account of Wrongful Executions(Random House, 2005). Sr. Helen, in a voice that moved her audience with its tones of weariness, sadness and struggle, narrated her witness to the last days and moments of Patrick Sonnier as he was put to death by electrocution in Angola State prison in Louisiana for the murder of two young teenagers. She spoke of how she was raised in a climate of upper middle class privilege and how she was eventually led through a series of small events and decisions to the role that she has today. She related in personal terms her prison ministry in the last months of Sonnier’s life as well as the pain and agony of the murder victims and their families. Her themes included the ways that Jesus led her down the path that she walks today and has called her as a witness to the inequality of the justice system in the United States. This witness included the writing ofDead Man Walking, its subsequent transformation into a movie, and now its re-birth as a play that can be performed by high school and college aged groups free of copyright fees in order to raise consciousness among young people about the morality of the death penalty.
She also spoke at length about her new bookThe Death of Innocents: An Eyewitness Account of Wrongful Executions(2005, Random House) in which she relates the stories of two men who she believes were wrongfully executed by an unjust system. One inmate, Dobie Gillis, had an IQ of 65 and was, she believes, incompetently represented by a defense that did nothing to challenge a prosecution based on speculation and conjecture. The other inmate, Joseph O’Dell, was convicted on the testimony of a “jailhouse snitch” who later admitted to lying. The larger message of these accounts is that the poor do not get the same justice as the wealthy which undermines the legitimacy of not just the death penalty but with the entire way that we view and treat “criminal acts” in this country.
The effort to bring Sr. Helen to this campus was coordinated and co-sponsored by the Community of Sant’Egidio in Boston which has an active group on the Boston College campus. The Sant’Egidio Community has had an ongoing involvement in raising consciousness about death penalty issues on campus and in the Boston area.
About the Speaker
Helen Prejean, CSJ, is the author of the Pulitzer-nominatedDead Man Walking(Random House, 1993) and more recentlyThe Death of Innocents(Random House, 2004), both eyewitness accounts of the death penalty in the United States.
Over the past 15 years, she has accompanied six death row inmates to their executions. In the fourth annual Prophetic Voices of the Church lecture, she details her ongoing fight in the years before and since Dead Man Walking against the injustices of the death penalty.