Thursday, December 19, 2013

The Journey Celebrated its 20th Anniversary This Year (Bill Pelke Reports) Part One


The Journey celebrated its 20th anniversary this year by doing an Indiana Journey of Hope Tour and Conference. The first Journey of Hope began at my house in Portage, Indiana in 1993. We honored the World Coalition Against the Death Penalty GO here and their project “World Day Against the Death Penalty." This was the 11th annual World Day Against the Death Penalty. We called this year’s Journey of Hope “World Day Against the Death Penalty Tour”. It began on October 4 and we journeyed around the state sharing our stories until October 20.

We did something this year we had never done before as part of the Journey. We organized a World Day Against the Death Penalty conference October 10-13 while we were in the Indianapolis, the state capital. We began with a press conference in the capitol rotunda on October 10 to commemorate World Day Against the Death Penalty.

The Journey of Hope Website here details the weekend long conference in depth.

It was a great conference. Many great people were involved and I had a lot of help with the organizing. Colleen Cunningham, Equal Justice USA here was the chief organizer and the main reason the conference was so successful.

As I am sure you heard, Paula Cooper was released from prison in June after over 28 years in prison. I did interviews that were aired around the world. CNN, Democracy Now, ABC National News Australia, BBC, Red Letter Christians and CBS News Chicago were some of the better ones. Unfortunately I have not heard from Paula Cooper since she has been released. It is almost 6 months now and I am quite surprised and disappointed. I visited with her 15 times while she was in prison and for the last two years we exchanged mails every week.

I have heard rumors that she has been taken in by a support group and is doing well. I am happy about that because I was quite concerned about how she would do upon her release. I understand that she wants to further her education. I was told that she wants to avoid media and fears that associating with me would bring unwanted attention. I have been approached by the Piers Morgan Show, Travis Smiley and Cornell West Show, Restorative Justice Groups and many others who want to talk to both us so I understand her fears and concerns about the media.

I was in Madrid for the 5th World Congress Against the death penalty June and was able to talk about love and compassion there. I stopped in Indiana on my way back to Alaska. I had planned for years to meet her at the gates of the prison when she was released, but shortly before Paula got out she told me her mother was picking her up and her mother didn’t want me to be at the prison so I agreed not to go. I was hoping to hear from her as I visited with my children and grandchildren in Indiana the following week, but have not heard from her since.

I just finished a 12 day tour in NE Italy for the Community of Sant Egidio and their Cities For Life Project. GO here

I often spoke three time a day, cumulatively to more than two thousand high school students; I spoke at prayer services, a press conference, a home for the elderly, at a college, etc.

(More to come.)

Thursday, December 05, 2013

Marietta Jaeger Lane: RePost (added comments)



There are three comments (one new) below this RE:posting...

Marietta Jaeger Lane's Story: Mother shares loss of daughter to teach forgiveness
By Patrick O’Neill, posted on the Garner Citizen December 2011 ( Also reposted earlier on this site.)

It’s hard to imagine the horror Marietta Jaeger Lane felt when she woke up in a Montana campground in 1973 to discover her 7-year-old daughter, Susie, was missing.

After putting her five children to sleep in a tent while on a family camping trip, Lane gave them each a hug and kiss goodnight. Susie had climbed out of her sleeping bag to give her mother a special good night hug. That was the last time Lane ever saw her youngest child again.

In the morning, the family discovered that someone had come in the night, cut a hole in the side of the children’s tent and abducted Susie, whose stuffed animals were left behind on the ground.

What followed was a journey Lane never expected. For a year after Susie’s abduction, Lane, who will be speaking this Saturday, March 19 at Garner’s St. Christopher Episcopal Church, waged a battle with God. Why had her daughter been taken from her under such devastating circumstances?

Before leaving their Michigan home for the trip, Lane said the family prayed, specifically asking God to bless and protect them.

“And then this happened. Where are you God? Where are you in this?” Lane recalled asking.

It wasn’t until a year after Susie’s abduction that Lane learned that her daughter had been tortured and raped for more than a week before being strangling to death and dismembered. The serial killer who abducted her, David Meirhofer, had also confessed to murdering three other children.

“He had her locked up in a broom closet, naked, having to sit in her own excrement in an abandoned farm house,” Lane said. “He would come every night and bring her food and water, but he would also rape her.”

Lane said she was blessed to have a year to work through her questions with God.

“… Because I was Susie’s mother, my motherliness made me go screaming after God, and God was there for me, and I came to understand that nobody grieved more about all the terrible things that happened to Susie, nobody was grieving more about that than God.”

Lane, now 72, said every time she felt rage and anger toward Susie’s abductor, God would tell her: “But that’s not how I want you to feel.”

As the first anniversary of Susie’s abduction approached, Lane gave an interview in which she expressed a desire to speak with her daughter’s kidnapper.

On June 25, 1974 — exactly a year to the minute of Susie’s abduction — Lane’s phone rang in the middle of the night, waking her from a sound sleep.

It was Meirhofer, who had called to taunt her.

“But he wasn’t counting on the spiritual journey that I’d been on during the intervening year,” Lane said.

Rather than get hysterical, Lane spoke with compassion toward Meirhofer, telling him how terrible he must feel to be burdened with the reality of what he had done, and that God loved him.

“He was virtually undone by what God had done to me, and backed down and stayed on the phone for about an hour and 20 minutes,” Lane said. “At one point I told him that I had been praying for him, and I asked him what I could do to help him, and he just broke down and … he said, ‘I wish this burden could be lifted from me.’”

Lane said that she knew what that could mean regarding the fate of her daughter but that she was committed to finding proof of what had happened to Susie.

That proof came in the course of that conversation, which Lane had been taping.

“He just relaxed and said a lot of things that he probably never in his wildest dreams intended to say, but he gave out enough information about himself — and God had graced me to remain calm … It just kind of undid him … but it was enough information that the FBI was able to identify him.”

After Meirhofer’s arrest, Lane stated publicly her opposition to capital punishment for her daughter’s killer. Because he wasn’t facing execution, Lane said he agreed to plead guilty to Susie’s murder and the other three murders. He was suspected in as many as a dozen Montana murders.

Meirhofer committed suicide the same day of his guilty plea.

As part of her healing, Lane befriended Meirhofer’s mother. The two mothers have prayed together at the graves of their children.

“She loves me,” Lane said. “She said I was the best thing that ever happened to her. I had absolutely no ill will toward her whatsoever. I just have grief and enormous sadness because she had no idea that there was anything wrong with her son.”

Today, more than 37 years after her daughter’s death, Lane speaks of her journey as being part of “Susie’s parable.” Jesus used parables, and the way Lane sees it, God is using her to be a living example of what’s possible when it comes to forgiveness and reconciliation.

“I understood after it was over that it needed to happen because this was a very sick young man who had killed many children, and he had never been identified,” she said.

“God had me prepared, had laid the foundation in me, so that I would eventually respond as God needed me to respond, and he allowed Susie to be a sacrificial lamb.”

In the years that have passed, and in the hundreds of talks she has given, scores of people have come up to Lane to tell her that forgiveness in their own lives seemed unattainable, but after listening to her story, they know they can forgive those who have hurt them.

“I know it’s a powerful script, but I don’t take any credit for it because it is not the script I wanted,” Lane said. “It’s a script written by the Holy Spirit to help people understand the importance of forgiveness and how it affects our relationship with God …”

In the fall, Lane, who has lectured all over the world with the group Murder Victims’ Families for Human Rights, was interviewed on Vatican Radio during a trip to Rome. In his book, “No Future without Forgiveness,” Archbishop Desmond Tutu gives an account of Lane’s story.

Because hers is a real-life story, Lane says, “There’s nobody who can come to me and say, ‘Well, you wouldn’t be opposed to the death penalty if it happened to your little girl,’ because they hear that it did. They may disagree with my stance on the death penalty but they can’t argue with my human experience. … To kill somebody in [Susie’s] name would be an insult to her memory.”


3 comments:
LaDonna said...
I have 3 daughters with 2 different fathers: Oldest 2 are 27 and 21 and youngest is 5. I feel very much wronged by both of these fathers in that they have walked away and refused to help support their children yet believe that I have become bitter and turned their children against them, which I have not. At present, I am in a very stressful custody battle with the youngest's father. In fact, even though I have court-ordered visits with her during the summer months, he and his family have taken her to an unknown location and refuse to answer my calls, and the father has told me that I will not see her this summer. Although I feel all of this has happened to me for a reason, it's hard for me to believe God is there for me and extremely hard for me to look toward forgiveness, even though I desperately want to so that I can move on with my life. I commend you and hope that one day soon God will give me the same strength to do his Will as well.
June 06, 2011

Anonymous said...
LaDonna, I will say a prayer for u. For Jehovah, God (Psalm 83:18), to give u what u need to be re-united w/your beloved child, to be given the strength & courage during this difficult time. Also, for u to be given the hard task of forgiveness. I know that bitterness & anger can & will only hurt u. Plz tk care of yourself, lean on Jehovah during this time, & also to thank God for the blessings u do have in this life. Lean on Jehovah, he will lift u up, prayer is a gift frm God, let it all out to your Heavenly Father.
September 20, 2013

John Harutunian said...
Marietta- I too am a born-again Episcopalian. I'd have to disagree with two things which you say. Neither the death of Susie nor any other evil is "necessary." And Jesus Christ is the world's only proper sacrificial lamb. Having said that, may God bless you for your insights, and your exceptionally forgiving spirit. Dec. 2, 2013 on Marietta Jaeger Lane's Story: Mother shares loss of daughter to teach forgiveness
on 12/2/13


Marietta Jaeger Lane is the co-founder of the organization JOURNEY OF HOPE...FROM VIOLENCE TO HEALING - a coalition led by murder victim family

(Plz let me know of any new links/articles/pics you have for Marietta via comments. Thanx, Connie)