My name is Rebecca Kanner,
and I was born in 1957 in Cleveland, Ohio. I received
a mechanical engineering degree from Ohio State University,
and moved to Ann Arbor, Michigan to work at the US EPA’s
Motor Vehicle Emissions Lab. Now I work as an environmental
educator for a non-profit environmental organization,
going into classrooms, teaching children how they can
make the earth a cleaner, healthier and safer place
for everyone.
When I was growing up, I learned a deep lesson from
my rabbi that I try to follow in how I live my life.
I didn’t learn this life lesson at my synagogue - I
learned it at school. My ninth grade civics teacher
presented a sermon by my rabbi as part of the lesson
plan on how to be a good citizen. This sermon talked
about the rights and responsibilities of
all citizens, listing ways that each one of us must
act to ensure our democracy continues. The first step
was voting and other steps included attending public
meetings and writing our elected officials.
Now, almost 30 years later, I of course don’t remember
all the steps listed or even how many there were, but
I do remember the final one and that was non-violent
civil disobedience. I wasn’t surprised to hear this
message from my rabbi. I knew that Rabbi Lelyveld had
been arrested and terribly beaten for his work in the
civil rights movement in Mississippi in 1964. So I wasn’t
surprised that my rabbi would give a sermon advocating
civil disobedience as one of the actions that may be
required of us to preserve our democracy.
What did surprise me was that my civics teacher would
teach us at my public
junior high school that sometimes breaking the law was
a viable action by concerned citizens to protect our
democracy. My respected teacher taught us that in severe
cases it was OK, in fact it is our responsibility to
break the law. So when I crossed the line at Fort Benning
(in 1997, 1999, and 2000), I was practicing a lesson
that I learned in school.
When I made the serious decision each time to participate
in a direct action to close the School of the Americas
(SOA) - now the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security
Cooperation (WHISC) - I was inspired by the Jewish concept
of “tikkun olam”. Translated from the Hebrew, this means
the just ordering of human society and the world - or
more literally, the repair of the world. I was also
inspired by the Jewish prophetic tradition of social
justice. As a Jew, I am moved to work to repair the
tragic consequences of the SOA/WHISC.
The three times I crossed the line at Fort Benning,
I have felt what the Jewish theologian and philosopher
Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel felt when he marched together
with Martin Luther King out of Selma. He believed that
it was a day of sanctification, filled with spiritual
significance, and he felt as though his legs were praying.
I was praying with my feet during those holy moments
as we gathered together to do tikkun olam at Fort Benning.
This trial is not about whether I crossed that line
at Fort Benning or not. I did cross it. Rather, this
trial is about bringing truth to the lie that SOA/WHISC
helps Latin American governments to promote stable democracies.
This is an obscene lie. The opposite is the truth. When
Panama kicked the School of the Americas out of its
country in 1984, its president declared that the SOA
is “the biggest base for destabilization in Latin America.”
This School is funded by our taxes. Graduates of the
School/Institute use the tactics learned, in courses
taught by the US Army, against their own people. The
victims of SOA graduates are those working for a better
life - working for land reform, for better wages, for
adequate housing and health care for the poor - and
the victims of the SOA graduates are those just trying
to simply live.
Over the years, we’ve learned that SOA graduates have
been responsible for
countless atrocities. The movement to close this School
of Assassins has forced the Pentagon to make cosmetic
changes to “reform” the School, even changing its name.
But we know that past “reforms” have not worked and
that this latest “reform” is not the answer. The atrocities
continue: in Guatemala with the 1998 murder of Bishop
Juan Gerardi by an accused SOA graduate; in Bolivia
where the president, a former military dictator and
SOA graduate, declared a state of siege and ordered
troops into the streets
against the people; and most notably in Colombia, with
over 10,000 troops trained at the SOA and the worst
human rights record in all of Latin America.
So I am doing what I can to close this notorious School/Institute.
I have written letters to my elected officials; I have
helped organize public forums to educate others about
the situation; and yes, I have solemnly and sincerely
entered Fort Benning asking that the School be closed.
I hope my actions, the actions of my friends on trial
with me, and the actions of thousands of others in our
movement will serve as a catalyst to others to
act to close the School/Institute in whatever way is
best for them.
Together, I believe, we will bring about justice and
that the SOA/WHISC will be closed.
Rebecca Kanner
of Ann Arbor, Michigan is one of the 26 School of the
Americas protesters who were convicted of criminal trespass
last summer. Rebecca received a six- month sentence
and a $500 fine, and is currently serving her sentence
at the Women's Work Camp in Pekin, Illinois. She is
due to be released in January.
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