| Conservative Spotlight:
St. Gabriel Possenti Society
By Joseph A. D'Agostino
Human Events Online
July 8, 2004
Some modern Christians, as well as other
religious people, suffer from the notion that self-defense
is wrong--and others think self-defense is acceptable as long
as one does not carry a firearm in order to do it. By spreading
the story of a 19th Century Italian saint, the St. Gabriel
Possenti Society works to counteract that impression.
The society's founder and president, John
Snyder, is a long-time lobbyist for 2nd Amendment rights in
Washington, D.C. Director of Publications and Public Affairs
for the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear
Arms, Snyder incorporated the society in 1989. "He's
fairly modern. He used revolvers," said Snyder in explaining
why St. Gabriel Possenti was chosen instead of a warrior saint
such as crusader St. Louis IX. "He was known as quite
a marksman. He defended an entire village from a gang of terrorists.
He was not in a war. He was in a situation that many people
can find themselves in, which is having to defend themselves."
And, crucially, said Snyder: "He used a handgun for self-defense
but never killed anybody."
The society's website summarized an incident
in the life of Gabriel Possenti, an athletic young man who
was a seminarian at the time: "In 1860, a band of soldiers
from the army of Garibaldi entered the mountain village of
Isola, Italy. They began to burn and pillage the town, terrorizing
its inhabitants. Possenti, with his seminary rector's permission,
walked into the center of town, unarmed, to face the terrorists.
One of the soldiers was dragging off a young woman he intended
to rape when he saw Possenti and made a snickering remark
about such a young monk being all alone. Possenti quickly
grabbed the soldier's revolver from his belt and ordered the
marauder to release the woman. The startled soldier complied,
as Possenti grabbed the revolver of another soldier who came
by. Hearing the commotion, the rest of the soldiers came running
in Possenti's direction, determined to overcome the rebellious
monk.
"At that moment a small lizard ran
across the road between Possenti and the soldiers. When the
lizard briefly paused, Possenti took careful aim and hit the
lizard with one shot." His next shot, he promised, would
be "through your heart." The soldiers, impressed
with Possenti's skills, gave in. They put out the fires they
had started and left town. The young Possenti died of consumption
two years later.
Snyder wrote a small book, Gun Saint (Telum,
2003), about Possenti and lobbies the Vatican to declare him
"the patron of hand-gunners." "Nobody has said
yes or no," said Snyder of his efforts in Rome. "They
say it requires more study." Snyder explains to people
that there is a "theological basis of the doctrine of
legitimate self-defense. There's a lot of confusion among
a lot of religious people about this. There is a pacifistic
element that needs to be corrected. The right to self-defense
is compatible with and commensurate with the charity of Christ."
This is the true pro-life position, he insisted. "If
you state you have the right to life but that you don't have
the right to the means to protect that right, you create a
problem," he said.
The soldiers that Possenti faced down were
renegades from their army. But oftentimes, governments use
their power to exterminate populations. In Gun Saint , Snyder
cites Death by Gun Control by Aaron Zelman and Richard Stevens,
which shows "that each of the genocides of the 20th Century
was preceded by government confiscation of privately held
firearms. Each confiscation itself had been preceded by the
enactment of restrictive firearm laws making possible the
confiscation policy," wrote Snyder. Those genocides included
those of Stalin's Soviet Union, Hitler's German Reich, Turkey
against Armenians, Communist China, Guatemala, Uganda, Cambodia,
and Rwanda.
"There's a pretty strong pro-gun
movement in Italy," said Snyder, though "there is
no mass gun movement in Italy like here." He linked this
issue to the current War on Terror. Possenti "did defend
people from a gang of cutthroats or terrorists. That's what
we're doing today," he said. "It's the innocent
versus the malignant." He said that supporting something
like the example of St. Gabriel Possenti could help certain
Catholic bishops who have gone overboard in their opposition
to the war in Iraq. "This would help them get out of
the hole they've dug themselves into with so many stupid statements,"
Snyder said.
#
GUN SAINT
By John Michael Snyder
Telum Associates, LLC
P.O. Box 2844
Arlington VA 22202 USA
(703) 212-9863
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