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    Carl K. Kabat (October 10, 1933 – August 4, 2022) was an American priest of the Catholic religious order Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate, best known for his eccentric, nonviolent protests against nuclear weapons. He served more than 17 years total in prison over his lifetime.


    Early life


    Kabat was born on October 10, 1933, on a farm in Scheller, Jefferson County, Illinois, United States, the third of five children. He dropped out of the University of Illinois where he was a pre-med student. He was ordained to the priesthood in 1959 one year after his elder brother Paul, a member of the same order. He served as a missionary first in the Philippines and then in Brazil.


    Activism


    On September 9, 1980, Kabat and seven others (known as the Plowshares Eight) entered the General Electric Re-entry Systems Building in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, where Mark 12A reentry vehicles were made. They damaged two vehicles, poured blood on documents, and prayed for peace. They were arrested and initially charged with burglary and other charges. The story is partly told in the book ARISE AND WITNESS: Poems by Anne Montgomery, RSCJ, About Faith, Prison, War Zones and Nonviolent Resistance, published in 2024.
    In February 1981, they underwent a jury trial in Norristown, Pennsylvania. During their trial they were denied a justification defense and did not present expert testimony. Due to the Court's suppression of individual testimony about the Mark 12A and U.S. nuclear war-fighting policies, four left the trial and returned to witness at General Electric. They were re-arrested and returned to court. They were convicted by a jury of burglary, conspiracy, and criminal mischief and sentenced to prison terms of five to ten years. They appealed and the Pennsylvania Superior Court reversed their convictions in February 1984. In November 1984, Kabat was one of four protesters who cut through a chained fence and broke into a Minuteman II silo 30 miles east of Kansas City, Missouri. They were arrested while sitting in a circle, singing, and holding hands. For that protest, Kabat received an 18-year prison sentence and served 10 years.
    Following a ruling in the fall of 1985 by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in favor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania on certain issues (including the exclusion of the justification defense), the Plowshares Eight case was returned to the Superior Court Appeals Panel. In December 1987, the Superior Court of Pennsylvania refused their appeal, but ordered a re-sentencing. This ruling, however, was appealed to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. In February 1989 the Pennsylvania Supreme Court denied a hearing of any further issues in the case, and on October 2, 1989, the U.S. Supreme Court announced it would not hear the Plowshares Eight appeal. On April 10, 1990, the Plowshares Eight were resentenced by the Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas in Norristown and, with neither the prosecutor nor General Electric making any recommendations or asking reparations, paroled for up to 23½ months in consideration of time already served in prison. Judge James Buckingham considered statements by the defendants, attorney Ramsey Clark, Dr. Robert Jay Lifton, and Professors Richard Falk and Howard Zinn, placing the crime in the context of the common plight of humanity, international law, America's long tradition of dissent, and the primacy of individual conscience over entrenched political system.
    In 2009, Kabat protested at a Minuteman missile site outside of Greeley, Colorado.
    On July 4, 2011, and again on July 4, 2012, Kabat entered the Kansas City Plant, a nuclear bomb component manufacturing facility then under construction in Kansas City, Missouri. He referred to the trespass as the 85% Pruning Hooks action, in reference to the fact that the plant produced approximately 85% of the non-nuclear components for US nuclear weapons.
    On December 13, 2013, Kabat and five other protestors were found guilty of again trespassing at the Kansas City Plant, but were given the unusual sentence of writing essay responses to questions posed by the judge.


    Death


    Kabat died at the age of 88 on August 4, 2022, at the Madonna Oblate Residence in San Antonio, Texas.


    See also


    Plowshares Movement
    Dorothy Day


    References




    = Additional sources

    =
    O'Neill, Patrick (September 29, 2000). "Fr. Carl Kabat faces prison, ouster from order". National Catholic Reporter.
    DeGette, Carl (October 24, 2000). "Gerash to defend activist priest". Denver News.
    Strabala, William; Palecek, Michael (2002). Prophets Without Honor: A Requiem for Moral Patriotism. Algora Publishing. pp. 295ff. ISBN 9781892941985.
    "Clowns for Peace". Prairie Public. June 20, 2022.

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Carl Kabat - Wikipedia

Carl K. Kabat OMI (October 10, 1933 – August 4, 2022) was an American priest of the Catholic religious order Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate, best known for his eccentric, nonviolent protests against nuclear weapons. He served more than 17 years total in prison over his lifetime.

Rev. Carl Kabat, Peace Activist and ‘Fool for Christ,’ Dies at 88

Aug 17, 2022 · The Rev. Carl Kabat, a Roman Catholic priest and tenacious yet joyful foe of nuclear weapons who spent nearly 20 years in prison for protests that involved bolt cutters, human blood and clown...

Carl Kabat, priest, clown and relentless anti-nuclear weapons …

Aug 5, 2022 · Oblate Fr. Carl Kabat, one of the 1980 Plowshares Eight and a relentless anti-nuclear weapons protester whose four decades of civil disobedience drew bitter critics and many admirers, died Aug. 4...

Carl Kabat, OMI, Noted Peace Activist Dies

Sep 7, 2022 · Rev. Fr. Carl Kabat, OMI, a tireless opponent of nuclear weapons, died on August 4 in San Antonio, Texas, at the age of 88. Much of his influence came from his unbending commitment to public protests, and a defiant spirit with a touch of sly wit.

Father Carl Kabat, a former Baltimore resident, spent 17 years in ...

Aug 9, 2022 · Oblate Father Carl Kabat, a former Baltimore resident who routinely described himself as a "fool for Christ" for his many faith witnesses challenging U.S. nuclear weapons policy, died Aug. 4 at his religious order's Madonna Residence in San Antonio.

Father Carl Kabat, who spent 17 years in prison for anti-nuclear ...

Aug 10, 2022 · WASHINGTON (CNS)—Oblate Father Carl Kabat, who routinely described himself as a “fool for Christ” for his many faith witnesses challenging U.S. nuclear weapons policy, died Aug. 4 at his...

Rev. Carl Kabat, nuclear arms opponent with Plowshares Eight, …

Aug 11, 2022 · The Rev. Carl Kabat, a tireless opponent of nuclear weapons whose decades of protests included damaging warhead nose cones with a group known as the Plowshares Eight that gave new focus to the...

Fr. Carl Kabat, plowshares activist and priest, dies at age 88

Aug 7, 2022 · Oblate Fr. Carl Kabat, one of the 1980 Plowshares Eight and a relentless anti-nuclear weapons protester whose four decades of civil disobedience drew bitter critics and many admirers, died Aug. 4 at age 88. Kabat did it his way, never fitting any preordained mode.

From 1981: Father Carl Kabat of the Plowshares Eight on the risk …

Aug 23, 2022 · On Sept. 9, 1980, Oblate Father Carl Kabat and seven others walked into the General Electric Space Division plant in King of Prussia, Pa., and, using hammers, damaged two nuclear warheads.

Obituary | Rev. Carl K. Kabat, OMI | ANGELUS FUNERAL HOME

Rev. Carl K. Kabat, OMI, 88, died on August 4, 2022 at Oblate Madonna Residence, San Antonio, Texas. Fr. Kabat was born to the late Nick and Anna (Skorczewski) Kabat in Scheller, IL, on October 10, 1933.