Renunciation: My Pilgrimage from Catholic Military Chaplain, Hawk on Vietnam, and Medal of Honor Recipient to Civilian Warrior for Peace

Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Renunciation: My Pilgrimage from Catholic Military Chaplain, Hawk on Vietnam, and Medal of Honor Recipient to Civilian Warrior for Peace by Charles Liteky, Thomas Fenton
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Author: Charles Liteky ISBN: 9781370875313
Publisher: Thomas Fenton Publication: February 27, 2017
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Charles Liteky
ISBN: 9781370875313
Publisher: Thomas Fenton
Publication: February 27, 2017
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

"Renunciation: My Pilgrimage from Catholic Military Chaplain, Hawk on Vietnam, and Medal of Honor Recipient to Civilian Warrior for Peace" is the dramatic story of a Catholic chaplain who was awarded and then renounced the Medal of Honor. Early on Chaplain (Capt.) Charles Liteky decided that the war in Vietnam to meet the "just war" criteria of his church. As he became aware of the true nature and reasons for the war and after he discovered the effects of U.S. government policies in Central America (and, later, Iraq), he renounced his medal and left it at the Vietnam Memorial for President Ronald Reagan. After leaving the priesthood, Charlie Liteky began down the path of nonviolent direct action against the principalities and powers that lead the United States to wreak such violence and injustice around the world.

Daniel Ellsberg (former U.S. Marine company commander and defense analyst who released "The Pentagon Papers"): I met Charlie Liteky on the steps of the Capitol in 1986 when I joined him, Brian Willson, Duncan Murphy and George Mizo for the last thirteen days of their 47-day water-only fast protesting the wrongful US war against Nicaragua. When he and I, both in Vietnam in 1966-67, had yet to recognize that the US war against the Vietnamese was itself wrongful, he earned the Medal of Honor by unexcelled battlefield courage. He went on to a life of unexcelled moral courage, in his singular renunciation of the Medal twenty years later and in earning federal prison sentences for protesting the Army's School of Torturers at Ft. Benning. In the month of his death, Charlie Liteky leaves us a book that has never in our lifetimes been more urgently needed in America, to inspire courageous, conscientious resistance to both ongoing and newly wrongful policies. What a story! What a parting gift he leaves us!"

Fr. Roy Bourgeois (former U.S. Naval officer in Vietnam, Catholic priest and missionary, and founder of School of the Americas Watch): "In these challenging times, people are searching for inspiration and hope. Charlie Liteky's transformation—from wounded warrior in Vietnam to internationally known war resister—has touched the lives of many in deep and profound ways."

Margaret Knapke (peace activist prosecuted with Charlie Liteky and others in 2000 for "crossing the line" at Ft. Benning, Georgia): "Charlie Liteky's heroism in Vietnam is legendary. His courage while saving the lives of numerous comrades is almost beyond belief, and he was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for it. But I'm even more impressed by Charlie's moral heroism—although he would never call it that. This book recounts, in his own words, the process by which Charlie became a conscious, nonviolent warrior for peace."

S. Brian Willson (former U.S. Air Force officer, Vietnam veteran, and author of "Blood on the Tracks"): "Charlie Liteky is one of a kind. Renouncing his Congressional Medal of Honor in protest of US policies, for three decades he consistently and tenaciously expressed his conscience condemning egregious US polices, at home and abroad, inspiring countless people to escalate their own actions of dissent in a country gone stark raving mad."

Sr. Megan Rice (former missionary in Africa who has been arrested almost forty times in protests against nuclear weapons): "This is Charlie's story, really 'his-story', made available for present and future generations. It proclaims vividly Charlie's honoring the universal mandate to live and to act for the common good. The Liteky brothers (Charlie and Pat) acted in accordance with common sense, with which each of us is endowed, but to which, at times, we may not always be listening. Read this book!"

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

"Renunciation: My Pilgrimage from Catholic Military Chaplain, Hawk on Vietnam, and Medal of Honor Recipient to Civilian Warrior for Peace" is the dramatic story of a Catholic chaplain who was awarded and then renounced the Medal of Honor. Early on Chaplain (Capt.) Charles Liteky decided that the war in Vietnam to meet the "just war" criteria of his church. As he became aware of the true nature and reasons for the war and after he discovered the effects of U.S. government policies in Central America (and, later, Iraq), he renounced his medal and left it at the Vietnam Memorial for President Ronald Reagan. After leaving the priesthood, Charlie Liteky began down the path of nonviolent direct action against the principalities and powers that lead the United States to wreak such violence and injustice around the world.

Daniel Ellsberg (former U.S. Marine company commander and defense analyst who released "The Pentagon Papers"): I met Charlie Liteky on the steps of the Capitol in 1986 when I joined him, Brian Willson, Duncan Murphy and George Mizo for the last thirteen days of their 47-day water-only fast protesting the wrongful US war against Nicaragua. When he and I, both in Vietnam in 1966-67, had yet to recognize that the US war against the Vietnamese was itself wrongful, he earned the Medal of Honor by unexcelled battlefield courage. He went on to a life of unexcelled moral courage, in his singular renunciation of the Medal twenty years later and in earning federal prison sentences for protesting the Army's School of Torturers at Ft. Benning. In the month of his death, Charlie Liteky leaves us a book that has never in our lifetimes been more urgently needed in America, to inspire courageous, conscientious resistance to both ongoing and newly wrongful policies. What a story! What a parting gift he leaves us!"

Fr. Roy Bourgeois (former U.S. Naval officer in Vietnam, Catholic priest and missionary, and founder of School of the Americas Watch): "In these challenging times, people are searching for inspiration and hope. Charlie Liteky's transformation—from wounded warrior in Vietnam to internationally known war resister—has touched the lives of many in deep and profound ways."

Margaret Knapke (peace activist prosecuted with Charlie Liteky and others in 2000 for "crossing the line" at Ft. Benning, Georgia): "Charlie Liteky's heroism in Vietnam is legendary. His courage while saving the lives of numerous comrades is almost beyond belief, and he was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for it. But I'm even more impressed by Charlie's moral heroism—although he would never call it that. This book recounts, in his own words, the process by which Charlie became a conscious, nonviolent warrior for peace."

S. Brian Willson (former U.S. Air Force officer, Vietnam veteran, and author of "Blood on the Tracks"): "Charlie Liteky is one of a kind. Renouncing his Congressional Medal of Honor in protest of US policies, for three decades he consistently and tenaciously expressed his conscience condemning egregious US polices, at home and abroad, inspiring countless people to escalate their own actions of dissent in a country gone stark raving mad."

Sr. Megan Rice (former missionary in Africa who has been arrested almost forty times in protests against nuclear weapons): "This is Charlie's story, really 'his-story', made available for present and future generations. It proclaims vividly Charlie's honoring the universal mandate to live and to act for the common good. The Liteky brothers (Charlie and Pat) acted in accordance with common sense, with which each of us is endowed, but to which, at times, we may not always be listening. Read this book!"

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