Sr. Helen Prejean, a Sister of St. Joseph of Medaille, is seen in Anaheim, Calif., calling for an end to the death penalty, in this 2016 file photo. (CNS photo/The Tidings/J.D. Long-Garcia)
Sr. Helen Prejean, a Sister of St. Joseph, shows no signs of slowing down in her long-standing fight to end the death penalty.
At 83, she is writing her fourth book while directing her advocacy organization, Ministry Against the Death Penalty, in New Orleans.
She spends a fair amount of time on the road as she continues to give talks, especially on college campuses, about the injustices she sees with capital punishment. She also continues to minister to both death-row inmates and murder victims' families.
She has accompanied six men to their executions.
When Catholic News Service asked Prejean in a Sept. 30 interview where she gets her energy, her responses all revolved around the work she does.
For starters, she said she is energized by those she ministers to on death row — currently, that is Manuel Ortiz, a Louisiana inmate in his 60s. The Salvadoran has been on death row for close to 30 years and continues to say he is innocent for the sentence he received for hiring someone to murder his wife. Prejean said Ortiz is a prayerful man with a great devotion to Our Lady of Guadalupe.
"How does he get up every morning in that cell 30 years now? How does anybody do that?" Prejean asked. She said she comes away more enlivened from every visit with him and is also overwhelmed by what he goes through — "knowing you're innocent, knowing the lies they told about you in trial."
His case, along with the cases of the 690 people currently on death row in this country, remind her "we've got our work cut out for us," she said.
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Her passion for both the innocent and the guilty on death row — who all have God-given dignity, she points out — has been her driving force since she witnessed her first execution in 1984: the electrocution of Patrick Sonnier, a 34-year-old man found guilty of killing two teenagers.
Prejean first came to know Sonnier as a pen pal when she volunteered to write to someone on death row. From that correspondence, she later became Sonnier's spiritual adviser.
She has often referred to her decision to write to someone on death row as a move of "Sneaky Jesus," saying Jesus sneaks up and draws you into doing something that seems small but in the end becomes life-changing.
Because Sonnier wanted Prejean to be with him and to pray for him at his execution, Prejean agreed. But nothing could have prepared her for what she witnessed.
"What I saw set my soul on fire, a fire that burns in me still," she wrote in her memoir, River of Fire.
After leaving the prison in the middle of the night, she said she threw up in the parking lot. But from that day forward, she knew that she had to do something about what she had seen.
As she put it: "Our faith awakens and we speak."
"I knew very few people were going to get this opportunity ever to be in [the execution chamber]. I'm the witness," she said, adding that she began to speak with whoever would listen.
At first, she encountered a lot of criticism with people shouting things at her like: "What do you know? What's your authority? The Catholic Church upholds a right of the state to take life!"
She didn't back down, though.
"You just stay in there because you know what your eyes have seen, you know what your heart has felt, you know what the Gospel of Jesus says about loving your enemy and forgiving."
So she has stayed in there for nearly four decades. Starting with parish talks and then moving on to writing Dead Man Walking and speaking to St. John Paul II and Pope Francis about death penalty wrongs.
"Have to do it. Can't not do it," she said of her personal crusade.
Prejean, who grew up in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, entered the convent at 18 and spent years teaching in Catholic schools, has not held back in recounting details of what she has seen in state prisons in prisoners' final moments.
In 1997, she told St. John Paul that she has walked behind a man on his way to be executed, with legs shackled, hands cuffed to a belt and surrounded by guards who whispered to her: "Please pray as I make this walk that God holds up my legs."
"Where is the dignity in taking a human being and rendering them completely defenseless and killing them?" she said she asked the pope. "How do we respect the inviolable dignity even of the guilty? Can you help our church? Can you help us?"
Pope Francis meets St. Joseph Sr. Helen Prejean on Jan. 21, 2016, at the Vatican. (CNS/L'Osservatore Romano)
And he did help, she said, in a 1999 visit to St. Louis, where he described the death penalty as both cruel and unnecessary and said: "Modern society has the means of protecting itself, without definitively denying criminals the chance to reform."
His 1995 encyclical Evangelium Vitae ("The Gospel of Life"), the pope spoke against the death penalty, but he included the caveat that it could be used if absolutely necessary to defend society. Prejean said that phrase made her heart drop because she knew those words would be used by anyone who wanted to sentence someone to death.
She likened St. John Paul's discussion of the death penalty to taking the issue to the net, then Pope Francis pushed it over the net in 2018. That was when he announced the revision of the Catechism of the Catholic Church to include a description of the death penalty as "an attack on the inviolability and dignity of the person" and saying it was inadmissible in all cases.
There's no doubt Prejean was happy that day. But by no means did she take a break afterward.
She knows there is still plenty of support in the United States for capital punishment, even as some states are abolishing it, and that Catholics are not much different from the general public in their death penalty views.
A 2021 poll by Pew Research shows that 60% of U.S. adults favor the death penalty for people convicted of murder, including 27% who strongly favor it. It also showed Catholics falling into that same bracket, with 58% of them generally supportive of capital punishment and 27% strongly favoring it.
Prejean said people in the pews need to learn about the death penalty in Catholic schools and parish adult education programs.
She said she is part of a broader movement, likening it to "a pot that begins to boil and these little bubbles start at the bottom and they start rising up. Well, I was one of those little bubbles."
And even now, the work doesn't get old for her.
"There's a great life when you feel you're fulfilling your purpose," she said, adding that she is glad to be awake to today's social injustices even though she said it took 40 years to happen.
"It's a great grace to be awake and then to be engaged in soul-sized stuff," she said. "Bring it on."