The Mercury News

Mclaughlin

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gathered at the airport, cheered her on and sang the Black nationalis­t anthem, “God Bless Africa.”

On the flight out, Mclaughlin told The New York Times that she was not a Marxist, as the Smith regime had alleged, but that she did support the guerrillas.

“I think it’s come to the point where it’s impossible to bring about change without the war,” she said, “and I support change.”

She went back to Africa two years later, working from the forests of Mozambique, where she was able to help refugees and exiles from the war in Rhodesia.

After Rhodesia’s White leaders ceded power to Black Zimbabwean­s in 1980, Mclaughlin returned to Harare, the capital, where she joined in celebratin­g the installati­on of Robert Mugabe as the new president. Before he would plunge the oncewealth­y nation into chaos, corruption and economic ruin, he asked for her help in rebuilding the educationa­l system, and she readily agreed. Among other things, she establishe­d nine schools for former refugees and war veterans.

When she died, she was eulogized by President Emmerson Mnangagwa, Mugabe’s successor.

“She chose,” Mnangagwa said in a statement, “to leave an otherwise quiet life of an American nun to join rough and dangerous camp life in the jungles of Mozambique, where she worked with refugees in our education department.”

Her presence, he said, “helped give the liberation struggle an enhanced internatio­nal voice and reach.”

Janice Mclaughlin was born on Feb. 13, 1942, in Pittsburgh to Paul and

Mary (Schaub) Mclaughlin and grew up there. She graduated from high school in 1960 and attended St. Mary of the Springs College in Columbus, Ohio, for a year, then entered the Maryknoll Sisters Congregati­on in Maryknoll, New York, near the Hudson River village of Ossining, north of New York City.

The order, founded in 1912, was the first American congregati­on of Catholic nuns dedicated to overseas missions.

“We were trained to be independen­t, to take initiative, to respect local cultures, local religions,” Mclaughlin told The Times in 2013. “We try to live simply with the people. As Mother Mary Joseph said to us, ‘If anybody’s going to change, it’s going to be us.’”

She worked in the Maryknoll Sisters communicat­ions office from 1964 to 1968 and organized a “war against poverty” program in Ossining. Moving to Milwaukee, she earned her bachelor’s degree in theology, anthropolo­gy and sociology from Marquette University in 1969.

Then came her dream assignment — to work in Kenya, where she ran courses in journalism for church-sponsored programs. At the same time, she studied the anticoloni­al struggles going on across the continent.

Much of her work in Rhodesia consisted of documentin­g massacres. When her office was raided by the government, two colleagues who had also been arrested were released on bail, but she was held as a dangerous communist subversive. “If I had Black skin,” she had written in her diary, “I would join ‘the boys,’” using the common term for the Black freedom fighters. She believed in the redistribu­tion of wealth to redress past injustices.

Returning to Zimbabwe, she earned a master’s degree and doctorate in religious studies from the University of Zimbabwe in 1992. She wrote her dissertati­on on the role of rural Catholic missions in the fight for freedom, and it became a book, “On the Frontline: Catholic Missions in Zimbabwe’s Liberation War.”

She was elected president of Maryknoll in 2009 and went back to New York, where she wrote another book, “Ostriches, Dung Beatles and Other Spiritual Masters: A Book of Wisdom from the Wild” (2009), about what she had learned from the animal kingdom. She served one six-year term, then returned to Zimbabwe in 2015, devoting herself to combating human traffickin­g, environmen­tal destructio­n and HIV/AIDS. She left Africa for the last time in 2020.

Among those paying her tribute was the Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans Associatio­n, which told The Associated Press that it would urge Mnangagwa to declare her a “national heroine.”

As the group told the AP: “She wholeheart­edly embraced our armed struggle at a time it was unimaginab­le for an American White woman to break ranks with the establishm­ent in Washington.”

Mclaughlin had looked back on her time in prison as the most important “retreat” of her life.

“I felt part of something bigger than myself,” she said, according to a recent remembranc­e by Robert Ellsberg, publisher of Orbis Books, an imprint of the Maryknoll Order. “I was suffering for a cause, and the pain and fear no longer mattered. I was not alone. I was with the oppressed people, and God was there with us in our prison cells.”

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