Tag Archives: Pornchai Moontri

Divine Mercy and the Doors of My Prisons — Guest Article by Pornchai Moontri

pornchai moontri-

Divine Mercy and the Doors of My Prisons

by Pornchai Moontri

April 7 is Divine Mercy Sunday, and my third anniversary of becoming a Catholic. When my friend, Father George David Byers asked me to write a guest post for Holy Souls Hermitage, I thought of all sorts of things I would like to write, but I don’t know how to write about Divine Mercy because it is a total mystery to me. I know that I am here writing this because of Divine Mercy, but I do not understand it at all.

Last year about this same time, my friend and fellow prisoner, Father Gordon MacRae [about], asked me to write a guest post for These Stone Walls, so I wrote “The Duty of a Knight: To Dream the Impossible Dream.” Father Gordon is the person who lives in this prison cell with me, but I know him as just “G.” That is not disrespect for I respect him very greatly. It is just that in prison there are no titles from our past life, just names and numbers, so here he is just Gordon or “G” as most call him.

pornchai moontriIn “The Duty of a Knight,” I wrote about how G and I became friends, and I also wrote about that in “Pornchai’s Story.” It was published by the Catholic League as the Conversion Story of 2008. There is a part of my story that I want to explain more about, but when I wrote it I was not able to see the whole story myself. I see it better now. It is the story of that big mystery, Divine Mercy.

Sometimes Divine Mercy shows me its presence in my life. The latest example was today. It was over a week ago that Father Byers asked me to write, but I had to wait for my friend G to finish his Holy Week post for These Stone Walls before I could use his typewriter. As I began to type this today, G asked me what was the date that I lost my freedom.

pornchai6

This is the clock Pornchai made in the prison wood-shop, which he sent in to Holy Souls Hermitage.

We both looked at the calendar on our cell wall and I saw with a shock that it was this date, March 21, at the very moment I sat down to begin this post. It is 21 years ago this very moment that I took an innocent man’s life and then lost my freedom. It is so strange that on this of all days, I am writing of Divine Mercy and my conversion.

So let me go back to the beginning, long before that awful thing happened. I am sorry if reading some of this might be uncomfortable for you. It is not easy for me to write it either, and some of it you may already know, but the Divine Mercy part of this story does not make much sense without it, so here goes.

When I was very young, I lived on a farm in the north of Thailand. I raised water buffalo, rice, and sugar cane.

rice paddies thailand from oursunnylife

When I was 11 years old, I was taken from there and brought to the United States to live in Bangor, Maine. I was brought here by my mother who had left me when I was two, and who I did not even know. She was with a man who was to be my stepfather, and together they took me from Thailand.

sugar cane thailand googled image

I did not understand English, and in Thailand I never went to school. Like most boys in Thailand then, I was sent to study for a year at a Buddhist monastery, but that was my only schooling. I have very cloudy memories of the Buddhist monastery.

buddhist school googled image

When I was taken from Thailand, my head was filled with all sorts of hope about what my life in America would be like. It’s hard to explain, but my memory of my life in Thailand is on the other side of a very dense fog. I only remember a little of it.

water buffalo thailand googled imageI remember being asked what I would like to eat when I come to America and I remember feeling hopeful at the question because food was scarce in Thailand. I remember hearing that when I was two years old, when my mother left me, I was treated for severe malnutrition. As a result, I was small for my age.

The first three years of my life in America replaced all my memories of childhood in Thailand with the memories of living in a nightmare in Bangor, Maine. I was forcibly raped by my stepfather, over and over, and if I resisted, I was beaten.

the scream googled imageNot long after my arrival, my new home became a prison of physical violence and sexual abuse. The story of sexual abuse is an awful story, and I know today that I must learn how to live with the ongoing trauma of it. The first and biggest loss was trust. I lost my ability to trust another human being. Recovering the ability to trust has been a lifelong mountain to climb. It was the first thing taken from me, and the most painful to restore.

I also lost the ability to laugh or smile, something that has only come back in the last few years. But the most powerful effect of those years of abuse was a life of constant anxiety and panic. When I was living in that house, I fled again and again, only to be brought back each time, sometimes even by the police who could not understand why I would run from such a good home. My captor was a respected member of the community, and in everyone’s mind I was just a kid he saved from a life of poverty in Thailand.

bangor maine from nedevelopment

When I was sent to a delinquent school at age 14, a counselor there learned of what happened to me. It was reported to the police, but my stepfather’s story was believed and mine was not even listened to. So the “Gook-kid” just ran away again into a life on the streets.

I spent the next four years as a homeless teenager on the streets of Bangor. Sometimes at night my mother would bring me things where I was living under a bridge, and in the winter friends took me in here and there. Sometimes they would sneak me into their homes after their parents went to sleep, and I would sleep on their floors.

Then, on March 21, 1992, when I was 18 years old, I took a man’s life. He was 27 years old, and we struggled as I tried to flee from him. He was much larger than me and he pinned me to the ground. I was told that in rage I stabbed him, but I have no memory of it. That night I was taken to jail, and the next morning the man died. I never again saw freedom. My sorrow for what I had done crushed my soul.

solitary confinement - googled imageI was broken, and when I was put on trial I could offer no defense. Nothing of my prior life came into the trial. My silence was seen as angry defiance, but it wasn’t, and my public defender did little to help. In my trial, the court heard from everyone but me. At 19, I was convicted of the crime of “murder with deliberate indifference to human life,” and sentenced to 45 years in prison.

My stepfather came nowhere near the trial, but he asked my mother to visit me in jail before my trial, and ask me not to say anything about my past life with him. Being young, ashamed, and afraid, I did as she asked. Several years after I was sent to prison, my mother was murdered. That crime was never solved.

The news media described me as a monster. The judge said America gave me many opportunities to turn my life around. I said nothing. When I went to prison, I was cut off from everyone and everything. I remember that a young woman my age came to visit me in prison just after my trial. She told me that she was in that parking lot that day and saw what happened and said it was not at all like what the police and newspapers were saying. She said that when she went to the police with the truth, they sent her away. I sent her away too. I remember that I just thought, “What’s the point?” I thought my life was hopeless.

THE PRIEST IN MY PRISON

Father Gordon MacRae2At about this same time, about 200 miles away in Keene, New Hampshire, Father Gordon MacRae was accused by a man who as a teenager had accused at least three other men of sexual abuse. In an almost total reversal of my story, Father G was condemned from the start, with no investigation at all. His story of being falsely accused was believed by no one. The man who as a teenager had a long criminal record, and waited until age 27 to make the accusation, was believed by everyone in spite of having a constantly changing story. Father G was declared guilty even before his trial, and even by his own Bishop. A lot of money changed hands and Father G’s freedom and priesthood were taken from him.

His accuser ended up with $200,000 from the Catholic Church and Father G ended up in prison with a longer sentence than even mine. Most people know he could have served only a year or two if he would plead guilty, but he just wouldn’t. If he had taken the easy way out, he and I would never even have met and my life would have been very different. That part is the great mystery of Divine Mercy.

Back in my prison, I was an angry young man who fought with everyone. There was a reason for my fighting that I kept secret from myself. The sexual abuse I suffered made me feel weak and helpless. I was determined to prove to myself and everyone that I was not helpless, that I needed no one, that I could defend myself.

As a result of all the violence in me and around me, I was kept in solitary confinement for many years. I was treated like a dangerous animal kept in a cage away from the rest of the human race. Sitting in solitary confinement in anger and rage and hurt, I knew nothing of Father G and his trial in the next state over. I had no idea we would ever meet and our two stories would one day collide.

solitary confinement h-t guardian

After 14 years, I was transferred from solitary confinement in Maine to a prison in New Hampshire. Not much inside me had changed. I went right into this new prison’s solitary confinement unit. A year later I emerged and ended up sharing a cell with a man convicted of sexual abuse – a Catholic priest no less. Can you just imagine this twist of fate? Can you just imagine how someone like me viewed this situation? Can you just imagine this priest, falsely accused and treated like a dangerous rapist, suddenly sharing 96 square feet of cell space with an angry, hostile victim of sexual abuse?

gordon macrae h-t to vincenzo at sanctepaterIt was not long before I knew with absolute certainty what I suspected the moment we met. This man is innocent of that crime. How do I know this? Like most people who have endured what I have endured, I have a powerful radar for predators. I knew never to trust, and when I am in the presence of such a predator my radar tells me to fight or flee. I especially know sexual predators. Prison is filled with them, and the great scandal of this story of Divine Mercy is that no one here – absolutely no one – believes Father G to be one of them. For almost 19 years of his being in prison, often with young men still in their teens, there has been not a single hint of anything dark or twisted in him. We cannot say that about any other prisoner.

tncrrg logoThis priest that accusers and their money-hungry lawyers and even the Catholic Church all declared to be a monster became the only person on Earth I could trust. He saw the truth of my life long before I did, and drew the deepest pain of it out of me like extracting poison. He set me on the path to freedom, the path to Christ, and taught me how to walk through this valley of the shadow of death fearing no evil, for Christ, like Father G himself, is at my side.

SAINT MAXIMILIAN KOLBE IN OUR PRISON

These Stone Walls Maximilian Kolbe Pornchai Father GordonThis was all the work of Divine Mercy so it is no mystery that I was brought into the Church on Divine Mercy Sunday. I once thought that was an accident, but there is no way that it was. When I decided to become Catholic I wanted it to be a surprise to Father G, so I planned to be Baptized on his birthday, April 9. That was a Friday in 2010, so then I found out I had to wait until the following Sunday – which just happened to be Divine Mercy Sunday.

And it just so happened that on Divine Mercy Sunday in 2010, Bishop John McCormack was coming to the prison for a Mass. So the prison Chaplain, Deacon James Daly, sent the Bishop a copy of “Pornchai’s Story,” and told him he would be giving me First Eucharist. In his sermon. Bishop McCormack said that my life was transformed because I learned to trust one single man. He did not mention who that man was even though that man was sitting right next to me in the prison Chapel. The Bishop told me after the Mass, “You have a good friend.” I replied to him, “You have a good priest.”

Pornchai and the bishop from shrine of the divine mercy web page

There is someone else living in this prison cell with us. He is another prisoner and a man we were both led to by Divine Mercy. He is Saint Maximilian Kolbe. I took his name as my Christian name because I met him through Father G. He is on our wall and also just above the sink and mirror where I wash and shave. I do not go through a day without seeing this Saint, this good friend, and this fellow prisoner who gave his life for another at Auschwitz. I honored him by taking his name because I see him so clearly in Father G.

dawn eden the journey homeThere is a very good book that helped me so much in my long road to recovery from sexual abuse and childhood trauma. It is a book by Dawn Eden called My Peace I Give You: Healing Sexual Wounds with the Help of the Saints. I was so happy to see Dawn write of Saint Maximilian Kolbe. dawn eden picShe wrote of how she began speaking to Saint Maximilian as she would to a friend. So do I. So does Father G. Her book opened my eyes to the truth that trusting Divine Mercy is my only hope. [[On Amazon: HERE]]

padre pioHere in our prison, for Father G and for me, Saint Maximilian is our friend, and we cope with prison in his company. Every Sunday night before Mass, we ask his prayers, and those of Saint Padre Pio, our other friend, that our lives may be worthy of this gift of the Eucharist. Father G and I are both Knights at the Foot of the Cross, a movement founded by Saint Maximilian’s order calling on us to offer up our suffering and our imprisonment for the good of others.

saint michaelSo this is my story – from Thailand, to abuse, to prison, to despair, to the farthest place down that my soul could go, then to the light of Divine Mercy, the light of Christ. It is to me a miracle story, and its twists and turns have led me to the only path to freedom there is: the path to Christ. Jesus, I trust in You.

* * *

/// Note from Father George: I would like to call your attention to the latest book of Felix Carroll, who is the editor of http://thedivinemercy.org/ which is the official web presence of  the Marian Fathers of the Immaculate Conception of the B.V.M. over at the Divine Mercy Shrine in Stockbridge, Massachusetts. The book is about seventeen stories of Divine Mercy. Felix was astounded by the great interest in Pornchai’s story, which he had written about for the website previously. Never, he said, had any article on the Divine Mercy website generated such enormous amounts of traffic and enthusiasm.

loved lost found felix carroll pornchai moontri

The presentation of the book can be found HERE.

loved lost found felix carroll pornchai moontri-This is the kind of book you want to leave laying around for certain people you know who may need to know a bit more about the Divine Mercy in their own lives. Know anyone like that?!? Get the book! Great for the new evangelization that Pope Francis wants us to participate in. So, here: Loved, Lost, Found: 17 Divine Mercy Conversions can be ordered online or by calling 1-800-462-7426.

Fathers of Mercy chapel

The Fathers of Mercy Divine Mercy Chapel

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And, just when you think it couldn’t possibly get worse, it gets a million times better: The continuing saga of the Great Pornchai Moontri

pornchai moontriA week ago a request for prayers for Father Gordon (about) and Pornchai was put up here at Holy Souls Hermitage, with an emphasis, I said, on Pornchai. Many have been wondering what this special request was all about.

I finally got the go ahead from Father Gordon today to write something about this. I also had a good chat with Pornchai. It’s always refreshing to speak with those who reflect Jesus so well.

Those of you who don’t know about Pornchai would do well to read about him in his own words: first HERE (at the Catholic League), then HERE (at These Stone Walls). After that, search on the blog here for stories with links to These Stone Walls, The Catholic League, The Divine Mercy Shrine, etc.: http://holysoulshermitage.com/s=pornchai 

pornchai moontri-So, this is a very brief account of what happened the other week. I’m only brave enough to write this, risking making mistakes, since Pornchai himself will have a guest post coming up during Easter Week here at Holy Souls Hermitage, just in time for Divine Mercy Sunday, when he was brought into the Church. He can correct me! O.K. So…

A young, very cocky new prisoner, full of himself, continuously causing trouble everywhere he’s been, always bragging what a great competitive boxer he is, always right in everyone’s face, was living in a bunk out in the open space of the cell block in that ever so overcrowded prison. He noticed that there was a bunk opening up in the cell next to Pornchai and Father MacRae. He. Wanted. That. Bunk.

Everyone, including the prison administration, wanted that free bunk in the cell to go to another prisoner who was also living out in the open, right in front of the cell of Father Gordon and Pornchai. That other prisoner is extremely elderly, and is dying of stomach cancer and other illnesses.  

rope a dope googled imageFather Gordon helped the old fellow move into the cell. This set the young boxer to pacing for hours, obviously terribly agitated. Suddenly he appeared at the cell of Father Gordon and Pornchai, upset that he did not get the bunk he wanted. Towering head and shoulders over Pornchai, he went after Pornchai, sucker punching him the face, so that his teeth came right through his upper lip, blood everywhere.

Don’t mess with Pornchai. Let’s just say that Pornchai sent this overconfident boxer guy right to the hospital. Literally. And, mind you, a trip to the hospital is always to be avoided if possible in a prison. Pornchai really cleaned his clock. Sorry, but I just have to smile when I think of this scene. Sorry! :)

pornchai graduationBoth were sent to solitary confinement to chill out for a week. Imagine for just a moment what this must have been like for Pornchai. Everything was going great. He just graduated from High School (a diploma, not a G.E.D.), and had privileges such as woodworking and having a job in the prison, coveted pass-times for prisoners as you can imagine. He had found the faith and was enjoying going to Mass with Father MacRae. He was helping the staff psychologist help other prisoners in overcoming their past horrific lifetimes. He is the peacemaker with any prisoners who otherwise want to kill each other. All of it taken away in a second, and for all he knew, permanently. Just because someone decided to do this to him.

What was he to think about? How he had already spent some 14 years in solitary confinement? The horrors of his childhood? Should he lose himself to bitterness, rancor?

Instead, Pornchai spent much of his time in solitary confinement in prayer, and speaks of forgiveness for the other fellow, hoping that he will find the proper programs in the prison so that he can be helped, so that he can grow. Thank God, the prison officials let him out of solitary confinement, and judged that he acted in self-defense. They still let him keep his job in prison, but took away the woodworking privileges for six months as a way to say that Pornchai wiped up the floor with the other fellow a bit too well. :) I told Pornchai that that means that he can have some time to write. He was eager to do just that. I left out very many things about Pornchai’s thoughts about our Lord during these trials. Magnificent, really. But I think he will mention something of that in his own post in a few weeks time.

Know that both Father Gordon and Pornchai thank you so much for your prayers!

Oh, and, by the way, the older gentleman dying of stomach cancer did get that bunk, and is very thankful for it. The other fellow won’t ever be back in this particular cell block.

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Pornchai & the Mercy of the Lord in this Church Militant (All war is hell)

Pornchai and the bishop from shrine of the divine mercy web page

O.K. Listen up, oh ye troops in this ecclesia militans, in this Church Militant: In your charity, I’m asking you, please, to right here, right now, offer a Memorare and a prayer to Saint Michael for both Father MacRae and for Pornchai. Sometimes, the mercy of the Lord takes us right through the very fires of hell on Calvary as He draws all to Himself as He Himself is lifted up on the Cross.

Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary, that never was it known that anyone who fled to thy protection, implored thy help, or sought thine intercession was left unaided. Inspired by this confidence, I fly unto thee, O Virgin of virgins, my mother; to thee do I come, before thee I stand, sinful and sorrowful. O Mother of the Word Incarnate, despise not my petitions, but in thy mercy hear and answer me. Amen.

Sancte Michael Archangele, defende nos in proelio;
contra nequitiam et insidias diaboli esto praesidium.
Imperet illi Deus, supplices deprecamur:
tuque, Princeps militiae Caelestis,
satanam aliosque spiritus malignos,
qui ad perditionem animarum pervagantur in mundo,
divina virtute in infernum detrude.
Amen.

Saint Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle;
be our protection against the wickedness
and snares of the devil.
May God rebuke him, we humbly pray:
and do thou, O Prince of the heavenly host,
by the power of God,
thrust into hell Satan and all the evil spirits
who prowl about the world seeking the ruin of souls.
Amen.

And if I say that all war is hell, and that we are at war with Satan, I must also say that Jesus’ love for us shines most brightly in our perception when the hell is at it’s absolute worst, for then we see Jesus get to work as at no other time on our souls, forging us into His soldiers to do battle with Him, a battle of truth and goodness and kindness, which is always confronted and rejected by this world, no matter what our circumstances happen to be. But this is exactly how Jesus gets us right to heaven. Our job is only to be in humble thanksgiving for what we learn in the midst of hell, for what we learn when we see Jesus, with ineffable majesty, reach through the hell to grab us. Please, continue to pray daily, particularly for Pornchai.

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Truth is like a lion. No one has to defend it. Just set it free, and it will defend itself – Saint Augustine & Father Gordon MacRae

tsw16

Pornchai and the bishop from shrine of the divine mercy web pageFather Gordon MacRae (about) has a project for you regarding the Great Pornchai Moontri. Even if you’re a member of SNAP or VOTF reading this, surely you can do this. And even though I think SNAPers and VOTFers are a bunch of hyenas, surely they aren’t so afraid of Father Gordon MacRae that they would refrain from giving a just a few seconds to the Great Pornchai Moontri. Just a thought. All other readers can surely to this. I know many of you have already. Thank you for that. But there are some stragglers.

From a wordpress blog...

We wouldn’t want you straggling, would we? You know what happens to stragglers.

No one who is an enemy or who is wishy-washy is left standing before the Lion of the Tribe of Judah. So, get to it.

lion wdtprs

HERE

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Pornchai Moontri’s speech at his highschool graduation in prison: great story of hope for us all!

To get to know why this is such a victory, here’s an intro.

Congratulations, Pornchai! Thank you for the great example.

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Google tunnels Holy Souls Hermitage with good manners, and a techy question. Help needed!

guy fawkes mask googled image

(1)

I have some very benevolent HSH readers deep within google on their coffee breaks. Great!

But, avoiding the rest of the internet, they “tunneled” directly into my Holy Souls Hermitage WordPress blog to leave a comment. That comment was very kind and thoughtful. But they would make ANONYMOUS envious. So, my question is, GOT PRAYER? (hah!)

(2)

I have a film of Pornchai’s graduation. I’d like to put it up in a post. I don’t know how to convert this mess of files into an acceptable upload to, say, YouTube:

pornchai mootri graduation dvd files

The video files are separated from the sound files.

Suggestions?

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Finally, picturing this about the Great Pornchai Maximilian Moontri (On what makes anyone great)

pornchai graduation

Front and center, surrounded by friends and fellow graduates.

Remember this post on Pornchai’s graduation over on These Stone Walls?

I know that a certain Godmother of Pornchai will be wondering how I was able to get this picture, but she’ll just have to ask a certain Father Gordon MacRae about that. Now, before going on about Pornchai, let me reminisce just a bit about yours truly. It’s actually not a digression, completely anyway.

I know a very, very sharp witted Irish priest who can always make a wise crack on the spot, always appropriate, always incisively ironic, always geared to lifting one back into reality should one have slipped off into some corner of narrow-minded perspective. I would sometimes privately say that so-and-so seemed to be doing well in the parish in this way or that, and he would immediately scowl and reprimand me should there have been any danger that my happy demeanor was in danger of complimenting so-and-so in such a way that he or she would fall into such complacency that I would surely be sealing their fate of sliding down into hell with such words of praise! And… and… he was right, of course. One has to be discerning in the encouragement one doles out! We always need to know that we haven’t “arrived” yet, that we can do better.

Having said that, when I was in highschool, I always despised getting a lower grade than I thought I objectively deserved from this or that teacher. Asking him or her about this I would get the response that I had done very well indeed, but that the grade I had received, artificially marked lower than it should have been, would stand as an incentive for me to realize the potential that they saw in me. A compliment, I suppose. But, the idea of being marked on a curve, not against one’s class, but against the potential that another subjectively saw in me…? Honestly! But, it worked, after the shock wore off. I did not attend a very normal highschool.

At any rate, considering all that, why oh why would I compliment Pornchai (and not just this once) by providing the appelative “Great” before his name? Well, you have to know that there are those who are false heroes and those who are truly heroes:

  • On the one hand, the false heroes have mere grit determination to do something, a fallible will power that somehow they’ve manipulated for whatever self-serving reasons. They are bound to crash. It’s gotta happen.
  • On the other hand, the true heroes are such because the right thing to do is not something they imagine, but is rather provided to them with the wherewithal do carry out what is needed, even despite themselves, and they know it. Remember the fellow in New York who jumped off the subway platform onto the tracks just seconds before a train came speeding through, doing this so as to knock down in between the tracks a disabled person who had fallen down, and both were saved unscathed as the train sped over them? But this can is also be the case for the one who has a long road ahead on so many levels.

Pornchai has come a long way…

  • … from being stolen from Thailand as a little boy, being raped almost daily for years, being involved in the violent death of another, turning in on himself for years and years and years and years in solitary confinement, bitter, frustrated, angry, in a vortex of impossible anguish with zero hope at all…
  • … to being a high school graduate and impossibly brilliant mathematician and interlocutor of Father Gordon MacRae (no mean feat there!).

But that’s not good enough. Sorry. I mean, you know, sure, it’s inspiring in some way, but it can also be an occasion for getting depressed by someone else who doesn’t think that he or she is up to the impossible task of self-betterment, especially with the bar now set so very high by Pornchai, who, at one time, was so very low. Right? People running away from good example happens all the time.

But Father! But Father! Pornchai’s great at encouraging others!

Still not good enough. Did our Lord encourage us by saying that we are to love God and love neighbor and pray always and be perfect as our Heavenly Father is perfect while leaving us with nothing more than a good example and a word of encouragement? No! We would know that this is impossible for us and we would simply fall into despair at such mockery of ourselves by God Himself. Yikes!

Instead, our Lord provides us with the wherewithal, the grace, friendship with Him, so that we can follow Him, He providing our weak hearts with the solidarity of His Sacred Heart. It is that and only that which makes a hero into a true hero.

Being a hero is not about mind games of being nice. Being a hero is about being taken up into the life of Him who is the only hero ever, Christ our God, Divine Son of the Immaculate Virgin, who willingly took on what we deserve, the worst we can give out, death, so that, remaining innocent in all this, He would have the right in justice to have mercy on us, forgiving us both original sin and whatever we ourselves might have done, and… and… bringing us into a whole new life: “Father, forgive them!” and “I came to give you life to the full.”

When anyone is in reverence before Him, Jesus, when anyone has even a smidgen of humble thanksgiving before Him, when anyone is not putting oneself forward as a hero, but is instead pointing to Christ our God even if only by one’s actions of real respect for others, this is immediately sensed by these others, and they are already by that fact encouraged to be true heroes themselves in Christ Jesus, no matter how far from that they are at any given moment.

When someone takes up the invitation of our Lord’s friendship, one knows that there is no hero but Him. This takes all the pressure off. This means that no complacency is possible. One knows quite starkly, and with humble thankfulness, what our Lord does for us in giving us the graced strength to do what is right in the charity of truth and solidarity when all the while we know that on our own we would fall apart. The hero knows that it’s not about him, but about Him, Christ Jesus, King of kings and Lord of lords and Prince of the Most Profound Peace.

So, if I say — “the Great Pornchai Maximilian Moontri” — it is not to give Pornchai a damnable sense of complacency, of having arrived or having accomplished something himself. Instead, it is to point to the work of Christ Jesus in him, the work of The Hero within him, the work of the intercession of the saints, like his hero, Saint Maximilian Kolbe, OFM.Conv., within him.

It is the work of Mary’s Son, Jesus, which makes Pornchai into the Great Pornchai. It is this grace which makes sense of becoming a great mathematician and highschool graduate when this would have been considered abolutely impossible by all who knew him. These things may show that we all have great potential, but it is the work of the Son of God within us which would bring those things to be used for others, for love of God and neighbor in all solidarity with those who have little hope in any way. And that’s what it’s all about. Everyone knows this deep down. The help Pornchai brings to others is indeed helpful because others sense the work of the Son of God in him. When others are eager to learn from him, it is not so much to be able to have this or that skill, but to be able to come to know the One Pornchai knows, Christ Jesus. That’s how it always works. Always.

The Son of God, Christ Jesus, wants all of us, and gives us all a living hope, which is realized not only looking to the future, but from what we know of His love for us right now. Pornchai has come to know all this behind bars. And that, my friends, is cause for rejoicing, with Pornchai, before the Son of the Living God, ever present to us.

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Father George privileged to be “doing time” with the Great Pornchai “Super-Max”imilian Moontri

A package arrived at Holy Souls Hermitage from the New Hampshire State Prison for Men. It’s from Pornchai. What could it be? Let’s investigate. Continue reading

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Graduating in Jesus’ life: How the Great Pornchai “Super-Max” Moontri did it

The Great Pornchai “Super-Max” Moontri (with “Max” referring not only to his prison, but to his confirmation patron, another ultra-super-max prisoner, Saint Maximilian Kolbe, O.F.M.Conv., Priest and Martyr) now has his Diploma, not a GED, but a diploma. Congratulations! Here’s a bit from his commencement address:

The gift of education has shown me how to not be just a prisoner. It has shown me that the door that kept me trapped opens out, and not in. I have learned to push forward in this life and not just pull back. I have learned that this is the way to freedom.

“I have learned.” How many of us can say that our education has brought us to actually learn something, that is, to understand it, as a lived reality? Who of us could say that the lesson of life he has mentioned is something we live ourselves, pushing forward instead of pulling back?

This is an almost super-human achievement, given his life-experience and present conditions. Indeed, grace is at work here. Pornchai is a hero to all those who know him, finding inspiration and hope in seeing just how this has come about, the great drama that is truly in every life, if we only knew. Certainly, Pornchai has come to know the economy of salvation more than any of us will ever be able to get a smidgeon of understanding about.

To enter into this whole other universe of how our Lord’s goodness and kindness reaches everywhere (even, mind you, into our own hearts), click on the picture above, or HERE to go the article by Pornchai’s cell-mate, the priest’s priest, Father Gordon J. MacRae (about). It’s truly worth the read. And don’t just read it. Take Pornchai’s example. Live what you read there in your own life. Yikes!

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A source of hope and inspiration for Holy Souls Hermitage

Click on the picture to read this great article by Father Gordon MacRae (about) over at the newly revamped These Stone Walls. This article is not about Father MacRae, but about some of his fellow prisoners, including, but not only, the Great Pornchai Moontri. A great read, and, for me, a source of hope and inspiration.

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The Great Pornchai Moontri. His craftsmanship. His spirit. His Friendship. His Birthday… And his being re-written by the Word of God

Happy Birthday to the Great Pornchai Moontri! When I published this post, it was his birthday. Now he’s already working on his next year. By the way, I’m told that his first name is pronouned something like “Punch-eye”, but maybe putting the hyphen after “Pun”.

This post now makes a dozen posts in which Pornchai has been mentioned or been the very subject of the post. Yet, it’s been a little while since I’ve put anything up about him. Those who don’t know Pornchai already will surely be inspired by reading the following articles. I only include a few here, since some of these articles have many other links for you to follow. You have to know that Pornchai is a bit of a hero of mine. His saga in coming to know the friendship of Jesus is entirely awesome. He has all my respect:

(1) 28 December 2007 — Pornchai’s Story — (reprinted by Bill Donohue of the Catholic League) This is a MUST READ. Pornchai wrote this himself.

(2) 7 April 2010 — My Fifty Seven — by Father Gordon MacRae

(3) 22 July 2011 — Narrow Gate — on A Ram in the Thicket by Ryan MacDonald

(4) 11 April 2012 – The Duty of a Knight by Pornchai Moontri

In a previous post, I extracted a few brief citations from those articles, just to let you know where this is going:

(1) My name is Pornchai Moontri, and I am prisoner #38284 [That's been changed to 77948] in the New Hampshire State Prison. I come to the Catholic faith after a painful journey in darkness that my friend, Father Gordon MacRae, has asked me to write candidly. This is not something I do easily, but I trust my friend.

I was born in Bua Nong Lamphu, a small village in the north of Thailand near Khon Kaen on September 10, 1973. At the age of two, I was abandoned by my mother to be sold. A distant teenaged relative rescued me. He walked many miles to carry me away to his family farm where I worked throughout my childhood raising water buffalo, rice, and sugar cane. I never attended school, however, and never learned to read and write in Thai. Though my childhood involved hard work, I was safe and happy.

When I was 11 years old, my mother re-emerged in Thailand with a new husband – an American air traffic controller from Bangor, Maine. I was taken from Thailand by them against my will, and brought to the United States. This transition was a trauma to be endured. A month after my arrival in Bangor, my new stepfather’s motive for importing a ready-made Thai family became clear. I was forcibly raped by him at age 11, an event that was to be repeated with regularity over the next three years. I was a prisoner in his house, and resistance was only met with violence against me and against my mother. I was all of 100 pounds. I cannot describe this further. Welcome to America!

Being one of only three Asians in 1985 Bangor, and speaking little English, I did not readily comprehend my new names. “Gook,” “V.C.” and “Charlie” meant nothing to me, but I could sense the scorn with which such names were delivered. Because my English was poor, I was treated as though I was stupid. Part of my humiliation was that I had to get a paper route at age 12, and my earnings were taken from me to pay for the “privilege” of living in my captor’s house. Stephen King’s home was on my paper route. Mr. King once gave me a Christmas bonus of 25¢ for delivering his newspaper all year. The horror stories he wrote about Maine are all true. Remember the one with the evil clown? It’s true.

When I was 14, my English was better. I was a little bigger, and a lot stronger – and nothing but angry. Anger was all I had. So with it I fled that house and became a homeless teenager in and around Bangor. One day the Bangor police actually picked me up and forced me to go “home.” I would rather have gone to one of the ones Stephen King wrote about. I just fled again and again, and ended up at the Good Will Hinckley School for people like me. I was there for a year and got kicked out for fighting. I was always fighting. I fought everyone.

Back on the streets of Bangor, I began to carry a knife. At 17 and 18, a lot of people were after me. I lived under a bridge for a while and sometimes my mother would bring me things. I tried to climb out of the deep hole I was in by signing up for night classes at age 18 to finish my high school diploma. I was kicked out of Bangor High School for punching the principal.

One night, at age 18, something that lived in me got out. I got very drunk with friends, and we walked into a Bangor Shop & Save supermarket to buy cigarettes. I barely remember this. In my drunken state, I opened a bottle of beer from a case and started to drink it. The manager confronted me and ordered me to leave. I tried to flee the store, but the manager and other employees tried to keep me there. I tried to fight them off to flee. When I got outside, a manager from another Shop & Save had witnessed the incident and pounced on me. I was 130 pounds and was pinned to the ground by this 190-pound man. I think something snapped in my mind. IT was happening again. I fought, but his dead weight was suffocating me. The newspapers would later tell a different story, but this was the truth, and it is all I remember.

In jail that night, I was questioned for three hours. I was told that I had stabbed a man and was charged with attempted murder. I have no memory, to this day, of stabbing the man. The next morning, I awoke in a jail cell and was told that I was charged with Class A murder. The man had died during the night. I was told that I blew a .25 on the Breathalyzer, but the result was so high it was discarded as an error.

My stepfather could have hired expert counsel, but it was clearly not in his best interest that my life be evaluated so I was left in the care of a public defender who wanted this high profile murder off his desk.

(2) I was a teenager when I went to prison. Over the years, I was sent back to solitary confinement over and over, for up to three-and-a-half years at a time, because I was so hostile. The longer I was there each time, the more inhuman I felt and became. Living for years on end in solitary confinement joined with the guilt I felt for the life I took during a struggle when I was 18 years old. So I just gave up on myself as a human being. I sank to the very bottom of the prison I was in, and stayed there.

(3) Over the next few years, G [Father Gordon MacRae] and I discussed a lot about the life of Saint Maximilian Kolbe and about Saint Padre Pio. I drifted like an iceberg that was ever so slowly melting, and before I realized it, I was caught up in what happened to Saint Maximilian. I never had a hero, and he became one. I suddenly felt as though I was no longer just adrift at sea; the ice was all gone. Four years after my arrival in this new prison, on the day before Divine Mercy Sunday in 2010, G and I walked to the Prison Chapel where Fr. Anthony Kuzia, a nearby priest, Baptized and Confirmed me.

The next morning, Divine Mercy Sunday, I received my First Eucharist. I stepped that day out of the Dark Wood of Error into the light of day – the light of Christ. If anyone had told me of this just five years earlier, I would have thought them insane. Every demon that once controlled my life was expelled, and I was free.

(4) I dream of having an opportunity to reach those who are lost like I was, and broken, and brokenhearted, and lead them to Christ. I dream that I will be able to help young people who have had all trust broken and taken away from them. I dream that I will be able to live my life in freedom and in service to others. I dream that I will have the chance to honor someone who sought only my good despite his own captivity. I dream that I will live this life as a Catholic. I dream that I will be led to where I am supposed to go and that I will not be all alone when I get there. What used to be just a nightmare is now my dream.

======================

  • Did I mention that Pornchai has a knack for working with his fellow prisoners, defusing tense situations?
  • Did I mention that he is a superb mathematician?
  • Did I mention that he can write suberbly, candidly?
  • Did I mention that is an accomplished craftsman, a shipbuilder?
  • Did I mention that he crafted this box in which I keep the the Holy Oils?
  • Did I mention that he created a pen-set for me just now? It reminds us of how the Living Word of God is written upon our hearts by our Heavenly Father. Here it is:

I’d like to share his letter as we take a tour of this unique writing center.

Pornchai’s address, should any of you take a fancy to writing to him, is this (and write it out exactly as is):

Pornchai Moontri
P.O. Box 14 — #77948
Concord, N.H. 03302-0014 (U.S.A.)

Andand… Follow the rules or it will never reach it’s destination:

  • Use of tape and/or stickers (including religious stickers) is forbidden and will result in rejected mail.
  • Each envelope is limited to ten physical pages. Double-sided printing is OK.
  • Printed articles from the Internet are allowed (within the ten page limit) but newspaper/magazine clippings enclosed with letters are prohibited.
  • Unused postage stamps and unused writing materials are prohibited.
  • Checks to prisoners must include the prisoner’s full name and number (No. 67546), and the sender’s full name and address on both the check and the envelope. Abbreviated names (e.g. “J. Smith”) are not permitted.

Pornchai begins his letter in this way:

Peace be with you. This is Pornchai and I want to thank you for the very nice post you wrote about the keepsake box I made for you. The pictures of it were very nice and I was happy that you are using the box to store the sacred oils. This made me very proud.

I have been trying another kind of woodworking called wood turning. Using a lathe, I have turned some beautiful woods into a set of pens, and I am sending this set to you as a gift for you and Holy Souls Hermitage. The barrels of the pens are made from olivewood imported from Bethlehem. I am able to special order it, and it is very nice to work with. It has become my favorite wood for wood turning. The Jonah and Cross clips and the bands on the two pens are cast from 24-carat gold. The display box is maple and rosewood, and can be folded open to stand the pens on your desk.

I placed a plastic pen from the Pontifical College Josephinum next to Pornchai’s creation, to give you a bit of perspective on various levels:

Exquisite.

I have to say that I thought I was one to know something about the Fish and the Cross symbols in early Christianity. You can review my somewhat rambunctious views in this Holy Souls Hermitage Special (one of my favorite posts, if I do say so myself). However, it is from Pornchai that I hear for the first time that the fish is called “The Jonah”. We call to mind that Jesus said of himself that there will be no other sign given to this generation (in which we still live) other than the sign of Jonah. Jesus fulfilled that sign by being crucified, and then being buried in the belly of the earth for three days. Thus, the catechetical set of pens, one with the fish, one with the cross. Thanks for that, Pornchai! Did I mention that he is a disciple of Saint Maximilian Kolbe?

Pornchai continues:

A little pressure at the band and the pen will pull apart to replace the Cross pen refill if you need to.

Indeed. I’d just like to point out the absolute precision that goes into such a detail. Look inside of the top of the barrel of the pen. It’s lined with metal to receive the bottom half. This is nanoprecision. I know a machinist who’s CAD program permits him an exactitude of about 1/10,000′s of an inch. This is better. And note how very, very thin the wood is. Yikes!

Pornchai says that this is olive wood from Bethlehem, and I believe him. However, I think you’ll agree with me that this almost transparent wood has all the appearance of a golden marble.

Everything fits together most precisely…

Sorry for the blurry shot here. What I wanted to point out is the matching, continuous grain on both sides of the pen. Not easy to do. If you make a mistake on one side or the other, you have to start all over again. Nothing blurry about Pornchai’s work.

A good shot of the maple and rosewood (top inside cover)…

And there we are. But it will stay open on the desk!

Pornchai continues:

I have sent a few of these pens and boxes to a furniture store in New Hampshire that sells our creations for us. I am sending you one of their brochures. I can make these for others who want them as well.

I was happy to note in that brochure that the prisoners also build toys for Toys for Tots, which is a USMC sponsored program. SEMPER FI! Those up near Concord, NH (Franklin) can go to Grevoir Furniture to see what’s available. They have a website for directions and contacts.

It’s coming up to Christmas time. You won’t regret writing to the Great Pornchai about this.

He continues…

I want to thank you for all the prayers and Masses you have offered for me and my friend, Father G, and for all the support you have given to These Stone Walls. It is strange that a website could change the life of a prisoner, but just by living in the same prison cell as Father G, I have been exposed to a world of true believers that I did not know existed. My whole life and outlook has changed thanks to the readers of These Stone Walls who have touched my heart. I see things very differently now, and I am very happy to count you as a friend. God bless you, Father.

Your brother in Christ,

Pornchai Moontri

I’m very honored to be Pornchai’s friend.

Now, just to say: Pornchai knows I like to write. And I confess I do write with the help of a computer keyboard for big projects, but once in a while I have to sign my name to this or that document, to this or that letter, to this or that oath of fidelity, or, please God, in the future, to this or that contract with a publisher. That’s what I would like to reserve the use of the pens for, besides their being a catechetical conversation starter for any seminarians or priests or bishops who visit the hermitage. I’ll also be able to use that to tell them about another of Pornchai’s friends, Father Gordon MacRae (about), whom Pornchai mentioned in his letter. If you don’t know about http://www.thesestonewalls.com go there and check it out. Click!

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UPDATE: Thanks to benefactors (with a very moving donation from Pornchai Moontri)

The great Pornchai Moontri – whose depth of humanity, whose depth of faith I admire immensely — is still a prisoner in a Maximum Security Prison in New Hampshire. Much of that was spent in solitary confinement. He now knows Jesus as a great friend… Jesus, the Son of the Living God, the Son of the Immaculate Conception. You can read about Pornchai in his own words over on These Stone Walls. We’ve mentioned him many times here on Holy Souls Hermitage. Just type in “pornchai moontri” into the search box on the sidebar. Yikes!

Well, this same Pornchai Moontri is a Master Woodworker, besides being a most extraordinary mathematician. He sent me a keepsake box he made recently in prison. The workmanship is absolutely impeccable. All the joints come together exactly. The cover has no slippage. There are unending details, like the recessed bottom…

The artwork…

The lining…

And… and… the sacred oils from the Chrism Mass fit perfectly inside. You couldn’t ask for a more perfect repository for the Oil of Catechumens, the Oil of the Infirm, the Sacred Chrism. Thank you, Pornchai. Of course, that’s kind of a guarantee for prayers for you!

* * *

Thanks go to D. F. for his contribution to Holy Souls Hermitage. He sent in a project he has been working on, pictured above, The Life of Christ Rosary. Doctor (for he’s a physician), might I share this in more detail with the readers? The good doctor also recommends I get rabies shots for the bats in the hermitage. I must report that that bat invasion was a once off event. I kind of miss them!

Thanks go to C.W., who sent in a donation, also of Mystic Monk Coffee (very delicious) and something very mysterious to me, a Mystic Monk Press. I will have to learn how to use such a contraption. It looks most complicated. Not the usual coffee grounds in a billy bucket over an open fire!

Thanks go to D.K. for her contribution to Holy Souls Hermitage. Her words of forcing the gift on me against all my protestations should satisfy any IRS invasion! And, yes, we are keeping up the prayers for N. at John Hopkins. Yikes!

Thanks go to TPF and RLF  for their contribution to Holy Souls Hermitage! Very kind indeed!

Thanks go to GPE and SME for their donation to Holy Souls Hermitage. Always faithful!

Thanks go to M.L., who sent in this frightful volume about the Vatileaks. You can’t get more out of context than this, can you?

Thanks fo the Tyburns for sending in the newly published volume about Mother Adèle Garnier, foundress of the Congregation of Adorers of the Sacred Heart of Jesus of Montmartre, O.S.B. Please God, I will be writing much more about Mother Garnier as time goes on. Vocations anyone!

And thanks to S.S. for sending in a back issue of Envoy Magazine, so that I might take a gander at Peter Kreeft’s take on C.S. Lewis’ Screwtape Letters:

***

Having said all that, you remember Steven, don’t you? Here and here!

UPDATE: See Steven’s most recent comment in the comments. They are having an auction on behalf of the orphanage…

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Here’s Dawn Eden’s Exclusive Guest-Post on HSH (about Saint Maximilian Kolbe, Sexual Abuse, and Creative Love)

St. Maximilian Kolbe: “Only Love Is Creative”

By Dawn Eden

One of the observations I make in my new book My Peace I Give You: Healing Sexual Wounds with the Help of the Saints is that saints are sometimes patrons of particular physical or mental conditions not because they actually had them, but because they had experiences similar to them.

For example, St. Maximilian Kolbe is a patron of recovering drug addicts—not because he ever in his life abused drugs, but because he was killed by a lethal injection from a Nazi “doctor.” Likewise, St. Denis is a patron of migraine sufferers because he suffered the ultimate headache—decapitation.

In that light, I propose certain saints in MyPeace I Give You as patrons for those who suffer from effects of post-traumatic stress — not necessarily because they suffered from it (though many saints, such as the wounded soldier Ignatius of Loyola, may well have) – but because they endured pains familiar to sufferers.

Take St. Thomas Aquinas, who, after an intensely distressing incident in which his brothers tried to force him into a sexual situation with a prostitute, fell to his knees—“weary and frightened, and almost despairing.” He began to pray, and, while praying, fell asleep. To me, as a survivor of childhood sexual abuse who has suffered from flashbacks, Thomas’s experience is very familiar—the adrenaline rush, followed by sadness and a kind of full-body exhaustion as though my life has been sucked out.

Whether or not Thomas actually underwent a flashback is not important; what matters is that he knew how it felt, and so, like a good friend who has been there, he can sympathize with me when I suffer. More than that, I can learn from the way he responded to his trauma. Instead of giving in to despair, he chose to deepen the self-offering he had already made to God, in union with Christ. The example of his life and the support of his prayers give me confidence that there is no suffering of mine that the Lord cannot use to draw me closer to Him.

In a similar way, at times when I have felt trapped by mistakes I have made, St. Maximilian Kolbe’s story and loving intercession strengthen me. It is true that his suffering, unlike mine, came not from his own sins, but rather from the sins of others. Yet, he can sympathize with me because he knows how it feels to be hemmed in. For that reason, he is specially equipped to show me how, in the midst of afflictions, I may yet attain victory through Christ (1 Cor 15:57).

As I write in My Peace I Give You, it was through the intercession of Kolbe, the Polish Franciscan priest who gave his life for a fellow prisoner at Auschwitz, that I first discovered and experienced the love of the Communion of Saints. What struck me most deeply about that “martyr of charity,” then and now, was how, all the while he was incarcerated and brutally treated by the Nazis, he demonstrated a profound sense of freedom.

Kolbe was truly free, because he was free to do good, free to love, free to cling in prayer and devotion to the Immaculata—Our Lady, whose grace spurred him to bring the light of Christ into the darkest places.

One of my favorite stories about St. Maximilian is how, after having volunteered to take the place of a fellow Auschwitz inmate who was condemned to die in a starvation cell, he transformed his environment with his presence. Crammed into a small, dank room with nine other men, deprived of clothes, food, and water, Kolbe convinced his fellow cellmates to join them in prayers, the rosary, and hymns. Nazi guards patrolling the prison, expecting to be confronted with the desperate moans and sobs of dying men, were shocked to find instead that it sounded as though they were in a church.

The ships Pornchai Moontri carved in prison (an Asian custom). The ship on the right is named “St. Maximilian”. Pornchai didn’t know the story about the red and white crowns of martyrdom and purity which Immaculate Mary offered to Father Maximilian when he painted this ship!

A surviving witness—an inmate who had been called to act as translator—later reported that the Nazi guards marveled in wonder at Kolbe. Their ideology had taught them to strive to be godless “supermen,” defining themselves by the brute power with which they could subjugate others. In the naked, starving priest, the Nazis were stunned to discover a true man, one who could face death with a smile because he was dying not for hate, but for love.

During the weeks before his martyrdom, Kolbe gently corrected a fellow prisoner who spoke of hating the Nazis. “Hatred is not a creative force,” he said. “Only love is creative.” St. Maximilian showed that the ultimate creativity is to be joined at the heart with the creative love of God, whose mercies are “new every morning” (Lam 3:22-23).

* * *

We all thank Dawn for making her way to Holy Souls Hermitage in this way.

I asked Dawn to write this post particularly for the imprisoned priest Father Gordon MacRae (whose story on TheseStoneWalls is HERE) and his fellow prisoner, the Catholic convert Pornchai Moontri, whose story is summarized in the following links:

(1) Pornchai’s Story by Pornchai Moontri (This version has his correct prison number)

(2) Pornchai Moontri – The Duty of a Knight – To Dream the Impossible Dream by Pornchai Moontri

(3) Pornchai’s Path to the Narrow Gate by Ryan Anthony MacDonald

(4) The Paradox of Suffering: An Invitation from Saint Maximilian Kolbe by Father Gordon MacRae

Now, I’m sure Dawn would appreciate a comment or two in the combox. It’s always great to have encouragement, especially when writing such a book, which involved Dawn telling her own story of being abused (with zero graphic details, which I think is great!). She’s very brave and generous in cooperating with our Lord in bringing great good out of the great evil she herself suffered. I, for one, think abuse victims have a great deal to offer all of us. Suffering  can be an opportunity to learn much about the friendship our Lord holds out to us.

Be sure to get Dawn’s book. It’s inexpensive a tremendous read.

Dawn’s book is something that will also help to bring the entire abuse crisis full circle.

This is a must read, not only for victims of abuse, not only for those who very often counsel abuse victims (such as priests, who are also very much the intended audience of Dawn), not only for those who know abuse victims, but for all in the Church today. This is the situation we are in and we are all in this together.

Dawn’s book is totally unique. It provides what has never been a part of the solution in the abuse crisis, reverence before the Immaculate Mary’s Son, Jesus, who, by His grace, is so very present in His saints, and who is so very present to all of us.

Whenever Pornchai tells his story, he is loathe not to mention his great mentor and friend and cellmate, Father Gordon MacRae. I, for one, also think that Father Gordon will benefit greatly from Dawn’s book, for although he was not abused as a youngster nor did he ever abuse anyone, he was terribly abused in prison. His being there, falsely accused and wrongly convicted, for now going on 18 years, is like a continuous rape of his very priesthood. It’s got to stop, and it’s got to stop now. Meanwhile, one can learn ever more, every day about the Heart of “the creative love of God, whose mercies are ‘new every morning’ (Lam 3:22-23).” I think Father Gordon will very much love reading Dawn’s book (should Pornchai let him have it)!

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Father Gordon MacRae phones Holy Souls Hermitage. I respond with a letter to… Pornchai Moontri (Mathematics and friendship with Jesus)

Is that the chain of a pectoral cross?!

While out in the forest on the back ridge of Holy Souls Mountain – in the middle of nowhere — I received a telephone call from Father Gordon MacRae. My first impression? What a great family of faith we have! And what’s my impression upon further reflection? What a great family of faith we have! I might have been speaking Saint Paul the Apostle (who often found himself in prison, by the way). What a great priest.

We talked about Continue reading

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Don’t blame me! It’s all Pornchai’s fault!

Father Gordon MacRae asked his cellmate, the great Pornchai Moontri, to write THIS RECENT POST on TheseStoneWalls. In that article, he wrote this:

Whenever Father G. has a new idea, it always makes me squirm a little because it usually means my mind and spirit are about to be stretched again. “How would you like to write a guest post for These Stone Walls?” he asked. Since English is not my first language, writing is very difficult for me. At first, I was excited about this idea. Then I was given a deadline, and I got nervous. Then nervous turned into dread, and now I just feel very intimidated by the whole thing.

Yes, well… minus the bit about English, ditto. In Father Gordon’s MOST RECENT POST on TheseStoneWalls, he writes this:

Last year at this time, TSW went on a one-month hiatus with a series of re-runs. I thought of doing the same for the month of May, but then our friend, Pornchai had a much better idea. Emboldened by his well received recent guest post, “The Duty of a Knight,” Pornchai suggested inviting a few other guest writers to stand in for me.

Long story short, my guest post on TSW is slated for a week from today, 2 May, 2012. Yikes! I blame Pornchai Moontri! It’s all his fault.

This is the judge whose apparently purposed, horrific mismanagement of proceedings, ensured the unjust conviction of Father Gordon MacRae

On a more serious note, Father Gordon is busy preparing for a hearing that will determine if there is sufficient grounds for putting a retrial on the docket. The way I read it — and I’ve gotten some advice on this – if they put it on the docket, they will, in the same day, take it off the docket, simply freeing Father MacRae. There is so much evidence proclaiming “NOT GUILTY!” that it is rather embarrassing to the State of New Hampshire.

Prayers are in order. Why not the Emergency Chaplet of the Immaculate Conception? Why not the Prayer of Saint Michael? Why not… both?!

Sancte Michael Archangele,
defende nos in proelio;
contra nequitiam et insidias diaboli esto praesidium.
Imperet illi Deus, supplices deprecamur:
tuque, Princeps militiae Caelestis,
satanam aliosque spiritus malignos,
qui ad perditionem animarum pervagantur in mundo,
divina virtute in infernum detrude.
Amen.

Saint Michael the Archangel,
defend us in battle; be our protection
against the wickedness and snares of the devil.
May God rebuke him, we humbly pray:
and do thou, O Prince of the heavenly host,
by the power of God, thrust into hell Satan
and all the evil spirits
who prowl about the world seeking the ruin of souls.
Amen.

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Pornchai Moontri and the 2nd HSH book review on Dawn Eden’s “My Peace I Give You: Healing Sexual Wounds with the Help of the Saints”

The First Yikes! I’ve now received TWO review copies of Dawn’s new book — “MY PEACE I GIVE YOU: Healing Sexual Wounds with the Help of the Saints”– from Ave Maria Press. Pre-order HERE, also on Amazon. Her excellent BLOG. And… and… HERE. More on the second copy below…

The Second Yikes! Dawn is writing a post exclusively for this blog — but which you can re-post to your heart’s content! — which is scheduled to be published here on HSH on 1 May, the feast of Saint Joseph. This is way cool, especially because the post will be on saying why Saint Maximilian Kolbe’s life experience is so significant to those who have suffered sexual abuse. This is significant also because Maximilian has not already been featured in the book. Moreover, Maximilian is the patron saint of none other than Pornchai Moontri. More on this below…

Back to the fact of receiving two review copies… Hmmm… What to do with the extra one?

I could give the second copy away to the reader with the best comment to make about healing from sexual wounds, but that wouldn’t work, since there is no “best” comment possible. All healing is wonderful!

Actually, I immediately thought of sending the extra copy to a common friend of readers here and over at Father Gordon MacRae’s These Stone Walls, namely, Pornchai Moontri. That copy will, please God, get speedily sent on 20 April, hopefully to arrive by 24 or 25 April guaranteed to arrive by 3:00 PM on Monday, 23 April, which just happens to be the feast of Saint George, a great friend of Saint Michael! Those who don’t know Pornchai already will surely be inspired by reading the following articles. I only include a few here, since some of these articles have many other links for you to follow:

(1) 28 December 2007 — Pornchai’s Story — (reprinted by Bill Donohue of the Catholic League) This is a MUST READ. Pornchai wrote this himself.

(2) 7 April 2010 — My Fifty Seven — by Father Gordon MacRae

(3) 22 July 2011 – Narrow Gate – on A Ram in the Thicket by Ryan MacDonald

(4) 11 April 2012 – The Duty of a Knight by Pornchai Moontri

Let’s just make three quick citations from the above articles:

(1) My name is Pornchai Moontri, and I am prisoner #38284 in the New Hampshire State Prison. I come to the Catholic faith after a painful journey in darkness that my friend, Father Gordon MacRae, has asked me to write candidly. This is not something I do easily, but I trust my friend.

I was born in Bua Nong Lamphu, a small village in the north of Thailand near Khon Kaen on September 10, 1973. At the age of two, I was abandoned by my mother to be sold. A distant teenaged relative rescued me. He walked many miles to carry me away to his family farm where I worked throughout my childhood raising water buffalo, rice, and sugar cane. I never attended school, however, and never learned to read and write in Thai. Though my childhood involved hard work, I was safe and happy.

When I was 11 years old, my mother re-emerged in Thailand with a new husband – an American air traffic controller from Bangor, Maine. I was taken from Thailand by them against my will, and brought to the United States. This transition was a trauma to be endured. A month after my arrival in Bangor, my new stepfather’s motive for importing a ready-made Thai family became clear. I was forcibly raped by him at age 11, an event that was to be repeated with regularity over the next three years. I was a prisoner in his house, and resistance was only met with violence against me and against my mother. I was all of 100 pounds. I cannot describe this further. Welcome to America!

Being one of only three Asians in 1985 Bangor, and speaking little English, I did not readily comprehend my new names. “Gook,” “V.C.” and “Charlie” meant nothing to me, but I could sense the scorn with which such names were delivered. Because my English was poor, I was treated as though I was stupid. Part of my humiliation was that I had to get a paper route at age 12, and my earnings were taken from me to pay for the “privilege” of living in my captor’s house. Stephen King’s home was on my paper route. Mr. King once gave me a Christmas bonus of 25¢ for delivering his newspaper all year. The horror stories he wrote about Maine are all true. Remember the one with the evil clown? It’s true.

When I was 14, my English was better. I was a little bigger, and a lot stronger – and nothing but angry. Anger was all I had. So with it I fled that house and became a homeless teenager in and around Bangor. One day the Bangor police actually picked me up and forced me to go “home.” I would rather have gone to one of the ones Stephen King wrote about. I just fled again and again, and ended up at the Good Will Hinckley School for people like me. I was there for a year and got kicked out for fighting. I was always fighting. I fought everyone.

Back on the streets of Bangor, I began to carry a knife. At 17 and 18, a lot of people were after me. I lived under a bridge for a while and sometimes my mother would bring me things. I tried to climb out of the deep hole I was in by signing up for night classes at age 18 to finish my high school diploma. I was kicked out of Bangor High School for punching the principal.

One night, at age 18, something that lived in me got out. I got very drunk with friends, and we walked into a Bangor Shop & Save supermarket to buy cigarettes. I barely remember this. In my drunken state, I opened a bottle of beer from a case and started to drink it. The manager confronted me and ordered me to leave. I tried to flee the store, but the manager and other employees tried to keep me there. I tried to fight them off to flee. When I got outside, a manager from another Shop & Save had witnessed the incident and pounced on me. I was 130 pounds and was pinned to the ground by this 190-pound man. I think something snapped in my mind. IT was happening again. I fought, but his dead weight was suffocating me. The newspapers would later tell a different story, but this was the truth, and it is all I remember.

In jail that night, I was questioned for three hours. I was told that I had stabbed a man and was charged with attempted murder. I have no memory, to this day, of stabbing the man. The next morning, I awoke in a jail cell and was told that I was charged with Class A murder. The man had died during the night. I was told that I blew a .25 on the Breathalyzer, but the result was so high it was discarded as an error.

My stepfather could have hired expert counsel, but it was clearly not in his best interest that my life be evaluated so I was left in the care of a public defender who wanted this high profile murder off his desk.

(2) I was a teenager when I went to prison.  Over the years, I was sent back to solitary confinement over and over, for up to three-and-a-half years at a time, because I was so hostile.  The longer I was there each time, the more inhuman I felt and became. Living for years on end in solitary confinement joined  with the guilt I felt for the life I took during a struggle when I was 18 years old. So I just gave up on myself as a human being. I sank to the very bottom of the prison I was in, and stayed there.

(3) Over the next few years, G [Father Gordon MacRae] and I discussed a lot about the life of Saint Maximilian Kolbe and about Saint Padre Pio. I drifted like an iceberg that was ever so slowly melting, and before I realized it, I was caught up in what happened to Saint Maximilian. I never had a hero, and he became one. I suddenly felt as though I was no longer just adrift at sea; the ice was all gone. Four years after my arrival in this new prison, on the day before Divine Mercy Sunday in  2010, G and I walked to the Prison Chapel where Fr. Anthony Kuzia, a  nearby priest, Baptized and Confirmed me.

The next morning, Divine Mercy Sunday, I received my First Eucharist. I stepped that day out of the Dark Wood of Error into the light of day – the light of Christ. If anyone had told me of this just five years earlier, I would have thought them insane.  Every demon that once controlled my life was expelled, and I was free.

(4) I dream of having an opportunity to reach those who are lost like I was, and broken, and brokenhearted, and lead them to Christ. I dream that I will be able to help young people who have had all trust broken and taken away from them.  I dream that I will be able to live my life in freedom and in service to others. I dream that I will have the chance to honor someone who sought only my good despite his own captivity. I dream that I will live this life as a Catholic. I dream that I will be led to where I am supposed to go and that I will not be all alone when I get there. What used to be just a nightmare is now my dream.

I wonder if Pornchai might offer us just a sentence or two, whatever he wants, about Dawns book. That would be just so very wonderful… Not to put any pressure on you, Pornchai!

* * *

This is the flyer: click to enlarge

Dawn will be giving a talk and having a book signing at the launch of her book on Monday, April 23 [WAY COOL! = The Feast of Saint George!], 6:30 p.m., at the Catholic Information Center, 1501 K St. NW, Washington, DC.

My Peace I Give You (Ave Maria Press, 2012) is the first book ever to offer a Catholic spirituality of healing for adult victims of childhood sexual abuse. It bears an Imprimatur (ecclesiastical approbation) from Washington Archbishop Donald Cardinal Wuerl.

Here’s more from the Ave Maria Press website:

Eden uses her own story as a backdrop to introduce numerous holy people— like Laura Vicuña, Thomas Aquinas and Bernard of Clairvaux—who suffered sexual abuse or sexual inappropriateness, as well as saints such as Ignatius of Loyola who suffered other forms of mistreatment and abandonment. Readers seeking wholeness will discover saints with wounds like their own, whose stories bear witness to the transforming power of grace. Eden explores different dimensions of divine love—sheltering, compassionate, purifying, etc.—to help those sexually wounded in childhood understand their identity in the abiding love of Christ.

Sisters of Life Superior General Agnes Mary Donovan S.V. writes in the book’s foreword:

“An inspired work . . . powerfully moving and hope-filled. . . It is my hope that this book may become a resource readily available: in churches, schools, counseling centers, young adult ministries, libraries, and hospitals. Through it may many whose human dignity has been offended come to know their beauty in the eyes of God, and learn to sing in joy of His love and His mercy. I pray that for every reader this book will be an instrument of grace and instruction.”

The book has also received endorsements from Father James Martin S.J., Alice von Hildebrand, Barbara Nicolosi Harrington, and others.

======= And just to say:
Location:Washington, District of Columbia, United States
IP Address:Pontifical Faculty At The Dominican House Of Stud
Referring URL:(No referring link)
Visit Page:holysoulshermitage.com/2012/04/20/pornchai-moontri-and-the-2nd-hsh-book-review-on-dawn-edens-my-peace-i-give-you-healing-sexual-wounds-with-the-help-of-the-saints/

Our readers will know that I frequently push the Master’s Thesis of Dawn, which was wonderfully, successfully defended at the Dominican House of Studies in Washington, the famous Saint Joseph Provence of the Dominicans! Here’s the PDF of this superbly written, spot on thesis: (Thesis).

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