Martin Sheen June 2008 Celebrated for his acting in both films and television,
where he is known for his roles as political figures (West Wing and "Kennedy"
are two notable examples), Martin Sheen has not shied away from politics in his
personal life either. He is an outspoken opponent of the School of the Americas
(SOA/WHINSEC), a U.S.-sponsored program for training Latin American soldiers in
torture and interrogation techniques, and has been arrested in protests against
the SOA/WHINSEC every year since 1998. These protests count among over 70 arrests
for political causes, about which he notes: "I love my country enough to suffer
its wrath." He was influenced early in life by a meeting with Dorothy Day, and
he's been keeping good company ever since: his first act of civil disobedience
was beside Daniel Berrigan. A liberal and faithful Catholic and devoted family
man, he has been married to his wife Janet since 1961, and counts his son Charlie
as a best friend. He has worked for peace and justice across the whole spectrum
of life issues: abortion, capital punishment, farm workers' rights, nuclear testing
and war. In 2001, he was named a "Remarkable Pro-Life Man" by the Catholic organization
Feminists for Life, and in 2008 Notre Dame University awarded him the Laetare
Medal for outstanding service to the Church and society. Sheen graciously donated
his time and skills to narrate the Sean Dougherty/Freke Vuijst/Tana Ross documentary,
Poet of Poverty. He would have been familiar with Michael Doyle's letters, having
been given the "green book", It's a Terrible Day, Thanks Be To God, by his pastor,
Msr. John Sheridan of Our Lady of Malibu in California. He applied his actor's
instincts well enough to quote from it almost as faithfully as the author himself.
Those who were fortunate enough to meet him during his visit to Camden discovered
not only a distinguished actor and man of integrity, but an affable story teller
and lover of jokes. He enjoyed a tour of the neighborhood and visited the church,
the greenhouse and the future site of the Waterfront South Theater, where he extemporaneously
recited lines of the poet Tagore and sang with Barbara and Shauna Dever in a hole
in the ground, where a new stage will one day await him.