| FATHER JENCO STORY
Lawrence
Martin Jenco was born November 27, 1934, and grew up in
a working-class neighborhood in Joliet, Ill. After studying
at St. Joseph's Seminary in the United States and the Pontifical
University in Rome, he was ordained as a Roman Catholic
priest in 1959. Jenco joined a small religious community
called The Servants of Mary (O.S.M.). His ministry took
him to many different countries where he worked among the
oppressed of the world, including Australian aborigine alcoholics,
California migrant workers, Indian lepers, and Cambodian
refugees.
Jenco was serving as director of Catholic
Relief Services in Beirut, Lebanon, when he was kidnapped
by Shiite Muslim extremists on January 8, 1985. Two months
later, AP correspondent Terry Anderson was also kidnapped
and held at the same undisclosed location as Jenco. When
Anderson learned that a priest was being held captive nearby,
he asked to see him. The bearded, white-haired Father Jenco
heard Anderson's confession—the first in 25 years—
which to Anderson represented "my first formal step
back to the church." Later, Jenco and Anderson shared
a cell where they spoke often of their spiritual odysseys
and of the role of the church in ministering to the poor
and underprivileged.
Jenco was released after 19 months in
captivity, while Anderson was destined to remain imprisoned
about five years longer, until 1991. But as Anderson later
told a radio interviewer, his time spent with the priest
in the early years of captivity was instrumental in helping
"build a structure I could hold onto" in the years
to follow.
Once freed, Jenco resumed his ministry
by serving as chaplain at the University of Southern California,
providing outreach programs to the Hispanic community. He
spoke often of his experiences as a hostage and emphasized
the need to forgive. He and Anderson remained friends until
Jenco's death from cancer in 1996.
Anderson calls Jenco "a wonderful
personal example. . .the closest thing to a saint I have
ever met." In June 2001, Anderson honored his friend
through the establishment of the Father Lawrence Martin
Jenco Foundation and the creation of an annual Jenco Award
in his memory.
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