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Fr. John Kaiser, MHM

John Anthony Kaiser was born in Perham, Minnesota. John attended St. John’s Preparatory School, and the St. John’s University in Collegeville, Minnesota for two years, before he joined the army in 1954. He was a paratrooper, and was advanced to the rank of Sergeant. He graduated from Saint Louis University in 1960, with a BA in English Literature. From here, he went to St. Joseph Seminary in Mill Hill, England, where he studied from 1960 to 1964. Fr. Kaiser was ordained in St. Louis for the Mill Hill Fathers in 1964 by the Most Reverend Glennon Patrick Flavin, auxiliary bishop of St. Louis, and was sent to the Mill Hill missions in Kenya. For a brief time fron January - June, 1973, during a break from his mission work, Fr. Kaiser was parochial vicar at All Souls Parish, home church for Bp. Wurm Council, when he joined the Knights.

John spent 20 years in the missions in the Kisii Diocese. At that time there were only 48 priests for more than half a million Catholics in the diocese, many living in grinding poverty. In 1993, he was reassigned to the Maela refugee camp in the Ngong Diocese. Refugees fled to the camp as a result of tribal violence, armed gangs driving them from their homes, and then torching the buildings. Father and others thought the government was fomenting the violence as part of a land grab. Amid international attention, on Christmas Eve, 1994, the camp was closed and the refugees were forcibly resettled. Father protested the closing, but he was arrested, beaten, and released into the dangerous bush. Following these events, Kaiser was reassigned to preach to the more distant Maasai at Lolgorian Parish.

In 1998, at great personal risk, Fr. Kaiser testified before the Akiwumi Commission, investigating the causes of the violence and the closing of the camp. In public, sworn testimony, Kaiser fingered prominent cabinet ministers in the incumbent government, as well as the then-President, Daniel arap Moi. His testimony was quashed. The report of the commission was released on October 18, 2002. It confirmed the charges made by Fr. Kaiser, "indicted ... senior officials" and "accused senior officials of giving inflammatory speeches and in some cases, financing persons responsible for the violence."

He also had helped two women, schoolgirls really, in summer, 1999. The girls claimed they had been raped by Julius Sunkuli, a cabinet minister in the Moi government. Sunkuli is alleged to have offered money for an abortion, but the girl, a fourteen year old named Florence, decided to keep her baby. Kaiser put the girls in touch with the Kenyan Federation of Women Lawyers, FIDA-Kenya. The attorneys submitted the evidence to the government, but Sunkuli was never charged. Instead, police stormed the building where the girls were hiding.

In November, 1999, the Kenyan government tried to deport Fr. Kaiser, claiming that his work permit had expired. Father briefly went into hiding in Kisii before he was granted a new work permit, but only after intervention by the US Ambassador Johnnie Carson and Bishop Colin Davis of Ngong.

In March, 2000, the independent Law Society of Kenya presented Fr. Kaiser with its annual Human Rights Award, for his public testimony before the Akiwumi Commission and his support of the two girls. They called him "a study in courage, determination and sacrifice on behalf of the weak, oppressed and downtrodden."

Fr. Kaiser knew of the dangers of speaking out in Kenya, and of a fate which had captured many others. In a book about his experiences at the Maela camp, he wrote a warning.

“I want all to know that if I disappear from the scene, because the bush is vast and hyenas many, that I am not planning any accident, nor, God forbid, any self destruction. Instead, I trust in a good guardian angel and in the action of grace.”

On August 23, 2000, Fr. Kaiser was shot in the back of the head with a shotgun, which was nearby. His body was found at 6 am the next day beneath two acacia trees, by a butcher named George at Morendat junction on the Nakuru-Naivasha road in western Kenya. He was carrying documents he intended to present to the Akiwumi Commission. He was also to testify against the Moi government before the International Criminal Court in the Hague in three weeks. The first police officers on the scene thought he had been murdered.

Less than a week after Fr. Kaiser's death, Florence Mpayei dropped her rape case against Julius Sunkuli.

Kenya's chief government pathologist and a pathologist from an independent human rights organization present at the autopsy thought Father was killed from a muzzle distance of about 3 feet, from which suicide would be impossble. However, an FBI expert from Texas, who did not examine Fr. Kaiser but only saw photographs, concluded that Father had committed suicide. The Moi government readily agreed.

Both houses of the United States Congress passed a joint resolution calling Fr. Kaiser’s death, "an assassination," and for the US State Department to investigate.

The papal nuncio, the Most Rev. Giovanni Tonnucci, said at Father’s funeral in the Nairobi basillica, "The church, through pitiless violence, has once more been deprived of one of her ministers. Let no one have any doubts about it: we are celebrating a religious occasion; we are reflecting on a religious assassination, not a political one. Fr. Kaiser has been murdered because he was, and in the eternity of God still is, a Catholic priest who preached the Gospel. Those who killed him, those who planned his killing, wanted to silence the voice of the Gospel.... Only two days before his death, I met Fr. Kaiser for a long conversation. At the end, he asked my blessing, which I reluctantly gave him. At that moment, I thought it would have been better if he, an old and worthy missionary, had blessed me. How much more I am convinced of that now, that we look at him as a martyr of the faith?". Also present on the altar was His Eminence Maurice Cardinal Otunga, Archbishop Emeritus of Nairobi.

The Law Society of Kenya renamed its annual award the Fr. Kaiser Human Rights Award. A new Kenyan government was elected in 2002. Since then, the Kenyan National Human Rights Commission posthumously honored Fr. Kaiser with its 2006 Milele (Lifetime) Achievement Award. Fr. Kaiser also posthumously received the Twin Cities International Citizen Award from the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul in 2000, and the Lumen Gentium Award from St. John's Preparatory School in 2004. The Kenyan government has reopened the inquest into Fr. Kaiser’s death at the request of the Kenyan Episcopal Conference. On August 1, the inquest ruled that Fr. Kaiser had not committed suicide but was murdered by unknown assailants, and ordered the Kenyan police to reopen the investigation.

Father Kaiser remained a member of the Knights, and was a member of Bishop Wurm Council at his death. Many Knights, including the Mexican priests killed during the Cristeros movement, have been martyred for the faith. Fr. John Kaiser is one more among them. Please pray for Fr. Kaiser, that he and the souls of all the faithful departed may rest in peace, and that Fr. Kaiser's martyrdom will be recognized by the church.


References for the statements found on this page may be found in the copy of this article located on Wikipedia. Much more information about Fr. Kaiser is available online.

Other recent, local references can be found at the following sources:
The Riverfront Times examines death of Father Kaiser.
Tony Barnicle writes about his time in Seminary with Father Kaiser.
An Article and Editorial from the Saint Louis University News reporting on his murder.

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