News
release
Public Information Office
SLU 10880 Hammond,
LA 70402 phone:
985-549-2341 fax:
985-549-2061
Contact: Christina
Chapple
Date: 10/4/05
LECTURE BY SISTER HELEN PREJEAN RESCHEDULED OCT. 14 AT SOUTHEASTERN
HAMMOND – A lecture at
Southeastern Louisiana University by internationally recognized death penalty
opponent Sr. Helen Prejean has been rescheduled for Friday, Oct. 14 at
2 p.m. in the university’s Student Union Theatre.
Sr. Helen’s appearance,
postponed earlier because of Hurricane Rita, will launch a new social justice
lecture series at Southeastern, said Yanyi K. Djamba of the Department
of Sociology and Criminal Justice, the series’ sponsor. Entitled “Dead
Man Walking – the Journey Continues,” the lecture is free and open to the
general public.
Copies of Sr. Prejean’s
books -- “Dead Man Walking, An Eyewitness Account of the Death Penalty
in the United States” and “Death of Innocents” – will be available for
sale and autographs following the talk.
“We are pleased to
have an individual such as Sr. Helen Prejean initiate our annual lecture
series,” said Djamba. “Her international reputation as a tireless worker
against the death penalty makes her ideal to launch this program.” He said
future programs will include films, panels and roundtable discussions on
social justice issues that affect everyone from a local to international
level.
Sr. Helen is a Louisiana
native whose book, “Dead Man Walking,” was number one on the New York Times
Best Seller List for 31 weeks and was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. The
work was developed into a major motion picture starring Susan Sarandon
as Sr. Helen and Sean Penn as a death row inmate. The film received four
Oscar nominations with Sarandon winning the award for Best Actress.
A member of the Catholic
order of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Medaille, she holds bachelor degrees
in English and education from St. Mary’s Dominican College and a master’s
degree in religious education from St. Paul’s University, Ottawa, Canada.
Sister Helen began her
prison ministry in 1981 when she dedicated her life to the poor of New
Orleans. While living in the St. Thomas housing project, she became acquainted
with a convicted killer on death row at Louisiana’s Angola State Prison,
serving as his spiritual advisor. Frequently interviewed by the media,
Sr. Helen has been featured in the “New York Times Magazine” and on programs
such as CBS’ “60 Minutes,” the NBC “Today Show,” and the ABC “World News
Tonight.” |
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