Father James Reuter, S.J.
Much has been said about the life
and accomplishments of Father James Reuter. It is not easy to improve on or repeat
in a better way what has already been said or written about him. Hence, let me just say a few words about
him not as the public persona known to many Filipinos but simply as a
Jesuit.
I believe that you do not have a
full picture of him unless you also look at him simply as that, Jesuit. He was
a Jesuit before anything else. It
was, after all, his decision to join the Jesuits as an eighteen year old high
school graduate of St. Peter’s Prep in New Jersey that launched him on his
Philippine adventure.
Father Jim’s Jesuit life started in
1934 in St Isaac Jogues Novitiate in Wernersville, Pennsylvania. As a young
Jesuit novice he must have found inspiration in the stories about the heroic
lives of the North American martyrs, Isaac Jogues, John de Brebeuf and
companions. These Jesuits brought
God to the wilds of North America and were martyred under the most cruel
circumstances.
It was during his novitiate that he underwent the thirty day Spiritual
Exercises of St Ignatius, the soul-wrenching and soul-cleansing experience
every young Jesuit must undergo. Four
years later, while on a boat to Manila, he must have felt like the North
American Missionaries about to
bring God, not to the Indian wilds of North America but to the Philippines, but only to realize later,
as he said, that, instead of bringing God to the Philippines, the Philippines
brought God to him. In fact, the only
wild Indians he encountered in the Philippines were high school boys of the
Ateneo de Manila where he was assigned to teach Latin and English.
During Second World War he was together
with other Americans herded by the Japanese Armed Forces to a Los Baños
Concentration Camp. He wrote a
highly entertaining account of
life in Los Baños parts of which, some co-inmates of his said, were apocryphal.
He tells, for instance, of how the
basic clothing needs of some male detainees were met with short pants tailored
from the veils of American Maryknoll nuns. Father Reuter was an imaginative writer!
After release from Los Baños, he graduated to Cell Block No. 4,
Muntinlupa, Rizal.
Liberation in 1945 finally brought
him back to the US and enabled him to finish his studies for the priesthood in
Woodstock College, Maryland. After
ordination and before going back to Manila, he had to go through what is called
tertianship or second novitiate where another mandatory thirty-day Spiritual
Exercises are meant to cleanse whatever prideful dregs had been left by long
years of study. After this he went
to Fordham University for Radio and Television Broadcasting studies. His work would later find him
comfortably comingling with lovely
actresses. He could navigate
safely in such dangerous waters, even with his Paul Newman look, because it is
said of him that he had no original sin.
I first met Father Reuter when I was a high school student in Ateneo de
Naga. He had recently come back
from the US and was assigned to teach English and elocution in high
school. Even then he was already
Father Reuter – writer, dramatist, teacher, basketball coach, and marvelous
story teller, not always historically accurate but always highly entertaining. His example and the example of other
Jesuits in the Ateneo de Naga attracted me to join the Society of Jesus.
I met him again at the Ateneo de Manila. By then I was a
young Jesuit teaching English and Latin in the High School. Father Jim taught English, Latin and
Theology in College, was Drama and Debate Moderator and Workshop Director, ran
the Family Theater Santa Zita,
directed TV and Radio Masses, while also coaching basketball. In other words, the Society of Jesus
was getting its money’s worth out of him.
After several years, we were together again under the same roof, this
time in Xavier House in Herran where I had my office as Provincial Superior of
the Jesuits and where he had his office as Director of Communications for the
Society of Jesus and for the Catholic Bishops.. This was all during Martial Law. He was everything for
Jesuit communications and for the communications apostolate of the Catholic
Bishops Conference. From Xavier
House came Radyo Bandido and the
mimeographed publication Signs of the
Times which chronicled events which could not find print in the controlled
media. But if Father Jim had
dreams of becoming like the North American Martyrs, that never happened. All he got was a short stint in military
detention. But we had a lot of serious
and fun moments discussing the developing events of martial law.
I have mentioned the Spiritual Exercises of St Ignatius which every
Jesuit undergoes for thirty days twice during his life time and for eight days
every year of his life. It is the
Spiritual Exercises together with the meditation on the life, suffering, death
and resurrection of Christ which burn into the Jesuit soul the outline of what
his life should be and the inspiration that serves as the dynamo of his life. It sears into every Jesuit what is
sometimes called Ignatian spirituality; spirituality, yes, but worldly,
immersed and at ease in a sinful world. This is the unseen power behind the life, work and reputation
of Father Reuter.
Monday last week, on the last day of the year when the world did not end,
he went to join Ignatius and his brother Jesuits, sent off, I am told, by the
singing of his loyal assistant Sister Sarah of the St. Paul Sisters. Last Saturday he was brought to the
Jesuit cemetery in Sacred Heart Novitiate, Novaliches, QC, where he now rests
in distinguished if silent company.
7 January 2013
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