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Sr
Karen Predicts Her Death and Forgives
Her Murderer 15 Yrs Earlier.
(Complete Story) |
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Sister Karen Klimczak, SSJ
In 1985, Sister Karen Klimczak
founded HOPE House on Sycamore Street in the
City of Buffalo. This project was started to
provide transitional housing to inmates being
released from correctional facilities. During
Sr. Karen’s work in the prison ministry, she
felt that there were not enough services
available for these men upon their release. In
1987, Father Joseph A. Bissonette was murdered
in his rectory at St. Bartholomew’s church at
335 Grider Street, also in the city of Buffalo.
Sr. Karen relocated HOPE House to this location
and renamed it Bissonette House as a way of
paying homage to the slain Fr. Bissonette. It is
at this location that Bissonette House continues
to operate. This year marks the 20th
anniversary of Bissonette House and also the 22nd
year of Sr. Karen’s work with recently released
parolees.
Sr. Karen’s reach throughout the
City of Buffalo and Erie County is second to
none as she started the “Nonviolence Begins With
Me” and “I Leave PeacePrints” campaigns with
attractive yard signage in the hopes that these
campaigns would spread her desire for
nonviolence throughout the region. This campaign
is still very much active today through these
yard signs, community events in honor of Sr.
Karen and the unveiling of billboards throughout
the city that bear these sayings.
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SISTER KAREN'S HOPEFUL LEGACY LIVES ON
By David Staba David Staba is the sports
editor of the Niagara F`alls Reporter. He
welcomes e-mail at dstaba13@aol.com.
While eulogizing Sister Karen Klimczak --
who was killed on Good Friday, allegedly by
a parolee living in the halfway house she
founded and ran for almost two decades --
Father Roy Herberger asked not for vengeance
or even justice, but mercy.
"If there was one word synonymous with
Sister Karen, it would be 'forgive,'" said
the priest who co-founded the ministry
serving ex-convicts recently paroled from
prison, which would become known as
Bissonette House, with the murdered nun.
"And she would be the first one to say that
about Craig -- 'Father, forgive him for he
doesn't know what he's doing, because of the
crack cocaine.'"
During Sister Karen's funeral on Saturday at
St. Ann's Church, Father Herberger and the
nearly 2,000 people packed into the
sanctuary and a huge tent in the parking lot
prayed for Craig Lynch, who police say
confessed to the crime three days after she
disappeared, and led them to the makeshift
grave where her body was found. And they
prayed for his mother, who neighbors said
wailed, "What did you do?" again and again
as police led him away in handcuffs.
Mostly, though, the day was not filled with
mourning for Sister Karen's horrific death,
but celebration of her remarkable life.
White paper doves, hand-printed with what
had served as her slogan, "I leave
peaceprints," decorated the church and
overflow tent.
Her sister, who is also a nun, talked about
those words while sitting in the kitchen of
Bissonette House at noon Tuesday, less than
18 hours after Sister Karen's body was
found.
"She said to me, 'You leave your
fingerprints on everything. We need to be
people who leave imprints of peace wherever
we go in our world,'" Sister Jean Klimczak
said. "That's what she was about and that is
what she challenged others to do."
During his eulogy, Father Herberger talked
about not just Bissonette House, but all of
Sister Karen's efforts -- serving prisoners,
running another facility called Hospitality
House to provide a place to stay and eat for
the visiting families of prison inmates,
leading prayer vigils at murder sites
throughout Buffalo, dressing up as a clown
named Bounce to entertain at churches,
schools and senior centers, and giving
Christmas parties for the children and
siblings of murder victims.
It was to Bissonette House, though, that she
devoted, and eventually gave, her life.
Bissonette House was named for Father A.
Joseph Bissonette, who was murdered in 1987
in a room off the kitchen of his rectory by
two men he was trying to help. Sister Karen
turned the former rectory into a haven for
men readjusting to society.
At Bissonette House, parolees got shelter,
food and structure, with check-in times and
curfews part of the requirements. Sister
Karen gave them something more, insisting
that they gather to pray at 7 a.m. in the
room where Father Bissonette died.
Her ministry was as spiritual as it was
religious. On the Web site she maintained (www.hopeofbuffalo.org),
a section called "Stories of Hope"
demonstrates the little touches that made
such a big impact on the people she helped.
"It was Dan's 27th birthday and we
celebrated with a party," she wrote. "We had
cake with candles, ice cream and a small
present. As we began to sing, I looked over
at Dan and saw tears coming down his cheeks.
I couldn't imagine what could possibly be
wrong.
"I went over to Dan and whispered, 'What's
wrong?' He said, 'I've never had a birthday
party in my life.'" Hundreds of men passed
through Bissonette House over the years.
Many of them regularly returned to
volunteer, trying to repay her for her
support and love.
"She did everything she could for us, to
straighten us out and help guide us in the
right way," said Willie White, who spent six
months at Bissonette House after being
paroled from a burglary sentence and now
works as a counselor for other former
inmates. "You don't find too much of that
anymore."
Craig Lynch had only been at the brick house
across Grider Street from Erie County
Medical Center for nine days when he snuck
out to get high on crack, then broke into
Sister Karen's room looking for something
that might be worth another rock, police
said. He told his interrogators that he
panicked when he heard the 62-year-old woman
coming and attacked from behind when she
entered the room. An autopsy determined
strangulation and blunt-force trauma as the
cause of death.
Lynch told police he traded her cell phone
and charger for a bag of crack that turned
out to be fake. Detective Sgt. James
Lonergan of the Buffalo Police Department's
homicide squad said Lynch's remorse helped
lead to his confession Monday afternoon.
"He'd cry for a period, then he'd be calm,"
Lonergan said. "We fed him, then he started
to cry again. He'd have periods of remorse
and other periods where you wouldn't think
anything happened."
In the wake of the murder, some talk-show
callers demanded an end to parole and
facilities like Bissonette House.
"There have been talk shows on the radio
filled with bitterness and hatred," Father
Herberger said during his eulogy. "That's
totally a contrast to what Karen's life was
about. Some people just don't get it."
Lonergan, who had investigated Father
Bissonette's murder as one of his first
cases as a homicide detective, said much the
same thing Tuesday while standing in the
driveway outside the halfway house.
"They're very important," Lonergan said,
looking at the building. "We can't blame all
parolees for this. It's one individual. The
rest of them in there, they're all as upset
as we are. It's just one bad apple smoking
crack." More than 100 people from throughout
the city helped search for the missing nun
over Easter weekend and hundreds more
attended vigils Monday and Friday.
Saturday morning, cars lined Broadway for
blocks in either direction. The gathering
included young and old. Black, white,
Hispanic and Asian. Men and women. Corn-rows
and crew-cuts. A middle-aged white man in a
monk's robe and a young black man in a Los
Angeles Lakers jacket worked their way
through the crowd in the tent, lighting
small candles held by mourners. More than 40
tables in the overflow tent were covered
with pizza, pasta, relish trays, fruit and
desserts donated by businesses and
individuals from throughout Western New
York.
More than a thousand voices opened the Mass
by singing "How Great Thou Art," and ended
it with what had to be one of the longest
"Peace be with you" handshake-and-hug
sessions in religious history.
On Good Friday evening in the brick house on
Grider Street, one man provided indisputable
proof that there is evil in the world.
But in the aftermath of Sister Karen
Klimczak's death, thousands of others
demonstrated that there is even more good.
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UPDATE -
Dec. 19,
2006
The jury has
reached a
verdict.
The Newsday
reports:
BUFFALO,
N.Y.
(AP) _ A
jury has
convicted
a
parolee
of
killing
a
pacifist
nun at
the
halfway
house
she
operated
in
Buffalo.
Craig
Lynch
was
found
guilty
late
Friday
in Erie
County
Court of
manslaughter,
burglary
and
second-degree
murder
for
beating
and
strangling
Sister
Karen
Klimczak
on April
14 in
her room
at
Bissonette
House.
Lynch
could
face 25
years to
life in
prison
at
sentencing
March 7.
He is in
jail
without
bail.
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March 8, 2007 Sentencing |
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