James Miller (De La Salle Christian Brother)
James Miller, F.S.C. (1944 - February 13, 1982), was an American member of the Brothers of the Christian Schools, born in Stevens Point, Wisconsin, who grew up in Custer, Wisconsin. He joined the Christian Brothers during his freshman year of high school and received a Master's degree in Spanish from Saint Mary's University of Minnesota in Winona, Minnesota.
In 1969 Miller was sent to Bluefields, Nicaragua, where he taught in both elementary and high schools. He returned to the United States, where he taught at Cretin High School in St. Paul, Minnesota before returning to teach in Central America. First working in Puerto Cabezas, Nicaragua, where he helped build an industrial arts/vocational complex. He was later transferred to Guatemala. On February 13, 1982, Miller was shot and killed by masked gunmen while on a ladder repairing a wall at the De La Salle Indian School at Huehuetenango, Guatemala.
Some suspected that his killing was in retaliation for the work of the Christian Brothers to prevent Indian boys from being conscripted into the military. Miller had dedicated himself to providing job and leadership skills to Indian people to help ease the oppression suffered by Guatemalan Indians. Although students were exempt from the military, two days before the shooting an Indian student was forced into the army. A different Christian Brother went to the authorities to obtain the student's release. The military refused and the Brother, adamant, had infuriated them.
The Roman Catholic Diocese of La Crosse sponsors an annual Brother James Miller Social Justice Award.
External links
- 20th Anniversary of Br. James Miller’s Assassination Prompts Memorials and Reflection.
- Remembering Brother James Miller.