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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Politics
Veronica Rocha

Jesuit mission in Honduras set Kaine's path to public service

EL PROGRESO, Honduras _ Not long after Jesuit priest Jack Warner met a bearded, 22-year-old Midwesterner in 1980, the two Americans bonded, drawn together by the goals and questions that led them both to El Progreso, a small city not far from vast banana fields _ the campos bananeros.

Warner was 35 and had arrived a year earlier to form the Teatro La Fragua, a theater company for Hondurans. As the young priest looked to forge a relationship with the campesinos, his friendship blossomed with Tim Kaine, who had taken a year off from Harvard Law School to join the Jesuit mission.

"He was 22 years old," Warner said, "and it was the typical thing that a 22-year-old would do: What do I do with my life?"

Kaine, now a 58-year-old U.S. senator from Virginia and the Democratic vice presidential nominee, has often said that his time in Honduras helped him answer that question, giving him "a North Star" to guide his life toward public service. It's central to his biography and likely to arise Tuesday night when he debates his Republican opponent, Mike Pence.

When Kaine traveled to Honduras, the nation was in the throes of turmoil, flanked by countries torn by civil war and ruled by the heavy hand of a U.S-backed military bent on stamping out what it perceived to be communism spreading in the region.

"I got a firsthand look at a system _ a dictatorship _ where a few people at the top had all the power and everyone else got left out," Kaine said in July at the Democratic National Convention.

He also witnessed extreme poverty. His experiences, coupled with the Jesuit goal of being "men for others," led him to become a civil-rights lawyer for 17 years, specializing in housing-discrimination cases. Honduras convinced him, he said, "that we've got to advance opportunity for everyone."

Kaine now serves on the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations and this year co-sponsored a bill that would increase aid to Central America's "Northern Triangle" _ Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras.

Key to his experiences in Honduras was the friendship and example of Warner and a handful of other Jesuits. And a Christmastime visit to a poor man's house taught him a lesson that resonates decades later.

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