Berta Caceres, Dorothy Stang remembered at Notre Dame de Namur vigil

Notre Dame de Namur Sr. Dorothy Stang in her dorm room in 1992 at the Institute in Culture and Creation Spirituality at Holy Names University, in Oakland, Calif. (Sharon Abercrombie)

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Each February, Notre Dame de Namur University remembers its most famous alumna: Dorothy Stang, a Notre Dame sister and environmental activist who was shot to death Feb. 12, 2005, in the town of Anapu in the Brazilian rain forest.

This year, the commemoration on the Belmont, Calif., campus had fresh grief to process.

Along with Stang, the candlelight vigil on Thursday honored another slain eco-defender: Berta Caceres, a Honduran indigenous rights activist and the 2015 Goldman Environmental Prize recipient who was murdered last March.

Roughly 75 people endured a rainy evening to attend the vigil in Cunningham Memorial Chapel, sponsored by the school’s Dorothy Stang Center. Among the attendees was Caceres’ nephew Silvio Carrillo.

“Berta was strong-willed, fearless and like a sister to me,” he told NCR in an interview prior to the vigil.

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Last modification date: Feb. 25, 2017, 6:11 p.m.