Louis Vitale was born on June 1, 1932, in San Gabriel, California.[6] His family operated a lucrative fish processing business.[7] After graduating in 1954 from Loyola University, now Loyola Marymount University,[5] Vitale enlisted in the US Air Force. Vitale's main role in the Air Force was that of an intercept officer, in charge of radio communications.[3] Vitale took his vows as a Franciscan friar in 1960 when he was 28 years old.[5] He was awarded a PhD for original research in sociology in September 1972, from University of California, Los Angeles.[2] From 1979 to 1988, Vitale served as the provincial superior of the Franciscan Friars of the Province of St. Barbara. He served as the pastor at St. Boniface Catholic Church for 12 years in the Tenderloin of San Francisco, California.[8]
Louis Vitale was one of the founders of Pace e Bene, a nonviolence service, in 1989.[9] The name means Peace and all good. Other founders included: Sr. Rosemary Lynch, Alain Richard, Peter Ediger and Julia Occhiogrosso[[10]], who were all experienced peace activists.[3][8] Pace e Bene developed educational programs for nonviolent living with an emphasis on spirituality.[11][9][12] In 2005, Pace e Bene published a book, Engage,[9] which described Pace e Bene's programs. The programs, as described in the book, were designed to encourage "the discovery, internalization and use of the power of nonviolence for personal and social change".[9][11] Hundreds of nonviolence study groups were organized by Pace e Bene between 1989 and 2010.[8][13]
In 1981, Vitale received a letter from Rome asking Franciscans to do something creative in 1982 to honor the 800th anniversary of the birth of St. Francis. Vitale took this to heart.[14] The First Nevada Lenten Experience was held at the Nevada test site,[14] a series of witness and protest actions held at the atomic bomb test site near Las Vegas, Nevada. This was the precursor to the Nevada Desert Experience.[14] Louis Vitale with Anne Bucher, Michael Affleck, Duncan MacMurdy, and two Franciscan friars, Ed Dunn and Terry Symens, founded the Nevada Desert Experience in 1984.[14][15] Over the years, Corbin Harney and the Shundahai Network[16] worked with NDE, holding many protests of the government's continued nuclear weapons work. NDE worked with Corbin Harney[14] in protests against establishing a repository for radioactive waste at Yucca Mountain, 100 mi (160 km) from Las Vegas.[17]
Vitale participated in numerous protests and was arrested hundreds of times. Examples include:
April, 2005, Vitale was arrested at the Nevada National Security Site and sent to Beatty Jail to say farewell to the "Justice of the Peace" while simultaneously the Navajo Nation banned uranium mining and Pope Benedict XVI was elected. He and his accomplice were stopping NNSS busses from getting workers to their job sites.[18]
On November 19, 2006, Vitale was arrested at Fort Huachuca in Arizona[19] with Jesuit Fr. Steve Kelly. They were protesting at the military compound responsible for training the US military in interrogation methods. The protest was against the US policy of using torture at Abu Gharib and the Guantanamo Bay Detention Camp.[19]
August 2009, Megan Rice and Louis Vitale were arrested at Vandenberg Air Force Base protesting a test of a Minuteman III Intercontinental Ballistic missile (ICBM) launched approximately 4,000 miles to the Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands.[25]
On December 31, 2009, Vitale planned to join the Gaza Freedom March, but after being stopped by the Egyptian government from making the trek, Vitale joined 22 others in a fast and protest.[22][26]
In November 2010, Vitale crossed the line (deliberately trespassing) at Ft Benning to protest the U.S. Army's Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation. He served six months at Federal Correctional Institution Lompoc for that action.[5][27]
On January 27, 2011, Rice, with Kathy Kelly, John Dear, and Louis Vitale, were convicted of trespassing following a protest against weaponized drones at Creech Air Force Base.[28]
At the 2012 August Drone convention in Las Vegas, Vitale registered and paid to attend and was threatened with arrest.[29]
^ abWittner, Lawrence S. (2009-05-12). Confronting the bomb : a short history of the world nuclear disarmament movement. Stanford, Calif. ISBN9780804771245. OCLC469186910.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^ abRiegle, Rosalie G. (2013). Crossing the line : nonviolent resisters speak out for peace. Eugene, Or.: Cascade Books. ISBN9781610976831. OCLC825735867.
^"Parish Newsletter, June 5, 2022"(PDF). St. Joachim and St. John the Evangelist's Church, Beacon, New York. June 5, 2022. Retrieved 9 September 2023. Social Justice Corner -- Father Louis Vitale OFM, was born 90 years ago this week (June 1, 1932) in San Gabriel, California. He is a Franciscan priest, activist, and a co-founder of Nevada Desert Experience....
^ abcdDear, John (2013-09-15). The nonviolent life. Pace e Bene Franciscan Nonviolence Center (Las Vegas, Nev.). Long Beach, CA. ISBN978-0966978322. OCLC868026801.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^ abcdSlattery, Laura (2005). Engage : exploring nonviolent living. Oakland: Pace e Bene Press. ISBN0966978315. OCLC64179247.
^Preston-Pile, Cindy (2006). Traveling with the turtle : a small group process in women's spirituality and peacemaking. Woodward, Irene. Oakland, CA: Pace e Bene Press. ISBN9780966978377. OCLC84622237.
^ abcdeButigan, Ken (2003). Pilgrimage through a burning world : spiritual practice and nonviolent protest at the Nevada Test Site. Nevada Desert Experience (Organization). Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN1417506695. OCLC55205572.
^Epstein, Barbara (1991). Political protest and cultural revolution : nonviolent direct action in the 1970s and 1980s. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN9780520914469. OCLC44965693.