The Boston Globe - 02.09.2019

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THE BOSTON GLOBE MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2019 | BOSTONGLOBE.COM/METRO

B


By Sarah Wu
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
When Susan Pavlak flew from Min-
nesota to Boston a decade ago to do-
nate her kidney, she did not expect to
meet the recipient. But a month before
the surgery, she agreed to meet Phil Sa-
vianoforlunch,whichwasthefirstof
many meals they shared as their
friendship grew stronger over the
years.
“He has my kidney, but that’s not
why we’re friends. That’s just how we
met,” Pavlak said during an interview
last week in Saviano’s Roslindale
home.
The two had something else in


common other than organ donor and
recipient: They are both survivors of
clergy sexual abuse.
Saviano, 67, was a whistleblower
on the sexual abuse crisis in Massachu-
setts and played a prominent role in
the Globe’s Spotlight investigation,
published in 2002.
In 1992, in an interview with the
Globe, he told the public about the
abuse he endured as a child in East
Douglas. Saviano was repeatedly
forced to masturbate and perform oral
sex on a priest who turned out to be a
serial pedophile and who died in pris-
on.
Pavlak, 65, was molested for about

four years by a former nun who be-
came a teacher at her Catholic high
school.
Reflecting on the trauma they have
endured — beyond sexual abuse, Pav-
lak battled alcoholism decades ago and
Saviano tested positive for HIV in 1984
— Saviano said, “Horrible things hap-
pen to people. But that doesn’t mean
that horribleness should define a per-
son.”
Their enduring friendship, filled
with laughter, adventure, and a good
dose of activism, shows that joy can be
found on the other side.
“When you’ve been through rough
FRIENDS,PageB

A cherished friendship for two ‘survivors with a capital S’


Kidney donor and recipient also separately faced clergy sex abuse Kidney
transplant
recipient Phil
Saviano tied a
scarf for donor
Susan Pavlak
during a
Bishop-
Accountability
event in
Readville
last week.
The two have
maintained
their close
friendship a
decade after
the operation.
BARRY CHIN/GLOBE STAFF


By John Hilliard
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
Three dozen protesters arrested
during a controversial Straight Pride
rally and parade in Boston Saturday
could be in court Tuesday, according
to the Suffolk District Attorney’s of-
fice, while Boston police said they
plan to review officers’ use of force
during the demonstrations.
That review, part of the depart-
ment’s standard operating procedure,
will also look at reports of injured offi-
cers, said Boston police spokesman
Sergeant John Boyle on Sunday.
Four officers suffered non-life-
threatening injuries in connection
with Saturday’s demonstrations, when
about 200 marched in a parade to cel-
ebrate traditional families and defend
heterosexuality, proponents said.
The parade, which began in Copley
Square and ended in a rally at City
Hall Plaza, was organized by a group
called Super Happy Fun America. The
group and its event were blasted by
critics as homophobic.
Marchers were outnumbered along
the parade route by thousands of pro-
testers, many of whom gathered be-
hind police barricades along Congress
Street near City Hall.
On Sunday, Boston police released
the names of the 36 people who were
arrested Saturday and the charges
they face.
PARADE,PageB

Hurricane watch
A pocket of New Bedford transplants
in Florida await Dorian’s wrath. B

By Joshua Miller
GLOBE STAFF
RAYMOND, N.H. — He fulminated
against “a corporate elite that has un-
believable wealth, and power, and re-
sources.” He gave a paean to Medicare
for All. And he bemoaned the “absur-
dity and the dysfunctionality of Con-
gress” that thwarts progress on gun
control.
But as Senator Bernie Sanders
kicked off a new chapter of his presi-
dential campaign in New Hampshire
Sunday, his pitch was as much about
plausibility — that his plans and his
candidacy were likely to succeed — as
passion.
“I don’t think there has been a cred-
ible poll done in the last year which
has not had us ahead of Trump,” he
said in a high school auditorium
packed with nearly 400 people.
“It goes without saying that we
have got to defeat Donald Trump,” he
said 45 minutes later, noting a recent
national poll found he would beat the
president 53 percent to 39 percent in a
hypothetical matchup.
On the first stop of a multi-day
swing through New Hampshire and
Maine, Sanders spent a half-hour fo-
cused on health care. He spoke at
SANDERS,PageB

Police use


of force to


get review


Protesters arrested at


Straight Pride events


may face court dates


Sanders shifts


from passion


to plausibility


Messy?Yes,buttherearerules


Allston Christmas helps students


keep their moves under budget


By Bryan Marquard
GLOBE STAFF
Frances Crowe once recalled that her activism
began in the late 1920s, as a fifth-grader in
Carthage, Mo., when she and her classmates in a
peace friendship club sent letters to people around
the world.
“We took ourselves very seriously,” she told the
Globe in 1984, “all these little kids going to make
peace.”
For nine more decades, Ms. Crowe never let up,
notching more civil disobedience arrests at protests
than she could count, and adding other causes to
her original efforts.
She was 100 when she died Tuesday in her
Northampton home, her family announced.
“Frances was a strong believer that one sets an
example through the way one lives one’s life,” her
family members said in an obituary they placed in

the Daily Hampshire Gazette.
In an activism resume that could go on for pag-
es, she participated in sit-ins at the construction site
when the nuclear power plant was being built in
Seabrook, N.H., and prayed for peace on the White
House lawn.
She threw a vial of her own blood at a nuclear
sub launch (“for my grandson’s future,” she noted)
and spent a month in prison after breaking into a
Rhode Island base to spray paint “Thou shalt not
kill” on submarine tubes that would hold missiles.
Testifying on behalf of a fellow Seabrook protest-
er in 1977, she told a jury that she, too, had demon-
strated at the site because “my conscience told me I
must put my body where my words have been.”
Two years ago, at 98, she was among several peo-
ple who were arrested in Western Massachusetts
while protesting the extension of a natural gas pipe-
CROWE,PageB

For nine decades, a fervent fighter for peace


Her targets included war and nuclear power, weapons


FRANCES CROWE1919-


‘My conscience told me I must


put my body where my words


have been.’


FRANCES CROWE


YOON S. BYUN/GLOBE STAFF/FILE 2010

By Maria Cramer
GLOBE STAFF

T


here are rules for Allston Christmas, that special time
of year when college students moving out of their
apartments in the Boston neighborhood leave behind
unwanted furniture, clothes, and appliances for the
students moving in.
Rule 1: Don’t assume something left on the street is free for
the taking. Look for a sign, or ask someone first.
Rule 2: If you’re moving out, try to have someone stand sen-
try near your stuff, in case people are not following rule number
one.
Rule 3: Never take mattresses left on the sidewalks and
streets. In fact, avoid upholstery altogether.
College kids and cloth-bound furniture are “probably not a
good mix after a semester or two,” noted Matt Cohen, a 25-year-
old audio engineer from Arlington who visited Allston on Sun-
day to scavenge for leftovers.
It was the first Allston Christmas for Cohen, who works in
the neighborhood and was drawn to the annual happening by
ALLSTON,PageB

PHOTOS BY NIC ANTAYA FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
Xiwei Wang of Allston waited for a moving truck outside of her former apartment in Allston on Sunday.

Inspector Sherea McLaughlin checked a home in Allston Sunday.
During college move-in, the city steps up code enforcement.
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