(This article, reprinted with permission, featuring Abe Bonowitz, class of
1984, appeared in The Columbus Dispatch on October 16, 2004)
10/19/04
Bexley Native to receive award for work
to end death penalty
By Alan Johnson
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
Bexley native Abe
Bonowitz, once an advocate for eye-for-an-eye justice who said he was
willing to "pull the switch myself" at an execution, will receive an
award today in Washington as the national death-penalty abolitionist of
the year.
Bonowitz, 37, will be
recognized by the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty. The
group is comprised of religious, civil rights and other organizations
working to end capital punishment in the United States.
Diann Rust-Tierney,
executive director, praised Bonowitz for "relentless, around-the-clock
advocacy on behalf of a vision and a future that does not include
capital punishment."
Bonowitz is head of
Citizens United for Alternatives to the Death Penalty, a Gainesville,
Fla., nonprofit group.
Born and raised in the
Columbus area, Bonowitz graduated from Bexley High School in 1984, got a
degree from the Ohio Institute of Photography in Dayton, and attended
Ohio State University.
While working as a
photographer for what was AT&T Bell Laboratories in 1987, Bonowitz
learned about Amnesty International. He didn't immediately change his
mind about the death penalty, however.
"I said, 'an eye for
an eye. If you kill, I'll pull the switch myself.' "
But Bonowitz said he
soon came to believe that race, geography and socio-economic status play
as much of a role in who is executed as guilt or innocence.
In 17 years, Bonowitz
has been arrested seven times for protests, including once at the Ohio
Governor's Residence.
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