In our Local Paper Today -
SWANTON — Marcel Rainville was 9 when a priest gave him his first gun, a .22-caliber pump action rifle. When he was in high school, his father gave him a 12-gauge shotgun, still stored upstairs in the home where he grew up.Every fall, Rainville — a 69-year-old Catholic priest in charge of preparing men to enter the Society of St. Edmund religious order — returns to the family farm among the rolling fields of northwestern Vermont where his father taught him to hunt.
There is no contradiction, he says, between his life of faith and his lifetime connection to firearms.
“I guess what I’m saying is that a firearm is a tool, it’s not a weapon,” Rainville said. “It’s something that we use in the context of an activity which involves family, it involves tradition. It has a lot to do with a way of life. I guess family is at the center of it.
”The right to hunt is enshrined in the Vermont Constitution; the state often considered the most liberal in the country has no state gun control laws.
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http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/viewart/20130506/NEWS02/305060003?source=nletter-top5