I Couldn't Let Them Die Alone
Sister Helen Prejean is best known for her 1993 memoir, Dead Man 
Walking, about her role as a spiritual adviser to a convicted killer on 
death row. The story was adapted into an Oscar-winning film starring 
Susan Sarandon and Sean Penn. Prejean has accompanied six prisoners to 
their executions and has been at the forefront of activism against the 
death penalty. "In [their] last moments, I was amazed that they're 
walking," she says. "'Sister, pray that God holds my legs up as I walk.'
 They take steps. I read scripture to them. ... All I knew was: I 
couldn't let them die alone." Her new memoir, River of Fire: My 
Spiritual Journey, tells the story of her life leading up to her 
awakening to social justice movements in the 1980s.
https://www.npr.org/2019/08/12/750470040/sister-helen-prejean-on-witnessing-executions-i-couldn-t-let-them-die-alone
https://www.npr.org/2019/08/12/750470040/sister-helen-prejean-on-witnessing-executions-i-couldn-t-let-them-die-alone