November 8, 2013 Fr Harry E. Winter OMI, USA Vatican
II and the Fiftieth Anniversary |
Background
of Fr Harry
|
(Comments
welcome here)
Pope
Benedict XVI famously noted, as Cardinal Ratzinger, when he was attempting to
assess the impact of Vatican II, that it had occurred during the same time as
the optimistic, almost naïve, initial days of the administration of the first
Catholic president of the
As
we approach the 50th anniversary of Kennedy’s assassination,
American journalists and historians are evaluating the enormous changes in the
From
1941 to 2006, my religious community, the Oblates of Mary Immaculate, ministered
in
He
and his younger brother Robert were stunned by the poverty they found as they
campaigned there. Rick Thompson,
writing in USA Today,
If
the election did not bury the myth of Protestant intolerance, the assassination
did. The preacher’s Sunday sermon
at the Baptist church in the town of
What
the mayor called simply “this terrible thing” had a “special poignancy”
in McDowell County, editorialized the Welch Daily News; Kennedy visited the city
three times in less than a year.
“Why,”
the newspaper asked, “would anyone want to take his life?”
He’d
addressed their worries, shaken their hands, remembered their names.
Which is why, a half-century later, they would recall the days Kennedy
visited at least as vividly as the day he died.
Standing
on the second level of the municipal parking garage, Eleanor Breckner, 22,
beheld an incongruous sight below: a
millionaire in an expensive suit, tanned from a vacation in
JFK
was an hour late, having lingered at a coal mine where he sat against a rail car
and talked with miners between shifts. When
he arrived in Welch, the crowd was so big—including shrieking teenage
girls—that he had his sound truck pull outside the parking garage, despite a
gathering windstorm. He hopped on
top, reached in his suit pocket and pulled out what he said was a telegram from
his father, tycoon Joseph P. Kennedy, who had been accused of trying to buy his
son the election.
“’Don’t
buy one more vote than necessary,’” Kennedy read.
“’Damned if I’m going to pay for a landslide.’”
The candidate smiled; the crowd roared….
On
Primary Day, Kennedy got 61% of the vote in a 95% Protestant state—and a clear
path to the nomination.
His
victory helped make a reputedly backward state—stereotypically, a land of
toothless, unschooled, moonshining hillbillies—seem a model of tolerance.
Kennedy’s
first executive order as president started a pilot food stamp program.
On
There
is a great deal of controversy over JFK’s Catholicism, and the effect of his
election on the Catholic Church in the
Probably
most would agree that his election, his thousand day presidency, and
assassination did make it easier for Americans of all kinds to work together to
lessen racism, poverty and ignorance. How
long that attitude endured is another question.
USA
Today and National Geographic will be having special editions as
For
the quip with which one Protestant, Adlai Stevenson, challenged another Protestant,
Norman Vincent Peale’s anti-Catholicism during the 1960 campaign,
see the Christian Joy page, “ for past items,” of the Mission Unity
Dialogue website sponsored by the Oblates in the USA:
www.harrywinter.org.
Pope
Francis is the first pope in 50 years who was not directly involved in Vatican
II. It will be interesting as Nov.
22 approaches to see if he comments, during his Wednesday audience of Nov. 20,
or on Nov. 22 itself, about the assassination of JFK and any link to the heady
times of Vatican II.
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