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Dissent in an Unlikely Place
Bush speaks today at a Catholic college led by an ally, but views on the war dampen the welcome.
LATROBE, PA. - President Bush could hardly have picked a better private liberal arts college to find a welcoming audience for a commencement address than St. Vincent, a Catholic school run by a loyal former White House aide in a conservative region.
Yet consider what has taken place here since Bush was invited for today's speech: Students vigorously debated the invitation at a town-hall meeting last month. A former St. Vincent College president wrote a scathing newspaper essay saying Bush had no place on the campus. About a quarter of the tenure-rank faculty wrote an open letter to Bush challenging the Iraq war as contrary to Roman Catholic doctrine. Several dozen people held a candlelight vigil Thursday night protesting the visit. And for several Sundays, nuns protested on the edge of the campus.
The discord, polite and reasoned as it may be, is emblematic of passions across the country as the war moves further into its fifth year, with increasing military deployments and mounting death tolls among Iraqi civilians and U.S. troops.
If anything, the debate there - at a college associated with the Order of St. Benedict and led by a man who once ran Bush's faith-based initiative - suggests that dissent is spreading into places with little history of protest.
It also suggests that the Bush-led Republican drive to increase support among Catholics, built around Bush's stance on abortion and other social policy issues, could run into trouble over the Catholic doctrine of a "just war."
"I know we have this sense of Benedictine hospitality, but what the president represents does not fit in," said Michelle Sciacca of Pittsburgh, who is graduating with a degree in English.
"We know people are dying there, and that's not part of our faith."
Political scientists caution against reading too much into the impact of the war on one segment of voters.
John C. Green, director of the Ray C. Bliss Institute of Applied Politics at the University of Akron in Ohio, said Catholics were deeply divided over the war and were "the quintessential swing voters in elections today." He studies religion's role in politics.
The war has threatened GOP outreach to Catholics because church leaders "strongly oppose the war on principle, and have done so from the beginning," Green said.
Bush had made significant inroads with Catholic voters: His slice increased 5 percentage points in the 2004 election compared with 2000. But in a Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll last month, Catholics' views on the war tracked closely with the general public's, with 60% of respondents disapproving of Bush's handling of it.
For H. James Towey, who is finishing his first academic year as St. Vincent president, the intersection of religion and politics is familiar.
For more than four years, he directed the Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, an effort to increase the role of religious organizations in performing government-funded social assistance work.
He was legal counsel to Mother Teresa for 12 years and lived in her missions for two years. A nearly life-size charcoal drawing of the late nun dominates his office.
Towey said his e-mails, phone calls and letters had increased tenfold since the announcement that Bush would speak. "The hatred that comes out is just staggering - that he is not a Christian - and they'll unload on him in a most un-Christian way," he said.
But he added, "On these hallowed grounds, the debate has been pretty darn civil."
St. Vincent College, near Pittsburgh, has about 1,660 students and was founded in 1846, the first Benedictine college in the United States. It's on the edge of Latrobe, the hometown of golfer Arnold Palmer and late children's television host Fred Rogers.
"The college is fairly representative of society at large," said Dennis McDaniel, an associate professor of English who signed the open letter to Bush. "The tide has turned here, as it has elsewhere."
McDaniel said: "For many of us, there is a very strong spiritual basis for our opposition to the war, and perhaps that creates an intensity and a sense of conflict that may distinguish our feelings from someone who may simply see it as a strategic mistake."
But Bradley C.S. Watson, who holds an endowed chair in American and Western political thought, said: "If you don't like Bush, that's fine. But don't wrap yourself in the mantle of Catholic social teaching [as though] you have exclusive purchase on it."
At an end-of-the-year softball game pitting faculty against seniors, an informal sampling found a range of opinion about the war, but excitement that Bush would address the graduating class.
"The Catholic community doesn't believe in general that we should be over there," said Justin Eppler, who is about to begin a business marketing job. "It's just a tough situation in general."
But, he added, "everyone here supports our troops 100%."
Kevin Zaffino, who has completed Marine officer training and is to receive his commission as a 2nd lieutenant next month, said that "it's going bad over there" in Iraq but that critics of Bush's visit were "politicizing this event too much."
Nearby, Tyler Tomayko said the United States should not "police the world," but called Bush's visit "an amazing opportunity" for the school.
Towey said there would be dissent no matter who spoke. If it were Pope Benedict XVI, he suggested, "the nuns would still be protesting."
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times
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21 Comments so far
Show AllAre the idiots who asked Bush to SPEAK - a part of the pro - pedophile wing of the Catholic Church?: the pro - Nazi wing?: the Spanish Inquisition branch?: or just the Indulgence selling division?
Outlaw war.
Peaceful demenstrations accomplish nothing.
good for the catholics. good for the mormons. religion, christianty is now becoming bush's enemy.
I should think it would take a lot to drive Catholics away from Bush. Thanks to him we have five of them on the Supreme Court.
Our local Pittsburgh anti-war commitee organized a protest out there today, I was going to go, but the secret service has cordoned a no-protest zone extending almost a mile around the campus limits. Good luck to them...
The idea of Bush speaking at a school run by Benedictine monks is apalling. But he would have also been welcome at the College of Steubenville - and it is run by the Fransiscan friars.
Hope there are some principled students at the graduation today.
"If it were Pope Benedict XVI, he suggested, "the nuns would still be protesting."
Good for the nuns! The Sisters of Mercy are strongly supporting the protest and are making their grounds and convent avaialable to the protestors and hosting a picnic afterwards.
I am not a church-going Catholic, but like the secular Jews, once born a Catholic especially an Irish-descended Catholic, you are always a bit of a Catholic even if agnostic or athiest.
John Paul II and now this Ratzinger guy, have turned the Church into an institution of reactionary politics. I will never forget the disgusting behavior of JPII when he went to Nicaragua, and his purging of liberation theology - which he considered "Communistic", through the dismisal of thousands of priests. Well, maybe liberation theology was fairly "pinko"; but, which economic system, in principle, accords with Christ's sermon on the mount, which which economic system's very raison d'etre runs utterly counter to Christs teachings?
I also will always regard with disgust Bishop Wuerls (now Cardinal of DC) approval of our local churches open displays of war-mongering bellicosity post Sept 11 and in the run-up to the Iraq war - up to and including the carillions playing the "marine corps fight song" for evening vespers.
I'm surprised they even allowed Bush to appear, since he is in direct opposition to the direction given by the current and previous pope agsinst the war
http://www.tcrnews2.com/PopeNotWar.html
John Paul II stated before the 2003 war that this war would be a defeat for humanity which could not be morally or legally justified.
In the weeks and months before the U.S. attacked Iraq, not only the Holy Father, but also one Cardinal and Archbishop after another at the Vatican spoke out against a
"preemptive" or "preventive" strike. They declared that the just war theory could not justify such a war. Archbishop Jean-Louis Tauran said that such a "war of aggression" is a crime against peace. Archbishop Renato Martino, who used the same words in calling the possible military intervention a "crime against peace that cries out vengeance before God," also criticized the pressure that the most powerful nations exerted on the less powerful ones on the U.N. Security Council to support the war
I went to Catholic Boarding Schools and I never would have thought that X amount of year latter I would be glad to have done so, because the Nuns taught us how to THINK FOR OURSELVES, they never made us pray, but they were very strict and we taunted them hourly, but they turned us into thinkers with common sense. I also learned that organized religion is a scourge on society.
canuckchuck,
I agree thet geography is a factor. Catholic clergy in canada and elsewhere are certainly more progressive. But In northeast and rust-belt US cities, where catholics are a majority in many neighborhoods, the Catholic church is very conservative. The conservatism of catholics north of the mason-dixon line is stark compared to the south where they are a small minority that was discriminated in the past.
I am aware of the official Vatican positions against the Iraq (and even Afghanm) war, but they are awfully low-key about it.
Apparently, the L.A. Times is unfamiliar with the history of specifically Catholic dissent in this country--from Fr. Dan Berrigan and the Catonsville Nine burning of draft files during the Vietnam war, to Fr. Roy Bourgeois and acts of civil disobedience and vandalizing at the School of the Americas in Ft. Benning, GA, to the Catholic Worker movement, the National Catholic Reporter, etc.
This is why I hate reading newspapers here: no context--zero, zip, nada! We are to assume everything happened this morning--news flash, this just in!--while we were making coffee. The headline is misleading--there's always been dissent at Catholic colleges, and among the Catholic community at large--starting from the fact that most Catholics in the US are against (1) the Church's stance on divorce; (2) the Church's stance on limiting the reproductive rights of women; and (3) the Church's stance on homosexuality and same-sex marriages.
Perhaps we should all be glad the L.A. Times reported on it at all.
"The headline is misleading–there's always been dissent at Catholic colleges, and among the Catholic community at large"
I fully agree with you and belong to an orgainzation (the Thomas Merton Center) with close ties to Fr. Bourgeois, Dan and the late Phil Berrigan, have close ties to Catholic Worker's, etc...
But, this article was pretty accurate in describing the profoundly conservative politics of the Catholic institutions here in Western Pennsylvania. The Catholic colleges and universities here from St Francis in Loretto to the east, to Duquesne U. and Laroche College here in Pittsburgh, to the University of Steubenville across the WV Panhandle - institutions of right-wing indoctrination all!
Conservatism is strong among Catholics here - Irish, Polish, Croatian, Bohemian, southern-German and Italian, (but virtually no latinos,even today) - descendents of the immigrants who came here to work in the mills and mines. Strong unions like the USWA and the UMWA notwithstanding, they took up conservative jingoistic-Americanism as a way to seek acceptance as "real" Americans.
Face it. All of western PA is far right wing. The Klan had a strong presence there and for all I know, may still have. The Catholic community merely reflects the community in general and I am surprised that any of the students are protesting at all. Good on them.
I am curious as to what this "community at large" that St. Vincent's is supposedly representative of is. Certainly not any community I'm familiar with.
Wonderful to hear that there is opposition. Curious that it wasn't reported on the news. (That was snide.)
we need poison darts for the birds to destroy this war criminal who belongs in the hague now.
This religion is full of hypocrites. They rally to the popular side to gain support.
If you need help here they will not bother. Yet they will rally to help illegals. Public servants my ***!
Another religion that wants themselves in a photo op on the cover of a media publication.
They support perverts so why not murders too?
This will be a typical and historical Bush speaking...talks of ideas and accomplishes little. Because of the issues and Bush's involvement, the president of the college should have had a speaker opposingt Mr. Bush. That is gutsy, which, obviously, the president of the college does not have.
dkm wrote:
"All of western PA is far right wing. The Klan had a strong presence there and for all I know, may still have."
You must be from Philly, because you are confusing western PA with central PA. I was referring to the the bituminous coal mining and former steelmaking regions - really Southwest PA. The Klan was and probably still is anti-Catholic and anti immigrant, so I doubt they ever had a presence in SW PA. But yes, drop down off the Allegheny plateau into Bedford or Altoona, and it gets very WASP and quite redneck - confederate flags flying outside the mobile homes and all that.
The conservatism of the Catholics is from a different origin and can be understood by reading Ignatiev's book "How the Irish Became White"
My only surprise is that you should be surprised! JPII said st Coventry in my UK homeland in 1882: "Modern warfare, whether nuclear or not, is totally unjustifiable as a means of settling international disputes". I was there. BXVI , while condemning capital punishment unequivocally, has said the same repeatedly as he has booted the so called just war theory into touch.
Anybody listening?
I was named after my uncle who graduated from St. Vincent College in the early 1900s, was ordained a priest for the Diocese of Pittsburgh, and was pastor for years at St. Brendan's in Braddock. I knew Phil Berrigan, and read his brother's book "Uncommon Prayer" back in the 70s. In it he foretold that "We are going downhill and pellmell into a dark age led by neanderthals armed to the teeth... the day they long for, the day they bring nearer is named Doom." Welcome to Doomsville. Some of the neanderthals are running St. Vincent's College and instead of filing committment papers for a 302 in accordance with Pennsylvania law, they are inviting Bush to speak at commencement. He can't put a sentence together without a teleprompter. The arguements for his impeachment are beyond arguement. Either the U. S. Congress upholds and defends the constitution, or it upholds and defends Bush's lunacy. But the difference between a Congressman and a ho, as Edward Abbey noted long ago, is that the ho makes less money.
Bush is the enemy of what's left of Christianity.
He is an enemy of your Constitution (what's left of it) and an enemy of your right to practice your faith without state's approval. Wake up, Christians... Your butt may be next!