CARDINAL DOLAN'S DOUBLE STANDARD
“ It’s a pity Cardinal Dolan
didn’t also get ‘his Irish up’ over British oppression of Catholics in the
North of Ireland.”
That was my instinctive reaction
when I heard that the Cardinal said President Obama “ got his Irish up.”
I track the record of Irish
Catholic politicians and Church leaders on human rights and equality in
Northern Ireland. The record shows that Cardinal Dolan in forty years never opened his mouth to condemn British Government
internment (imprisonment without charge or trial) torture, collusion,
shoot-to-kill, anti-Catholic discrimination, etc., etc.
The racist, anti-Catholic Maggie
Thatcher never got the Cardinal’s “Irish up”, but the thoroughly decent
President Obama has. What’s wrong with that picture? What sort of double-standard
is that?
I deplore partisan ideology, on the right or on the
left. However, any time I make comments about something like this, ideologues want to accuse me of
being a partisan Democrat or Republican. I am neither. So, for example, when I
praised the late Congressman Hamilton( R-NY) and the great Congressman Ben
Gilman (R-NY) for their record on Irish justice , partisan
Democrats attacked me for being a Republican. When I praised Hillary Clinton
and the great Congressman Mario Biaggi ( D-NY),
I received complaints from Republicans.
I have simply no patience with that nonsense.
Here’s my bottom line: An
Irish-Catholic leader who has never opened his mouth about British injustice in
Northern Ireland has weakened his own moral leadership…. An African-American
leader who refused to speak out against Jim Crow or apartheid has forfeited moral
leadership … A Jewish-American leader who remained silent about anti-Semitism
has surrendered the high moral ground.
And let no one dare say,“ That’s
just politics.” No, no, no!
Justice is not just politics -- struggling for justice is an essential part
of the Judea-Christian faith. The Hebrew
Scriptures puts it perfectly: “ Do justice, love mercy and walk humbly with
your God (Micah 8 :6); and “Justice in
the World” by the Synod of Bishops, resoundingly proclaims,“ Action on behalf
of justice is a constitutive dimension of the preaching of the Gospel.”
Therefore to remain silent about
injustice is to betray The Gospel. It is, in my mind, a sort of heresy.
I reflect a lot on this theme in
the just published American Edition of my Memoirs, My American Struggle for Justice in Northern Ireland. Indeed, it
has haunted me my entire life: how could Irish Catholic Church leaders in both
Ireland and the United States have remained silent about the British
Government’s anti-Irish and anti-Catholic policy in Northern Ireland? What the hell was wrong with them?
I write in my book, “ Thank God
Ben Gilman was Jewish and Bill Clinton was Protestant” because had they been
Catholic, they might have been guided my the official position of the American Bishops:
“… after due consultation with the Irish bishops, and in recognition of the
efforts being made by the governments and church bodies directly concerned, we
had concluded that there is no appropriate basis for public intervention in the
problems of Northern Ireland, either by this conference, or any branch of the
United States government…" (Office of International Justice and Peace. US
Catholic Conference. October 17, 1979).
What an outrageous, shameful,
quisling and “heretical” teaching. And at that time, the key person in the Office of International Justice and Peace
was Fr. Bryan Hehir, SJ, who was – and still is -- considered the Catholic
Church’s top theological expert on Catholic social teaching.
That horrible double-standard leads
me to writing in my book : “ And what
about all the Irish-American priests,
especially the Irish-born. Why were ninety per cent of them silent? Some from Southern
Ireland were even known to tell Americans that Northern Ireland is an internal matter for the British
Government! What pathology is at work here? What explains such self-loathing
gombeenism? It was enough to make a man become a Protestant. History will not
forgive them – neither will Biblical theology.” (Page 86).
Cardinal O’ Connor, God rest him,
was famed for his pro-life leadership. But he also condemned British injustice
in Northern Ireland. For me, therefore, he spoke with full moral authority. His motto
was, “ Without justice, there is no love.” My sentiments exactly.
To me, one of the most enduring
signs of God’s grace is that the Irish have kept the Catholic faith despite
Church leaders (with a few honorable exceptions) colluding with British
Government oppression.
God bless America and God save
Ireland.
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