Posted on 10/12/2014 3:22:48 PM PDT by Heart-Rest
We do not recall these instances of anti-Catholicism to foster more animosity or violence, but recall them as part of our history, a history that, like so many others, included the targeting of ethnic and religious groups for persecution.
From left to rightBishop John Hughes, New York, 1844; cartoon from Anti-Catholic book published by the Ku Klux Klan, 1926; Burning of St. Augustine Church, Philadelphia, 1844; Fr. James Coyle, Birmingham Alabama, murdered, 1921.
You have, no doubt, heard the childrens rhyme: Sticks and stones may break my bones / But names will never hurt me. That is not exactly true. For in the history of the Church in America, Catholics have been wounded by both physical violence and hate speech. This article will examine episodes of violence against American Catholics, considering the sticks and stones, the broken bones, and the words that encouraged such violence.
If the presence of anti-Catholic violence in American history is unknown to many, it is for good reason. We as Catholics do not usually like to talk about being a minority; we do not like to talk about persecution. For generations, our immigrant ancestors and their descendants fought to be considered 100% American, not hyphenated Americans: Irish-American, German-American, Polish-American, or Italian-American. We Catholics have spent decades trying to assimilate into “White, Anglo Saxon, Protestant” (WASP) America and have, consequently, downplayed our distinctiveness. We wanted to fit in, and to achieve the American dreamto get good jobs, get a college education, and move to the suburbs.
In considering some episodes of anti-Catholicism, it should be noted that not all violence against Catholics was motivated exclusively by religion. In many cases, religious misunderstanding blended with nativism, and xenophobia, to bring about a toxic reaction to the United States Catholic newcomers. Consequently, anti-Catholic groupsthat included the Know-Nothing party, the American Protective Association, and the Ku Klux Klanespoused a form of bigotry, both religious and racially/ethnically motivated.
It should also be acknowledged that most manifestations of anti-Catholicism have not been violent. Much of anti-Catholicism in this country from the 18th century to today was more or less implicit: Protestants considered Catholics the other. Protestants often didnt have Catholic friends, they (and Catholics!) frowned on Catholic-Protestant marriages, and non-Catholics refused to hire or promote Catholic workers. Other times, anti-Catholicism was muted, but real; non-Catholics questioned whether Catholics were even Christians, calling the Church the Whore of Babylon (of Revelation 17), and considered the pope the “Anti-Christ,” or taught unequivocally that all Catholics go to hell.
Other times, anti-Catholicism was more overt. In colonial times, laws forbade Catholics from voting, becoming lawyers, and teachers. Catholics, even in Maryland, which had at first tolerated them, demanded a double tax on Catholic property; parents could even be fined for sending their children to Europe to be educated as Catholics. The propagation of anti-Catholic ideas manifested itself in various ways: in newspapers, books, and pamphlets, in sermons, in laws, in popular discussion and debate, and, occasionally, in violence and property destruction.
The examples of violence that follow are admittedly among the most pronounced and outrageous forms of anti-Catholicism, but we should not be led to believe that anti-Catholicism was only the experience of a few. As a corrective, it is important to remember that in the 19th century, Catholic-Protestant debates and discussions, often acrimonious, took center stage. They were on everyones mind. When the anti-Catholic novel, Maria Monks Awful Disclosuresupposedly written by a former nun, telling stories of affairs between priests and nuns, and the murder of the children they conceivedwas published in 1836, it became a near overnight sensation. By the start of the Civil War, it had sold 300,000 copies. Historians of this era claim it was among the most widely distributed book in America prior to the publication of Harriet Beecher Stowes Uncle Toms Cabin, the popular anti-slavery book.
Anti-Catholic violence has taken the form of protest against Catholics who were taking their place in the public square. Catholics, it was feared, could subvert the American Republic, especially its democratic processes, and its public schools. When Franciscan priests and brothers first came to Cincinnati, Ohio, from Austria in 1844, onlookers did not know what to think of them, walking through the streets in their brown habits. But some recognized them immediately as Catholic monks, potential anti-American subversives. In his journal, one of the first Franciscans in Cincinnati, Fr. William Unterthiner, described the animosity directed at Catholics, especially priests, in mid-1840s Cincinnati:
The Protestants here are even worse (than in other places in the U.S.); so goes the protest. Today some people threw wooden sticks at us, and cursed us (as we walked down the street). It is certainly true that a person is free to choose one, or even no religion, but one would still be very mistaken if he believed that Catholics are allowed to live unhindered.
As Catholic immigration increased throughout the 1840s and 1850s, concern mounted that Catholics were taking over Americas public schoolsan attempt that would eliminate the Bible (particularly the King James version) from everyday classroom use. The challenge offered by Catholics to public schools, that were de facto Protestant schools, brought Catholics and Protestants into frequent conflict.
The so-called Eliot School Rebellion, which occurred in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1859, proves a dramatic example. The state law that required the Ten Commandments to be recited (always using the King James Bible) in every classroom every morning, pitted Catholics, who viewed non-Catholics Bibles as false translations, against Protestant teachers, parents, and schoolmates. Ten-year-old Thomas Whall, a Catholic, was asked to take his turn leading the recitation of the Ten Commandments. When Whall refused because of his Catholic faith (and his desire to only read from the Douay-Rheims translation, an approved Catholic translation), he was disciplined. Whall had been urged by his parish priest not to recite Protestant prayers, nor read from the King James Bible.
A few days later, when Whall refused again, his teacher struck him with a rattan stick for half an hour until he was bleeding; he refused to give in, and his fellow Catholic classmates cheered him on. The schools principal demanded that Catholic children, who refused to recite the commandments, leave the school; hundreds left in protest. The rebellion helped extend the parochial school system in Massachusetts. Within a year, a Catholic school was established in Whalls parish with an enrollment of over 1,000.
Not all anti-Catholic violence was physical. Sometimes it resulted in the destruction of property. These episodes represent the ferocity of anti-Catholic violence, though without physical assault or loss of life.
In 1834, an anti-Catholic mob burned the Ursuline Convent in Charlestown, near Boston. The convent school there educated primarily upper-class Protestant girls, and worries of the Protestant elites attraction to Catholicism festered. This, together with the rumor of an Ursuline sister being held in the convent against her will, and the anti-Catholic preaching of Rev. Lyman Beecher, father of Harriet Beecher Stowe, incited a riot.
An angry mob gathered outside the convent, calling for the release of the sister, but the Ursuline mother superior threatened the crowd: The Bishop has 20,000 of the vilest Irishmen at his command, and you may read your riot act till your throats are sore, but youll not quell them. The crowd broke down doors and windows to enter the convent, and began to ransack the buildings. The sisters and their students rushed out the back of the convent, and hid in the garden. At about midnight, the rioters set fire to the building, burning it to the ground. Of the 13 men arrested and charged with arson, all but one was acquitted. The governor pardoned him in response to a petition signed by 5,000 Bostonians. Distrust of sisters in convents led eventually to a number of state legislatures proposing convent inspection laws, authorizing the warrantless searches of Catholic buildingsconvents, monasteries, rectories, and churchesfor weaponry, and for young women supposedly seduced into the convent and held against their will.
In 1844, two Catholic churches were burned in Philadelphia after it was rumored Catholics were insisting on the removal of the Bible from public schools. The same scene might have been repeated in New York City, but New Yorks Bishop, John Hughes, warned: If a single Catholic church is burned in New York, the city would become a second Moscow, a reference to the 1812 burning of Moscow in which its own citizens set fire to the city as Napoleons soldiers closed in.
In 1854, as the Washington Monument in Washington, D.C., was being constructed, nine men, associated with the anti-Catholic Know-Nothing party, sneaked up to the base of the monument to steal a stone that had been engraved Rome to America. The stone, which was to have been placed inside the monument, along with other stones given as gifts from foreign governments, had been shipped from the Vatican. The men carried the stone to a boat waiting at the tidal basin, smashed it into pieces, and dumped it in the middle of the Potomac River. For them, the stone indicated the threat of the Catholic Churchs takeover of the U.S. government, a much talked about, but very unlikely, threat. The identity of the conspirators was shrouded in mystery; no one was ever convicted of the crime. In 1982, a replica of the stone, given by a priest from Spokane, Washington, was installed in the monument by the National Park Service.
The attack on the Shrine of Our Lady of Juan del Valle in San Juan, Texas, provides a final, modern example. In 1970, a non-denominational preacher intentionally flew a small airplane into the church while Mass was being celebrated. No one was injured except the kamikaze pilot who died. While the overall property loss was estimated at $1.5 million, many believed it a miracle that no one else was hurt or died in the tragedy. A new shrine was dedicated in 1980 where the previous church had stood.
Infrequently, physical violence and death were the consequence of anti-Catholicism. In 1853, Pope Pius IX sent Archbishop Gaetano Bedini to visit the U.S. and report back to him on the state of the Catholic Church in America. Because many U.S. Protestants viewed the pope as sinister, and as an enemy of freedom, they blamed his representative.
In Cincinnati, hundreds of protesters marched towards the cathedral where Bedini was staying, carrying signs, a scaffold, and an effigy of the archbishop. The signs read Down with Bedini!; No Priests, No Kings; and Down with the Papacy! Fearing an attack on the residence, the police attempted to turn back the demonstrators. In the ensuing melee, one protester was killed, 15 were wounded, and 63 were arrested. Most of the citys residents supported the protesters, blaming the police for exercising brutality. Those who had been arrested were released, the charges were dropped, and an investigation of the police commenced. As Bedini continued to tour the country, violent disturbances erupted in Cleveland, Louisville, Baltimore, Boston, and New York. Fearing further violence in New York, Bedini was secretly transported by way of a rowboat to the steamship on which he would depart for Europe.
Not long after Bedini returned to Italy, anti-Catholic mob violence struck Louisville, Kentucky. In an incident known as Bloody Monday (August 6, 1855), concern about Catholic influence over the electoral process contributed to a mob attack on Irish Catholic neighborhoods, resulting in 22 deaths, scores of injuries, and widespread property destruction. Five people were later indicted; none was convicted.
Religious and racial prejudice combined in the deep South, resulting in the murder of a priest in 1921. Father James Coyle, priest of Birmingham, Alabama, was shot and killed on his rectory front porch. Coyle had performed the wedding of a recent convert to Catholicism, the daughter of a Methodist minister and Ku Klux Klan member, to a Puerto Rican Catholic man. The Methodist ministers daughter had become interested in Catholicism as a young girl; she converted at age 18 and was received into the Catholic faith by Father Coyle. Only a few months later, Coyle witnessed the girls marriage. When her father found out about the clandestine wedding, he confronted Coyle and shot him. The minister was charged with the priests murder, but was acquitted by a jury who found him not guilty by reason of insanity. In 2012, Bishop William H. Willimon of the United Methodist Church presided over a service of reconciliation and forgiveness in Birmingham, asking for forgiveness for the role his church had played in the death of Father Coyle.
In recent years the threat of anti-Catholic violence has surrounded fidelity to the Churchs teaching on marriage and family life. In 2002, Mary Stachowicz, the parish secretary of now Bishop, Thomas Paprocki of Springfield, Illinois, was raped and murdered. Her killer stated to police that he attacked Stachowicz after she confronted him about his gay lifestyle. Bishop Paprocki, in public addresses on the Churchs approach to same sex attraction, relates the story of his former secretarys murder in order to condemn all forms of violence based on bigotry. He feels compelled to speak about this form of anti-Catholic violence because it has been almost completely ignored by the media. Bishop Paprocki notes:
A Google search on the Internet for the name Matthew Shepard at one time produced 11.9 million results. Matthew Shepard was a 21-year-old college student who was savagely beaten to death in 1998 in Wyoming. His murder has been called a hate crime because Shepard was gay. A similar search on the Internet for the name Mary Stachowicz yielded 26,800 results.
Mary Stachowicz was also brutally murdered, also the victim of a hate crime, yet, her death went unnoticed. Perhaps, this is a signal that, as in the past, various forms of anti-Catholic violence are still viewed by some as acceptable, or at least, not worthy of notice.
Why examine these episodes of hate? Why not let them remain hidden in scarcely-read tomes of Catholic history? We do not recall these instances of anti-Catholicism to foster more animosity or violence, but recall them as part of our history, a history that, like so many others, included the targeting of ethnic and religious groups for persecution. Though the Church is often seen in overblown narratives as a perpetrator of violence, responsible for the horrors of the Crusades, the Spanish Inquisition, and the Holocaust, the Church has also been afflicted by violence motivated by religion. If history teaches us anything, it is that the memory of the past is so often selective.
Yet, this discussion should not end by recalling the role of religious belief in contributing to violence, but should remember the role of religious faith in promoting love. Fundamental to the Churchs teaching is the importance of humanitys dignity as sons and daughters of the Creator. Violence, if even partly motivated by religion, contradicts what St. John taught us about GodGod is love (1 Jn 4:8, 16)a divine love that humanity is called to mirror and extend.
Islam?
This is a thread about anti-what?
Stick to the subject, LOL!
Bishop Fulton Sheen
I would tell Fulton that it’s not what Americans think of the Catholic Church that matters but what God thinks that is important.
https://archive.org/stream/indianbattleswit00whituoft/indianbattleswit00whituoft_djvu.txt
view it in text
search for THE REDEEMED CAPTIVE RETURNING TO ZION
The Jesuits were criminals and slave takers of the protestants and the history of the world proves it
and this is in Colonial America and Canada
it is no wonder that due to our early history of relations of the catholic church forcing war and slavery upon the English that all Roman Catholics would have been considered suspicious, just as muslims are not trusted today.
Then we need this. Prayers for The Religion Forum (Ecumenical)
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No, this is the "truth" thread.
Back-tracking in history, in the face of Huns at the gates of Rome, moslems at the gates of Tours, Norse in Britain and to the gates of Paris and beyond, Mongols in Russia, and then protracted moslim aggression for literally centuries and right up to the gates of Vienna and the shores of the Mediterranean, I don't think experimenting with forms of government was of great concern to anyone in Europe. Survival was more in mode.
As time progressed the papacy had good relations with the Swiss Confederation, and sided with William of Orange over Kng James of England, to mention but two examples. The American congress severed ties with the Vatican over Pope Pius IX's recognition of the Confederate States. The Church has by no means supported absolutists without thought.
To present Europe as an evil empire humming along under the jewel-encrusted thumb of the pope is as gross a misrepresentation of history as possible, one which takes very little historical context into account.
Once I get all your names down the reparation checks will go out.
Since it was founded by the Second Person of the Trinity, I’m sure God approves.
But Bishop Sheen’s statement is still true. (As evidenced by many posts even on this one thread.)
I disagree. I think that's only your perception. Do you like to see these types of discussions? Ones that show that the Catholic Churchs actions brought some of it down on itself? Or do you just want people to smile and agree with everything you say? Which is it? Anytime you post this stuff you're going to hear both sides of it.
Your book is wrong
I don't think that's a true statement about the Catholic Church. I'm sure you disagree. One day we'll both know the answer for sure.
Which sentence exactly is in error? Is the name wrong or the date?
Sheen’s words are for the church founded 2,000 years ago and from the minute it was founded there have been those trying to tear it down. Most notably Islam, which has been going at with Catholics for 1400 years and for the last 500 years protestants. He knows exactly what he is speaking of.
The correct name should be “Foxes book of stuff we just made up to be anti-Catholic bigots”.
Wow! I must have missed those. With the "uncountable number" of times would you please show a post or two of those who did? I wouldn't want the readers to think you are making that up.
Along with the ebola threat, the CDC has issued a warning about hyperbole incidences are on the rise.
Islam is not a CHurch and Bishop Sheen is speaking of the Catholic Church.
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