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John Cardinal O'Connor

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John Cardinal O'Connor

Nat Hentoff

Nonfiction | Biography | Adult | Published in 1979

Plot Summary
In his biography John Cardinal O'Connor: At the Storm Center of a Changing American Catholic Church (1988), American author and historian Nat Hentoff chronicles the life and career of John O'Connor, a Catholic clergyman who in 1984 became the Archbishop of New York. Though many of O'Connor's views and statements throughout his career were considered controversial—particularly in his home state of New York—Hentoff seeks to provide a balanced and fair-minded perspective on the man.

Born in 1920 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, O'Connor was the fourth of five children belonging to Irish immigrant Thomas J. O'Connor and his wife, Dorothy. Though the daughter of a rabbi, Dorothy converted to Roman Catholicism at the age of nineteen, a year before marrying Thomas. After graduating from West Philadelphia Catholic School for Boys, O'Connor enrolled at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary. An ordained priest by the age of twenty-five, O'Connor began serving for the Archdiocese of Philadelphia in 1945.

In 1952, two years into the Korean War, O'Connor enlisted in the United States Navy Chaplain Corps. In Korea, O'Connor was frequently tasked with entering combat zones to administer soldiers' last rites and perform Mass. He remained with the US Navy for decades, ascending the military ranks to become a rear admiral. Although he wrote a book in 1968 expressing support for the Vietnam War, he later described it as "a bad book." Around this time, Pope John Paul II made O'Connor an Honorary Prelate of His Holiness.



In 1975, O'Connor was made Chief of Chaplains across the entire US Navy. During his tenure, O'Connor introduced a number of innovations, including the establishment of the Religious Program Specialist Enlisting Rating. This allowed chaplains to maintain a dedicated enlisted staff rather than having to rely on a rotating cast of enlistees working under them. When O'Connor's four-year term as Chief of Chaplains came to an end in 1979, Pope John Paul II appointed him as the auxiliary bishop for the United States Armed Services. In 1984, following the death of Terence Cook, the Pope appointed O'Connor to the position of Archbishop of New York. According to the author's reporting as well as other scholarship he cites, Pope John Paul II said that he appointed O'Connor because, "I want a man just like me in New York."

O'Connor's tenure in New York began with a somewhat rocky start. In a television interview shortly before his ascension to Archbishop, O'Connor likened "the killing of four thousand babies a day in the United States, unborn babies" to the Holocaust. To a city like New York with the nation's largest Jewish population and comparatively liberal values relative to the rest of the country, O'Connor's comments came under fire, most notably in a New York Times editorial lecturing the new Archbishop.

The author suggests that this controversy solidified O'Connor in the minds of many New Yorkers as an out-of-touch right-wing ideologue. One anonymous Harvard history professor expresses this perspective to the author by calling O'Connor "so far to the right, you can predict every position he takes." But while O'Connor was indeed passionate and immovable in his opposition to abortion, the author argues that the Archbishop's politics were far more complicated. For example, despite having spent much of his career in the US Armed Forces, O'Connor frequently offered intense criticism of American military policies. In particular, he condemned the United States' support of Nicaragua's counterrevolutionary guerilla forces or "Contras," a group of right-wing anti-socialist rebels who regularly committed acts of terror and human rights violations. O'Connor was also to the left of many of his high-ranking peers in the Catholic clergy in terms of his views on organized labor. The son of a lifelong union member, O'Connor sided with the 1199, New York's largest healthcare workers union, in its 1984 strike. He even leaned on the League of Voluntary Hospitals, an industry group of which the New York archdiocese was a member, to vow not to fire any union members on strike from the organization's Catholic hospitals.



Whether aligned with the right or left, O'Connor rarely shied away from secular politics. During the 1984 Presidential Election, he was incredibly critical of Geraldine Ferraro, a Queens Congresswoman running for Vice President on the Democratic ticket. In particular, O'Connor attacked Ferraro for claiming that the Catholic Church's stance on abortion is "not monolithic." He also sparred with New York Governor Mario Cuomo over Executive Order 50, which protected gay men and women from job discrimination.

Meanwhile, O'Connor's relationship with New York's Jewish population remained tense. Despite going against the Vatican's orders by visiting Jerusalem—which the Catholic Church did not recognize as Israel's capital—O'Connor returned to New York to face intense scrutiny from various Jewish groups for his behavior and statements during the trip. For example, in hailing the establishment of the Jewish state, O'Connor said, "The Holocaust may be an enormous gift that Judaism has given the world." To American Jews still reeling from his comparison of abortion to the Holocaust, O'Connor's statements were unforgivable.

John Cardinal O'Connor is an enlightening book that casts a fair eye on one of New York's most controversial public figures of the late 20th century.

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