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Angelus News | October 25, 2019 | Vol. 4 No. 36

Young dancers from Ballet Folklórico Herencia Mexicana at St. Agatha in Mid-City at the first “Día de los Muertos” celebration 2014 at Calvary Cemetery in East LA. On Page 10, Pilar Marrero reports on how both the cultural and religious aspects of the traditional Mexican feast of “Día de los Muertos” (“Day of the Dead”) have created an opportunity for evangelization in Los Angeles. On Page 14, R.W. Dellinger gives a look into the daily reality of life and death seen through the eyes of three employees at a local Catholic cemetery.

Young dancers from Ballet Folklórico Herencia Mexicana at St. Agatha in Mid-City at the first “Día de los Muertos” celebration 2014 at Calvary Cemetery in East LA. On Page 10, Pilar Marrero reports on how both the cultural and religious aspects of the traditional Mexican feast of “Día de los Muertos” (“Day of the Dead”) have created an opportunity for evangelization in Los Angeles. On Page 14, R.W. Dellinger gives a look into the daily reality of life and death seen through the eyes of three employees at a local Catholic cemetery.

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Father Theodore Hesburgh, CSC, left, with Martin Luther King Jr., and Msgr.<br />

Robert J. Hagarty of Chicago, right, in 1964 at the Illinois Rally for Civil<br />

Rights in Chicago’s Soldier Field.<br />

supports abortion with an honorary doctorate.<br />

Miscamble’s discussion of Hesburgh’s position on abortion<br />

is what most jarringly smacks of cynicism throughout<br />

the book. Though his historical investigation questions at<br />

time the extent of Hesburgh’s impact on certain causes, his<br />

criticism of Hesburgh’s lack of pro-life activism betray the<br />

author’s opinion into the university president’s legacy.<br />

At multiple points, Miscamble criticizes Hesburgh for what<br />

he chronicles as largely a pragmatic decision. According to<br />

Miscamble’s argument, Hesburgh’s cause of choice was civil<br />

rights, and through a flawed rationale Hesburgh decided that<br />

abortion issues were a distraction he could not afford.<br />

There are times when this criticism makes sense; for example,<br />

when recounting Hesburgh’s decision to move away<br />

from pro-life rhetoric after Yale students hissed at him during<br />

a Terry lecture in which he included defense for the unborn<br />

among civil rights issues.<br />

However, at other points, Miscamble seems to tack<br />

Hesburgh’s life-issues ambivalence to unrelated legacies.<br />

As a result, Miscamble beleaguers the reader with this non<br />

sequitur while still failing to completely address Hesburgh’s<br />

failed legacy in life issues.<br />

“Hesburgh” also brings up the 2009 invitation of Obama,<br />

even though the contentious event did not include Hesburgh<br />

as president, largely just to make two points: that the<br />

president cited Hesburgh for his work on the civil rights<br />

commission as essential for his election, and that Hesburgh<br />

confirmed his much-criticized successor in his decision to<br />

invite the pro-choice president.<br />

In making these two points, the movie ironically supports<br />

the view of the Hesburgh legacy that Miscamble much maligns,<br />

in claiming the presidential commencement address<br />

as a win for Hesburgh’s civil rights campaign, it conveniently<br />

avoids acknowledging basic Catholic teaching on abortion.<br />

Though Miscamble criticizes Hesburgh’s pro-life stance at<br />

inappropriate times, “Hesburgh” does show that the priest’s<br />

legacy is flawed because he wouldn’t address life issues<br />

CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE/COURTESY UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME<br />

publicly. As a result, the issue continues to be sidestepped or<br />

ignored, even during appropriate times to criticize abortion<br />

and Hesburgh’s lack of action against it.<br />

There is a sense that these two works need each other —<br />

the explicit hagiography of “Hesburgh” with the nuanced, if<br />

at times cynical, analysis of “American Priest.”<br />

The topics these works cover, civil rights, anti-Catholic<br />

prejudice, and the role of the Church in education, are far<br />

from settled, and the victories which Father Ted helped win<br />

have made way for new controversies to divide the nation.<br />

“It’s impossible to have a complete and honest human story<br />

if one doesn’t speak of human failings as well as human<br />

successes,” the recording at the beginning of “Hesburgh”<br />

concludes.<br />

Combined, these two biographies offer a complete and<br />

honest human story, one prominently displaying the human<br />

successes while the other honestly chronicles the human<br />

failings. Read and watch them soon. <br />

Evan Holguin is a graduate of the University of <strong>No</strong>tre<br />

Dame. Originally from Santa Clarita, he now lives in New<br />

Haven, Connecticut. His work has been featured on the<br />

website Aleteia.com and on Ultramontane: A Catholic <strong>News</strong><br />

Podcast.<br />

CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE/COURTESY OCP MEDIA<br />

<strong>October</strong> <strong>25</strong>, <strong>2019</strong> • ANGELUS • 27

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