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Maryknoll Society

The Maryknoll Society is (also known as the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers and officially as Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America; Latin: Societas de Maryknoll pro missionibus exteris) is a Catholic society of apostolic life for men founded in the United States to serve as missionaries to the poor and marginalized.

Maryknoll Society
AbbreviationM.M.
Formation1911; 113 years ago (1911)
Founders
TypeSociety of Apostolic Life of Pontifical Right (for Men)
Headquarters(Fathers and Brothers) P.O. Box 303, Maryknoll, NY 10545-0303
Membership (2017)
317 (268 Priests)
Key people
  • Raymond J. Finch, Superior General, Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers
  • Ted Miles, Executive Director, Maryknoll Lay Missioners
Websitewww.maryknoll.org

The society was founded in 1911 by Thomas Frederick Price, James Anthony Walsh, and Mary Joseph Rogers. The name Maryknoll comes from the hill outside the Village of Ossining, Westchester County, New York, which houses the headquarters of all three.[1] Members of the societies are usually called Maryknollers.[2]

Maryknollers are sometimes known as the "Marines of the Catholic Church" for their reputation of moving into rough areas, living side-by-side with the indigenous peoples and learning the language.[3][4] Maryknollers focus on "combating poverty, providing healthcare, building communities and advancing peace and social justice" in the countries they serve and have built numerous orphanages, primary schools and secondary schools.[5] Because of the way in which Maryknollers have especially engaged in social justice, Maryknoll is also sometimes seen as a movement that represents missionary service concerned with positive action for indigenous people.[6][7][8] In the mid-20th century, this movement came to be associated with liberation theology.[3]

The Christophers and The Maryknoll Affiliates[9] are both associated with the Maryknoll Movement. Maryknoll is also the current name of the semi-monthly magazine which the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers publish.[10]

The Maryknoll name shared by a number of related Catholic organizations, including the Maryknoll Sisters, and the Maryknoll Lay Missioners. The organizations are independent entities with shared history that work closely together in the joint focus of the overseas mission activity of the Catholic Church particularly in East Asia, the United States, Latin America, and Africa.[3]

History edit

Background edit

Prior to 1906, the United States was on a roster of Catholic mission territories compiled by the Vatican. It was part of an era of heavy migrations of European Catholics to the United States and there was a cultural hostility to Roman Catholicism. The establishment of Maryknoll for foreign missions came at a time when the Catholic church was focusing its energies on that anti-Catholic bias within the United States.[11] "Out of the 17,000 Americans serving as Catholic priests at the time, for example, the number serving in foreign missions was 14."[12]

 
Fathers Thomas F. Price, seated at left, and James A. Walsh, seated at center, co-founders of the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers, pose for a photo with fellow Maryknoll Fathers James E. Walsh, seated at right, Francis X. Ford, standing at left, and Bernard Meyer, at Maryknoll, N.Y., in 1918.

In 1907, Father James Walsh of Boston began publishing The Field Afar, a mission magazine that would later become Maryknoll. The following year, Mary "Mollie" Josephine Rogers (later Mother Mary Joseph, MM) began helping Walsh with editing, translating and writing.[13]

In 1910, Father Thomas Price was facing the failure of his attempt to begin a Catholic order for domestic mission work in the South. Price was overwhelmed with fundraising on top of his actual mission work and the many responsibilities he had as the order Superior.[14] Price and Walsh had corresponded and met in person that year at a conference in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.[14] The pair immediately began planning a national foreign mission seminary. They were complementary in character; Walsh had a knack for organization and planning things on a grand scale while Price was a "Tarheel" from North Carolina who was personable and charismatic.[15]

Foundation of the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers: 1911–1919 edit

The two received permission to travel to Rome, where Pope Pius X granted their request to found a new society on June 29, 1911.[1][16]

 
Founder Mary Josephine Rogers, second from right in the front row, with the first 'Teresians' – front row: Mary Louise Wholean, Anna Maria Towle, Sara Sullivan; Back Row: Mary Augustine Dwyer, Nora Shea, Margaret Shea, at Maryknoll in 1913.

Walsh immediately put an ad in The Field Afar: "Youths or young men who feel a strong desire to toil for the souls of heathen people and who are willing to go afar with no hope of earthly recompense and with no guarantee of a return to their native land are encouraged to write."[12] In 1912, The Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America (CFMSA) was launched in a rented property Hawthorne, NY with a total of six men.[17] Thomas McCann was the first candidate to become a full brother member of the Maryknoll Society on Nov. 21, 1912.[18]

That September, Rogers had relocated to New York to continue work on the magazine. She and five other women "secretaries" began living together at Hawthorne. Rogers emerged as their natural leader and envisioned the women as missioners in their own right and not merely serving in supportive roles to the men.[17][19][20]

"Mary's Knoll" and Foundation of the Teresians edit

 
St Teresa's Lodge at Maryknoll, NY, October 15, 1912

Walsh and Price had immediately begun a search for a permanent home for their new society. They contracted for a parcel in Pocantico Hills in July, 1912 but John D. Rockefeller, who owned the property on the other side and did not want a seminary as a neighbor, contested the purchase in court. In August, CFMSA gave up the parcel in return for a financial arrangement. Walsh and Price found a 93-acre hill in Ossining that included three houses and a barn and was now affordable due to the Rockefeller windfall. Wary of another incident of bias, Rogers, dressed as a "Lady from Boston" and accompanied by a lawyer, negotiated the sale. Walsh, dressed as her chauffeur, waited for two hours with the car.[21][22]

They made the purchase on August 20, 1912, for $44,500, a lower price than what had been offered for the previous parcel. Price dedicated the property to the Blessed Virgin Mary and the name "Mary's Knoll" was coined.[17][18][23] The hilltop had two homesteads at a distance from each other, the larger one became the first Seminary and the other was set aside for the "secretaries". A carriage house with quarters was converted into the chapel. The barn was allocated to the brothers and seminary students.

A few weeks later, Walsh asked the "secretaries" how they wished to be organized after the move to Maryknoll. They had been paid $25 a month by Walsh and Price for their work, which Walsh promised to continue, but he now asked them to make a decision if they wanted to continue as laywomen or to transform into a community living under Religious vows. "Do you wish Mollie to direct you, i.e., under my direction?… Write me on this subject…"[24][25][26] Each of the women responded affirmatively. Rogers replied to her colleagues, "I want you to know how wholly I belong to you in every hour of the day and night, to serve you, to love you, to watch over you and with you, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, for of myself I can do nothing."[26]

On October 15, 1912, the women joined Rogers, who had moved to Maryknoll directly after the purchase to cook and help organize. They dubbed their building at Maryknoll "St. Teresa's Lodge". A postcard from a traveling priest in England was addressed to them as the Teresians, and the nickname stuck.[27][11][18] The Teresians began studying with the Scranton Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary as they planned to petition for official recognition from Rome.[27][11] They designed uniforms with the Chi Rho symbol but rarely wore them and, under the advice of a retreat leader, used the Missal for their prayers – a rare occurrence among women at that time.[26]

Maryknoll now had nine men serving as brothers in addition to McCann. They named their building at Maryknoll "St. Michael's" Residence and themselves "The Brothers of St. Michael". Like the Teresians, most brothers spent much of those early years building, maintaining and updating the buildings at Maryknoll.[28]

 
The Venard Seminary of the Maryknoll Society, Scranton, PA circa 1918
 
The "Teresians" of Maryknoll assisting at The Venard, PA; July 18, 1918

Michael Hoban, bishop of Scranton, Pennsylvania, invited Maryknoll to establish a school in the city. In 1913, Maryknoll Preparatory Seminary was founded on Clay Avenue and students attended classes at St. Thomas College. Raymond Lane, who made his profession that year in the inaugural class, wrote that the success of the venture was greatly due to residents of Scranton who supported the new seminary with meals, transportation, and donations.[29] In 1915 the lease expired and the students joined the community outside Ossining for a year. In 1916, Walsh, after some difficulty, acquired 179 acres in Clarks Summit, PA and a school set up in an old farm house on the property. It became known as the Venard for Théophane Vénard. Price took charge of the Venard its first year, taking one of the Teresians to assist the new community.[1][2][30]

 
James E. Walsh arrives in China, 1918

First and second departures to China edit

 
Colorized lantern slide of Maryknoll Fathers James E. Walsh, second from left, and Francis X. Ford, third from left, with Bishop Auguste Gauthier, M.E.P. A large pile of woven baskets provides a backdrop. All three men wear cassocks and pith helmets. ca 1918

World War I ended in 1918 and three Maryknoll priests were ready to make the first Maryknoll mission to China.[31] James Edward Walsh, Francis X. Ford, and Bernard F. Meyer along with Price as Mission Superior departed for China on September 7, 1918.[32] Walsh and Meyer arrived first, Price and Ford some weeks later. Their first stop in Asia was Hong Kong (a British colony at the time), to acclimate briefly with the Paris Foreign Missions Society, which was the predominant Catholic organization in China.[33][34] From Hong Kong, they went to Yeungkong and started their missionary work in China from there. Although he was only successful at learning a few words in the local dialects, Price quickly set the tone for the mission and those that would follow;

Father Price liked China equally with us, but he had one enthusiasm only... all those precious souls that make up the vast population of common people that we went to help and to save. He gave this emphasis in a way that was very simple and yet highly important, and that was by taking very seriously every little piece of work that was done for the people – the simplest service in the Church, even though it should be attended by only a handful, the insistence on a complete schedule of church services for them just as if he had been in the biggest parish in his own country; the immediate planning for whatever they needed in the matter of religious, educational, medical and other help, even though plans could not be immediately realized, the most patient and courteous reception for every visitor; the scrupulous visits to the outlying villages, even though some of them contained only a few apparently hopeless apostates; and, in general, the placing of himself, his mission and all his energies and resources at the complete service of the people.

In short, Father Price knew why he went to China, and if we did not know it, we soon learned it from his example. I think this emphasis has persisted throughout the development of our missions, and I believe that his short and sacrificial mission career was a providential means in bringing this about.

— James E. Walsh [35]
 
Father Thomas F. Price, co-founder of the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers, center, was pictured in a 1918 photo in China.
 
Maryknoll Orphanage at Luoding, China 1921

Daniel Leo McShane led the second Departure Group in 1919.[36] McShanes's first assignment was to assist Meyer. When the Maryknollers arrived, they discovered that Chinese orphanages did not accept infants or sick children. An orphanage was begun in Yeungkong in 1920. McShane was then sent to be the pastor of Luoding and immediately set up an orphanage for abandoned children there, as well, despite local opposition.[37] The abandoned babies were almost all female and traditionally drowned before the Maryknollers built facilities and began offering a few cents for every child. Soon the Yeungkong orphanage was averaging 450 baptisms a year and the Luoding facility close to a thousand.[37]

Death of founder Thomas Price: 1919 edit

In August 1919, Price became seriously ill. With no adequate medical facilities in the area, he was transported to St. Paul's Hospital, Hong Kong. It was a long and arduous journey from Yeungkong by primitive means. Price was admitted on August 19, 1919 and underwent an operation in early September. The treatment was too late and Price died as a result of a burst appendix on September 12, 1919. His body was buried in the priests' plot in St. Michael's Cemetery in Happy Valley, Hong Kong.[34] In 1936, his body was exhumed and transferred to the cemetery at Maryknoll, New York. James E Walsh was named Superior of the mission following Price's death.[31]

Maryknolls Today edit

As of 2008, there are over 475 Maryknoll priests and brothers serving in countries around the world, principally in Africa, Asia and Latin America. Throughout their history, especially in the first half of the 20th century, Maryknoll missioners played a large role in the Catholic Church in East Asia where some missioners still work. Maryknoll also has extensive connections with many Latin American countries, where it has long worked to help alleviate poverty and bring constructive changes to the life of Latin America's poor.[38]

Maryknoll Seminary Building edit

 
The Asian-inspired fieldstone seminary at Maryknoll, a hill on the outskirts of Ossining, N.Y. Designed by Maginnis & Walsh.[22][39]
 
Panorama of a missionary station built by Maryknoll Fathers (Makoko, Tanzania)

The Maryknoll Seminary Building is located in Ossining, Westchester County, New York. The building currently houses the headquarters of Maryknoll missions. The building has distinctive design, specifically with pagodas built into its architecture, to honor its founding purpose as a mission order to the Far East.[40]

Martyrs edit

  • Francis Xavier Ford, Maryknoll martyr. Fr. Ford was one of the first four Maryknollers to arrive in China in 1918[41] and died in a Canton prison in 1953.[42] A primary school named Bishop Ford Memorial School was founded by the Maryknoll Fathers in Hong Kong in 1952. The school is now run by the Catholic Diocese of Hong Kong[43]

Other notable Maryknollers edit

 
Residents at Gate of Heaven Leprosarium in Kongmoon 厓門倉山 Many of the buildings there erected by Bro Albert Staubli are still standing today. Photo taken on 2011 March 20.
  • Maryknoll Seminary alumni
  • Roy Bourgeois was ordained to the priesthood in the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers in 1972, after which he worked with the poor in Bolivia until 1975. An outspoken critic of US foreign policy in Latin America, he founded the non-profit human rights organization, School of the Americas Watch (SOA Watch) in 1990. In 2005 he was awarded the Thomas Merton Award for his work. Following his participation in a women's ordination-to-the-priesthood ceremony in August 2008, he was warned of possible excommunication latae sententiae, marking the beginning of a four-year-long period of discussion and negotiation between Bourgeois and the Church, through the Maryknoll Society. Finally, on November 19, 2012, it was announced that Bourgeois had been officially canonically dismissed from both the Maryknoll Society, and the Roman Catholic priesthood, effective October 4, 2012.[44]
  • Everett Francis Briggs, Maryknoll missionary, studied the history of the Monongah Mining Disaster of December 6, 1907 described as "the worst mining disaster in American History". After discovering there was no memorial, he sought to ensure that the victims of the tragedy were not forgotten.
  • Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann, Foreign Minister of Nicaragua in the Sandinista government. Pope John Paul refused to meet him during his papal visit to the country on 4 March 1983, as he remained in that government contrary to Church discipline.[45]
  • Patrick Joseph Byrne, Apostolic Delegate to Korea from 1949 to 1950 who died in the custody of the Communists in Korea.
  • Fr. Vincent Robert Capodanno former Maryknoll missionary, Servant of God, and Medal of Honor winner during the Viet Nam War as a Navy Chaplain attached to the US Marines. He did his missionary work in Taiwan.
  • Fr. Robert W. Greene, served in China; placed under house arrest on Oct. 15, 1950; banished from China and marched under guard to Hong Kong on Apr. 13, 1952. Later authored best-selling novel "Calvary in China" about his work and incarceration, published in 1953.[46][47]
  • Fr. Joseph G. Healey serves in Kenya. He is noted for his innovative use of proverbs and other local verbal arts in ministry.
  • James Keller, founder of The Christophers.
  • Thomas Melville, a former Maryknoll priest, Catholic activist, one of the nine Catholic activists of Catonsville Nine[48]
  • Bishop Adolph John Paschang, Maryknoll missionary. A primary school named Bishop Paschang Memorial School was set up by Fr. John M. Mcloughlin, M.M. in Hong Kong in 1969. The school is still run by the Maryknoll Fathers in Hong Kong [49]
  • Thomas Frederick Price, one of the two Maryknoll founders. Fr Price was one of the first four Maryknollers to arrive in China in 1918.[50] Price Memorial Catholic Primary School was founded in Hong Kong for his labour in missionary work.
  • Bishop James E. Walsh, Maryknoll missionary. Fr James Edward Walsh was one of the first four Maryknollers to arrive in China in 1918.[41] Consecrated bishop of Kongmoon in 1927, he was imprisoned in 1959 and released in 1970 due to the improving US-China relationship. He became the last American missionary to be released by the Communist Chinese government.[51] A primary school named Bishop Walsh Primary School was set up by the Maryknoll Fathers in Hong Kong in 1963. The school is now run by the Catholic Diocese of Hong Kong[52]

Unfortunately, as with many dioceses and religious orders within the Catholic Church around the world, Maryknoll has been tainted with sex abuse allegations among its clergy. About eight priests, all now deceased, were part of the sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic Diocese of Honolulu. Though Maryknoll is a foreign mission order, priests and brothers are assigned, at times, to dioceses around the country. From the time it was a U.S. territory, Maryknoll priests have served in Hawaii. According to the 2015 Maryknoll annual report, the organization charged a significant amount ($19+ million) to address claims in Hawaii. Currently, at its headquarters in New York, several priests are monitored as they have been associated with inappropriate engagement with youth or vulnerable adults either while serving overseas or in the U.S.[citation needed]

An ex-Maryknoll priest, now deceased, recently was reported to have sexually abused a young boy for about eight years during the 1960s when he was assigned to parishes in Westchester County. This filing was reported in the June 13, 2019 issue of The Journal News. [53]

Another former Maryknoll priest, also deceased, has been cited for child sex abuse allegations in the Virginia Diocese of Richmond. He is one of six clergy recently added to the list priests from the diocese cited for 'credible and substantiated' allegations of sexual abuse against a minor. The announcement was made during June 2019.[54]

A deceased Maryknoll priest, was accused of abuse in a claim filed during 2019 by the son of lay missioners who lived close to the Maryknoll campus in Ossining, New York. The family ate their meals at the Maryknoll dining room. The claim was reported in the January 13, 2020 issue of The Journal News.[55]

Schools in Hong Kong edit

Several notable schools in Hong Kong were founded by Maryknollers; and several are still run by them.

Founded by the Maryknollers edit

The last three schools were in fact founded by the Maryknoll Sisters. Maryknoll Convent School is still managed by them in Hong Kong. However, sponsorship of the two Marymount schools was transferred to Christian Life Community. Nevertheless, these three schools are frequently viewed as members of the Maryknoll family in Hong Kong.

(The first school managed by the Maryknollers in Hong Kong was called St. Louis Industrial School, between 1921 and 1927, run by Fr Raymond Lane and Brother Albert Staubli. Management of the school was handed over to the Salesians in 1927 and later renamed as St Louis School.[56] Likewise, the first school founded by the Maryknollers in China was called St. Thomas School, a primary school in Yangjiang (previously known as Yeungkong) with the first graduation held in July 1923.[56] The second school founded by the Maryknollers in China was called Sacred Heart School, also a primary school, set up by Fr Bernard F. Meyer in Gaozhou (previously known as Kochow), with inauguration held on 5 October 1923. and first graduation in 1926 [56] Fr Adolph John Paschang once served in this Sacred Heart School in Gaozhou.[57])

Still run by Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers edit

  • Maryknoll Secondary School, formerly known as Maryknoll Technical Secondary School, a co-educational secondary school,
  • Maryknoll College (Senior Form), formerly known as Maryknoll Technical Secondary Evening School, a private co-educational evening school, senior forms only,
  • Maryknoll Fathers' School secondary section, a co-educational secondary school,
  • Maryknoll Fathers' School (Primary Section), a co-educational primary school,
  • Bishop Paschang Catholic School, formerly known as Bishop Paschang Memorial School, a co-educational primary school. This school was founded after the late Maryknoller, Bishop Adolph John Paschang, who had suffered a lot for his missionary work in China.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Kashuba, Cheryl (October 12, 2012). "Local History: Maryknoll Fathers trace roots to Hill Section". Scranton, PA: The Scranton Times-Tribune. Retrieved 8 June 2014. The Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America, commonly known as the Maryknoll Fathers, was in its infancy. In 1911, deeply convinced of the need to train Catholic priests for foreign missions, Father Thomas Price, a native of North Carolina, and Father James Walsh of Boston received permission to travel to Rome, where Pope Pius X granted their request to found their new society. The following year, 1912, the Maryknoll Fathers opened their first major seminary at Maryknoll, a hill on the outskirts of Ossining, N.Y., dedicated to Mary, Mother of God.
  2. ^ a b Price, Thomas (October 1917). "The Pioneer's Log, Fr. Superior's Knolligram". The Field Afar. 11: 151–152. Retrieved 10 June 2014.
  3. ^ a b c deChillo, Suzanne (March 19, 1985). "Maryknoll Pursues Its Vision of Mission". The New York Times. Retrieved 15 June 2014. Located across the road from each other, the Maryknoll Sisters of St. Dominic, as they are officially called, and the Maryknoll Society – which is officially known as the Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America and includes priests, brothers and lay missionaries – are separate organizations but often cooperate on projects. Their work in 27 countries – in churches, schools and orphanages and with lepers, factory workers, farmers and the homeless – rarely makes the headlines. Founded in 1911, the Maryknoll Society was the first Catholic Church missionary society in the United States;...The members of the society quickly became known as the Marines of the Church.
  4. ^ Fraser, Barbara J. (September 28, 2011). . Catholic News Service. Catholic News Service. Archived from the original on 17 October 2011. Retrieved 15 June 2014.
  5. ^ "Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers". The Maryknoll Society. Retrieved 15 June 2014.
  6. ^ "Maryknoll Lay Missioners – Our Mission". Maryknoll Lay Missioners. Retrieved 11 June 2014.
  7. ^ "Maryknoll". Maryknoll. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
  8. ^ Powers, George C. (1926). The Maryknoll movement (1st US ed.). Catholic foreign mission society of America. Retrieved 11 June 2014.
  9. ^ "The Maryknoll Affiliates". Retrieved 11 June 2014.
  10. ^ "Maryknoll Magazine". Maryknoll Magazine/. Maryknoll. Retrieved 12 June 2014.
  11. ^ a b c Yik-yi Chu, Cindy (2007). Maryknoll sisters in Hong Kong, 1921–1969: in love with the chinese. [S.l.]: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 15. ISBN 978-0230602311. Retrieved 11 June 2014.
  12. ^ a b Keane, James T. (June 20, 2011). Outward Bound. America Press Inc.: AMERICA: The National Catholic Review. Retrieved 11 June 2014. That year, 1911, was far from the heyday of American Catholic missionary enterprises; rather, the editor, James A. Walsh, M.M., was addressing readers in the United States, whose church had been removed from the Vatican's roster of mission territories only three years before and for whom the notion of sending missionaries abroad was a foreign one indeed. In the words of the historian Msgr. John Tracy Ellis, the first decade of the 20th century was a time when the Catholic Church in the United States finally "attained ecclesiastical adulthood." The great migrations of European Catholics to the United States were ongoing, and Catholics were trying to take root in a culture more or less hostile to "popery." As a result, the energies of the institutional church were often directed inward. Out of the 17,000 Americans serving as Catholic priests at the time, for example, the number serving in foreign missions was 14.
  13. ^ LaVerdiere, Claudette (2011). On the threshold of the future: the life and spirituality of Mother Mary Joseph Rogers, founder of the Maryknoll Sisters. Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis Books. ISBN 978-1570759420.
  14. ^ a b Byrne, Patrick James (June 1923). Father Price of Maryknoll: A short sketch of the life of Reverend Thomas Frederick Price, missioner in North Carolina, co-founder of Maryknoll (1ST ed.). Maryknoll, N.Y.: Catholic foreign mission society of America. pp. 40–55. ISBN 1149364084. Retrieved 12 June 2014. Several reasons conspired to defeat Father Price's plan of a religious order for the South, but we may say, in a word, that he was so overwhelmed with the labor of build- ing and money-getting that he could not give to the rising Society the minute attention it demanded. His labors were gigantic, since he had to be superior, builder, money-getter, editor, and missioner, all in one. Then, too, in his ardent zeal he wanted big results quickly...When two souls animated by the same spirit and purpose come together, it is to be ex- pected that they should desire and plan to join forces. Such was the decision of these two apostolic workers, and then and there was conceived the idea of supplying what they considered America's greatest spiritual need, a national foreign mission seminary, which would not only take away our reproach
  15. ^ Marie, Andre (June 30, 2011). "Back to the Roots: Examining Maryknoll's Heroic Beginnings (The Evangelical Vision of Father Thomas Fredrick Price)". Catholic Online. Retrieved 11 June 2014.
  16. ^ "Maryknoll priests visit grave of Fr. Thomas F. Price in Hong Kong, China, 1923". Retrieved 2011-05-14.
  17. ^ a b c Moorman, Dennis. "Cherishing Maryknoll's History – as we reach 100 years". The Maryknoll Society. Retrieved 9 June 2014.
  18. ^ a b c "Maryknoll History". Maryknoll Vocations. Maryknoll Missionary Vocations. Retrieved 9 June 2014. In 1912 the young missionary Society established their headquarters on a hilltop farm above Ossining, N.Y. The founders dedicated the hill, or knoll, to the Blessed Virgin. Thus, Mary's Knoll was born. In 1918 Maryknoll sent its first members to China, including Father Price, who died the following year. Three years later, six Maryknoll Sisters sent their first missioners to South China. The mission soon expanded to include northern China and Korea...The Society did not hesitate to try new approaches to attract and include as many people as possible. Before it had its first seminarian, one young man applied who felt called to mission but not priesthood. Thomas McCann became the first Maryknoll Brother in 1912.
  19. ^ Whitehead, Kate (11 March 2014). Documentary on the Maryknoll nuns sets its director on new path. South China Morning Post. Retrieved 9 June 2014. In 1912, the Maryknoll Sisters were the first group of Catholic nuns in the United States to found an overseas mission. When six sisters arrived in Hong Kong 10 years later, they had few resources at their disposal aside from their faith, determination to succeed and brains – what comes across clearly through the documentary is that these women, who traveled all over the world, were very well educated.
  20. ^ Tang, Nancy. "Brief History of the Maryknoll Sisters". Trailblazers in Habits. Fishtailsoup Productions Inc. Retrieved 9 June 2014. In 1912, the Maryknoll Sisters were the first group of Catholic Sisters in the United States founded for overseas mission. Ten years later in 1922, a group of six Sisters in sweeping grey habits arrived by steamer in Hong Kong to begin their mission. They had few resources other than their own faith, dedication, and what can only be described as a divinely-inspired ingenuity. Over the next nine decades, the Maryknoll Sisters established six thriving schools and a hospital in Hong Kong, and basically laid the foundation for Hong Kong's social welfare system.
  21. ^ Munch, Janet Butler (September 1992). "How the "Sidewalks of New York" Came to Maryknoll" (PDF). The Hudson Valley Regional Review. 11. Hudson River Valley Institute: 93–97. Retrieved 9 June 2014. The Rockefeller Family, which had its estate just south of Mr. Oussani's property did not want to see the seminary relocate to the area. The Rockefellers' in fact, wanted this very same 52 acre property and contested the Society's claim on the land. Litigation upheld the Society's right to the property. On August 14, 1912 a satisfactory financial arrangement was reached with the Rockefeller Family and the Society relinquished its claim on the Oussani property. This financial windfall enabled the Society to purchase an even larger parcel of land further up the river. On August 20, 1912, this 93 acre property became the present day headquarters of Matyknoll
  22. ^ a b Maryknoll Society Website. "The History of Maryknoll's Seminary Building". Maryknoll. Maryknoll Society. Retrieved 9 June 2014. A larger facility was required and the Boston architectural firm of Maginnis and Walsh (Timothy Walsh was the brother of Father Walsh) was commissioned to design the Seminary Building that today dominates the grounds.
  23. ^ Armstrong, Richard (1984). Out to change the world: a life of Father James Keller of the Christophers. New York: Crossroad. ISBN 0824506510.
  24. ^ Jones, Penny Lernoux; with Arthur; Ellsberg, Robert (2012). Hearts on fire: the story of the Maryknoll Sisters (Centenary ed.). Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis Books. p. 31. ISBN 978-1570759345.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  25. ^ Marie, Jeanne. Maryknoll's first lady. New York, NY: Dodd Publishers. p. 327.
  26. ^ a b c "Mollie's Legacy of Love Summer – 2012". Maryknoll Affiliates. Maryknoll. Summer 1912. Archived from the original on 11 June 2014. Retrieved 11 June 2014. On September 14, Father Walsh wrote to Mary Louise, Sara, Mary Augustine, and Nora asking: " On September 18, 1912, the Fathers, Students and Brothers moved from Hawthorne to Maryknoll, as Father Walsh was already calling his farm on the hill above Ossining. After a period of straightening up and settling down, which Father Walsh crisply defined as "chaos," and just as things were becoming normal, they woke up one morning to find that their cook had departed and left them breakfastless. Father Walsh had only to tell Mollie what had happened. After consulting the secretaries, she set out immediately for Maryknoll from Hawthorne. Hannah, who had been cooking for the secretaries, joined Mollie the following day, and together they turned out three robust meals a day, with occasional evidence of Mollie's special touches. They also cleaned all the pots and pans, stocked the empty shelves, met the usual situations of unexpected guests, late and early dinners, and the lack or delay of supplies! They slept in the old farmhouse down the hill from the seminary ~ later St. Teresa's Lodge.
  27. ^ a b Rogers, Mary (February 20, 1920). The Teresians of Maryknoll. The Field Afar, Maryknoll. p. 319. Retrieved 9 June 2014.
  28. ^ Duggan, MM, Michael (Fall 2011). (PDF). CMCS. CMSM. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 11 June 2014. In 1912 three young men arrived at Maryknoll to become auxiliary Brothers of St. Michael. These numbers 3 increased, so that in one period of twenty years 380 Brothers were professed. These were the years after World War II and the Korean Conflict when the U.S. Church was seeing a great growth in vocations to the priesthood and religious life. A third person, Mary Josephine Rogers, who would become the foundress of the Maryknoll Sisters and take the name Mother Mary Joseph, was truly a mother to the Society that was being born in the minds of Frs. Walsh and Price. She met Fr. Walsh in 1906 and volunteered to help publish his magazine. She gathered a few women to help and they and other women eventually became the Maryknoll Sisters of St. Dominic with Molly Rogers as their superior and foundress. From the very beginning the founders relied on the help and experience of others realizing that they could not accomplish anything productive and long standing as a missionary society if they did not. Fr. Walsh, the manager and director of the venture, was particularly aware of the need to rely on others' expertise and experience in the mission field. Perhaps it was this realization that inspired Fr. Walsh to look beyond the needs of the Society and help those who did not have the access he had to sustain themselves."Be bigger than your Society" was one instruction he gave to his young seminarians. He insisted despite the observation that there was not always enough money to meet demands of daily living that there always be some money for the people who came to the door asking for help
  29. ^ Lane, Raymond (January 1961). The Early Days of Maryknoll. Literary Licensing, LLC (May 5, 2012). p. 310. ISBN 1258327260.
  30. ^ . Maryknoll Affiliates. Maryknoll Affiliates. 5 July 2011. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 11 June 2014. We will need at Scranton a woman to assist Fr. John I. Lane: (1.) As supervising housekeeper, (2.) As secretary and accountant, and we have decided that, although our numbers are few at Maryknoll, one of our own should be at Scranton. I do not wish to ask any one of you to go, but I do ask for volunteers. Please read this note to all your flock, instruct them not to act hastily, but to say a prayer and leave a note in my basket before next Monday. On July 31, Father Walsh returned from a long trip. After supper on August 1, he visited the Teresians, giving an interesting account of his trip, including his visits to Detroit, Notre Dame in Indiana, Chicago, Des Moines, St. Louis and Scranton, where he encountered difficulty in leasing a house for the Apostolic School. Finally came the announcement that Mary Augustine Dwyer was chosen to go to Scranton. Father Walsh said he considered the position a very responsible one, a possible beginning of a series of foundations of the same kind. On September 8 Mary Augustine left for the Venard in Scranton
  31. ^ a b Wiest, Jean-Paul (1988). Maryknoll in China: a history, 1918–1955 (Paperback ed.). Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 0873324188.
  32. ^ "The Departure". The Field Afar. 12: 160–162. October 1918. The date set for their leaving was September 7, the eve of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary... Immediately after the Superior's address the four missioners read in his hearing their Propositum, a purpose to remain for life in the service of the Society, and each received a Missioner's Crucifix. As the Veni Creator began, the Pax was given by the Superior to each of the missioners, before whom then filed priests, students, and auxiliaries, in turn receiving the kiss of peace in a farewell embrace.
  33. ^ Young, Ernest P. (2013). Ecclesiastical colony: China's Catholic Church and the French religious protectorate. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 175–177. ISBN 9780199924622.
  34. ^ a b Smith, Jim; Downs, William (1978), Maryknoll Hong Kong Chronicle 1918 – 1975 (Chronicle), Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America
  35. ^ Hanlon, Kevin. (PDF). Maryknoll Sisters. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-07-14. Retrieved 15 June 2014.
  36. ^ Walsh, James Edwward (1947). The Man on Joss Stick Alley. [The biography of Father Daniel L. McShane. With plates, including a portrait.] New York, Toronto: Longmans, Green & Co. p. 146. ASIN B0006AR8A4.
  37. ^ a b Mungello, D.E. (2008). Drowning girls in China: female infanticide in China since 1650. Lanham, MD [etc.]: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 117. ISBN 978-0742555310.
  38. ^ "100 Years of History".
  39. ^ "About Us". Maryknoll Sisters. Retrieved April 12, 2012.
  40. ^ "Maryknoll Seminary, Ossining, NY | HV-Rob". Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  41. ^ a b "A Brief History – The sending of missioners from the U.S. Church was seen as a sign of the U.S. Catholic Church finally coming of age". Retrieved 2011-05-01.
  42. ^ Jean-Paul WIEST (1988). Maryknoll In China – A history, 1918 – 1955. M.E. Sharpe Inc, Armonk, NY. ISBN 0-87332-418-8.
  43. ^ "Bishop Ford Memorial School official web page". Retrieved 2011-04-30.
  44. ^ Sadowski, Dennis (19 November 2012). . Catholic News Service. Archived from the original on 27 November 2012. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  45. ^ Conor Cruise O'Brien, Passion and Cunning, p.95
  46. ^ Calvary in China. G P Putnam & Sons. January 1953.
  47. ^ "Father Robert W. Greene, MM". Archives. Retrieved 2023-02-10.
  48. ^ Astor, Maggie (19 May 2018). "Their Protest Helped End the Draft. 50 Years Later, It's Still Controversial". The New York Times. Retrieved 7 February 2019.
  49. ^ "Bishop Paschang Catholic School official web page". Retrieved 2011-04-28.
  50. ^ "Thomas Frederick Price – A devout Catholic in the tar heel state of North Carolina, Rev. Thomas Frederick Price found a natural calling to share his faith in the midst of antipathy". Retrieved 2011-05-01.
  51. ^ "Rev. James E. Walsh M.M." (PDF). Retrieved 2011-05-14.
  52. ^ a b "Bishop Walsh Primary School official web page". Retrieved 2011-04-30.
  53. ^ "Ex-Maryknoll priest faces sexual abuse allegation in religious order previously cited"./
  54. ^ "Catholic Diocese of Richmond adds names to list of priests facing 'credible' child sex abuse allegations". 27 June 2019./
  55. ^ "Maryknoll priest accused of sexually abusing the son of a missionary"./
  56. ^ a b c d e (in Chinese) BARRY, Peter (溫順天神父) (1977), 瑪利諾會在華傳教簡史 (Masters thesis), 台灣大學歷史學研究所
  57. ^ "Fr. Paschang and graduating class at Gaozhou, China, 1926". Retrieved 2011-05-01.

52 "School History Maryhill.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers website
  • Maryknoll Sisters website
  • Maryknoll Lay Missioners website
  • Maryknoll Affiliates website
  • Maryknoll Office of Global Concerns website
  • Maryknoll Mission School at the Chinese Wikipedia

maryknoll, society, this, article, about, catholic, religious, organizations, magazine, hill, york, australian, town, maryknoll, victoria, also, known, maryknoll, fathers, brothers, officially, catholic, foreign, mission, society, america, latin, societas, mar. This article is about the Catholic religious organizations the magazine and the hill in New York For the Australian town see Maryknoll Victoria The Maryknoll Society is also known as the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers and officially as Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America Latin Societas de Maryknoll pro missionibus exteris is a Catholic society of apostolic life for men founded in the United States to serve as missionaries to the poor and marginalized Maryknoll SocietyAbbreviationM M Formation1911 113 years ago 1911 FoundersThomas Frederick PriceJames Anthony WalshMary Joseph RogersTypeSociety of Apostolic Life of Pontifical Right for Men Headquarters Fathers and Brothers P O Box 303 Maryknoll NY 10545 0303Membership 2017 317 268 Priests Key peopleRaymond J Finch Superior General Maryknoll Fathers and BrothersTed Miles Executive Director Maryknoll Lay MissionersWebsitewww wbr maryknoll wbr org The society was founded in 1911 by Thomas Frederick Price James Anthony Walsh and Mary Joseph Rogers The name Maryknoll comes from the hill outside the Village of Ossining Westchester County New York which houses the headquarters of all three 1 Members of the societies are usually called Maryknollers 2 Maryknollers are sometimes known as the Marines of the Catholic Church for their reputation of moving into rough areas living side by side with the indigenous peoples and learning the language 3 4 Maryknollers focus on combating poverty providing healthcare building communities and advancing peace and social justice in the countries they serve and have built numerous orphanages primary schools and secondary schools 5 Because of the way in which Maryknollers have especially engaged in social justice Maryknoll is also sometimes seen as a movement that represents missionary service concerned with positive action for indigenous people 6 7 8 In the mid 20th century this movement came to be associated with liberation theology 3 The Christophers and The Maryknoll Affiliates 9 are both associated with the Maryknoll Movement Maryknoll is also the current name of the semi monthly magazine which the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers publish 10 The Maryknoll name shared by a number of related Catholic organizations including the Maryknoll Sisters and the Maryknoll Lay Missioners The organizations are independent entities with shared history that work closely together in the joint focus of the overseas mission activity of the Catholic Church particularly in East Asia the United States Latin America and Africa 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Foundation of the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers 1911 1919 1 2 1 Mary s Knoll and Foundation of the Teresians 1 2 2 First and second departures to China 1 2 3 Death of founder Thomas Price 1919 1 3 Maryknolls Today 2 Maryknoll Seminary Building 3 Martyrs 4 Other notable Maryknollers 5 Schools in Hong Kong 5 1 Founded by the Maryknollers 5 2 Still run by Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editBackground edit Main article James Anthony Walsh Prior to 1906 the United States was on a roster of Catholic mission territories compiled by the Vatican It was part of an era of heavy migrations of European Catholics to the United States and there was a cultural hostility to Roman Catholicism The establishment of Maryknoll for foreign missions came at a time when the Catholic church was focusing its energies on that anti Catholic bias within the United States 11 Out of the 17 000 Americans serving as Catholic priests at the time for example the number serving in foreign missions was 14 12 nbsp Fathers Thomas F Price seated at left and James A Walsh seated at center co founders of the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers pose for a photo with fellow Maryknoll Fathers James E Walsh seated at right Francis X Ford standing at left and Bernard Meyer at Maryknoll N Y in 1918 In 1907 Father James Walsh of Boston began publishing The Field Afar a mission magazine that would later become Maryknoll The following year Mary Mollie Josephine Rogers later Mother Mary Joseph MM began helping Walsh with editing translating and writing 13 In 1910 Father Thomas Price was facing the failure of his attempt to begin a Catholic order for domestic mission work in the South Price was overwhelmed with fundraising on top of his actual mission work and the many responsibilities he had as the order Superior 14 Price and Walsh had corresponded and met in person that year at a conference in Montreal Quebec Canada 14 The pair immediately began planning a national foreign mission seminary They were complementary in character Walsh had a knack for organization and planning things on a grand scale while Price was a Tarheel from North Carolina who was personable and charismatic 15 Foundation of the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers 1911 1919 editThe two received permission to travel to Rome where Pope Pius X granted their request to found a new society on June 29 1911 1 16 nbsp Founder Mary Josephine Rogers second from right in the front row with the first Teresians front row Mary Louise Wholean Anna Maria Towle Sara Sullivan Back Row Mary Augustine Dwyer Nora Shea Margaret Shea at Maryknoll in 1913 Walsh immediately put an ad in The Field Afar Youths or young men who feel a strong desire to toil for the souls of heathen people and who are willing to go afar with no hope of earthly recompense and with no guarantee of a return to their native land are encouraged to write 12 In 1912 The Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America CFMSA was launched in a rented property Hawthorne NY with a total of six men 17 Thomas McCann was the first candidate to become a full brother member of the Maryknoll Society on Nov 21 1912 18 That September Rogers had relocated to New York to continue work on the magazine She and five other women secretaries began living together at Hawthorne Rogers emerged as their natural leader and envisioned the women as missioners in their own right and not merely serving in supportive roles to the men 17 19 20 Mary s Knoll and Foundation of the Teresians edit nbsp St Teresa s Lodge at Maryknoll NY October 15 1912Walsh and Price had immediately begun a search for a permanent home for their new society They contracted for a parcel in Pocantico Hills in July 1912 but John D Rockefeller who owned the property on the other side and did not want a seminary as a neighbor contested the purchase in court In August CFMSA gave up the parcel in return for a financial arrangement Walsh and Price found a 93 acre hill in Ossining that included three houses and a barn and was now affordable due to the Rockefeller windfall Wary of another incident of bias Rogers dressed as a Lady from Boston and accompanied by a lawyer negotiated the sale Walsh dressed as her chauffeur waited for two hours with the car 21 22 They made the purchase on August 20 1912 for 44 500 a lower price than what had been offered for the previous parcel Price dedicated the property to the Blessed Virgin Mary and the name Mary s Knoll was coined 17 18 23 The hilltop had two homesteads at a distance from each other the larger one became the first Seminary and the other was set aside for the secretaries A carriage house with quarters was converted into the chapel The barn was allocated to the brothers and seminary students A few weeks later Walsh asked the secretaries how they wished to be organized after the move to Maryknoll They had been paid 25 a month by Walsh and Price for their work which Walsh promised to continue but he now asked them to make a decision if they wanted to continue as laywomen or to transform into a community living under Religious vows Do you wish Mollie to direct you i e under my direction Write me on this subject 24 25 26 Each of the women responded affirmatively Rogers replied to her colleagues I want you to know how wholly I belong to you in every hour of the day and night to serve you to love you to watch over you and with you under the guidance of the Holy Spirit for of myself I can do nothing 26 On October 15 1912 the women joined Rogers who had moved to Maryknoll directly after the purchase to cook and help organize They dubbed their building at Maryknoll St Teresa s Lodge A postcard from a traveling priest in England was addressed to them as the Teresians and the nickname stuck 27 11 18 The Teresians began studying with the Scranton Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary as they planned to petition for official recognition from Rome 27 11 They designed uniforms with the Chi Rho symbol but rarely wore them and under the advice of a retreat leader used the Missal for their prayers a rare occurrence among women at that time 26 Maryknoll now had nine men serving as brothers in addition to McCann They named their building at Maryknoll St Michael s Residence and themselves The Brothers of St Michael Like the Teresians most brothers spent much of those early years building maintaining and updating the buildings at Maryknoll 28 nbsp The Venard Seminary of the Maryknoll Society Scranton PA circa 1918 nbsp The Teresians of Maryknoll assisting at The Venard PA July 18 1918 Michael Hoban bishop of Scranton Pennsylvania invited Maryknoll to establish a school in the city In 1913 Maryknoll Preparatory Seminary was founded on Clay Avenue and students attended classes at St Thomas College Raymond Lane who made his profession that year in the inaugural class wrote that the success of the venture was greatly due to residents of Scranton who supported the new seminary with meals transportation and donations 29 In 1915 the lease expired and the students joined the community outside Ossining for a year In 1916 Walsh after some difficulty acquired 179 acres in Clarks Summit PA and a school set up in an old farm house on the property It became known as the Venard for Theophane Venard Price took charge of the Venard its first year taking one of the Teresians to assist the new community 1 2 30 nbsp James E Walsh arrives in China 1918 First and second departures to China edit nbsp Colorized lantern slide of Maryknoll Fathers James E Walsh second from left and Francis X Ford third from left with Bishop Auguste Gauthier M E P A large pile of woven baskets provides a backdrop All three men wear cassocks and pith helmets ca 1918World War I ended in 1918 and three Maryknoll priests were ready to make the first Maryknoll mission to China 31 James Edward Walsh Francis X Ford and Bernard F Meyer along with Price as Mission Superior departed for China on September 7 1918 32 Walsh and Meyer arrived first Price and Ford some weeks later Their first stop in Asia was Hong Kong a British colony at the time to acclimate briefly with the Paris Foreign Missions Society which was the predominant Catholic organization in China 33 34 From Hong Kong they went to Yeungkong and started their missionary work in China from there Although he was only successful at learning a few words in the local dialects Price quickly set the tone for the mission and those that would follow Father Price liked China equally with us but he had one enthusiasm only all those precious souls that make up the vast population of common people that we went to help and to save He gave this emphasis in a way that was very simple and yet highly important and that was by taking very seriously every little piece of work that was done for the people the simplest service in the Church even though it should be attended by only a handful the insistence on a complete schedule of church services for them just as if he had been in the biggest parish in his own country the immediate planning for whatever they needed in the matter of religious educational medical and other help even though plans could not be immediately realized the most patient and courteous reception for every visitor the scrupulous visits to the outlying villages even though some of them contained only a few apparently hopeless apostates and in general the placing of himself his mission and all his energies and resources at the complete service of the people In short Father Price knew why he went to China and if we did not know it we soon learned it from his example I think this emphasis has persisted throughout the development of our missions and I believe that his short and sacrificial mission career was a providential means in bringing this about James E Walsh 35 nbsp Father Thomas F Price co founder of the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers center was pictured in a 1918 photo in China nbsp Maryknoll Orphanage at Luoding China 1921 Daniel Leo McShane led the second Departure Group in 1919 36 McShanes s first assignment was to assist Meyer When the Maryknollers arrived they discovered that Chinese orphanages did not accept infants or sick children An orphanage was begun in Yeungkong in 1920 McShane was then sent to be the pastor of Luoding and immediately set up an orphanage for abandoned children there as well despite local opposition 37 The abandoned babies were almost all female and traditionally drowned before the Maryknollers built facilities and began offering a few cents for every child Soon the Yeungkong orphanage was averaging 450 baptisms a year and the Luoding facility close to a thousand 37 Death of founder Thomas Price 1919 edit In August 1919 Price became seriously ill With no adequate medical facilities in the area he was transported to St Paul s Hospital Hong Kong It was a long and arduous journey from Yeungkong by primitive means Price was admitted on August 19 1919 and underwent an operation in early September The treatment was too late and Price died as a result of a burst appendix on September 12 1919 His body was buried in the priests plot in St Michael s Cemetery in Happy Valley Hong Kong 34 In 1936 his body was exhumed and transferred to the cemetery at Maryknoll New York James E Walsh was named Superior of the mission following Price s death 31 Maryknolls Today edit As of 2008 there are over 475 Maryknoll priests and brothers serving in countries around the world principally in Africa Asia and Latin America Throughout their history especially in the first half of the 20th century Maryknoll missioners played a large role in the Catholic Church in East Asia where some missioners still work Maryknoll also has extensive connections with many Latin American countries where it has long worked to help alleviate poverty and bring constructive changes to the life of Latin America s poor 38 Maryknoll Seminary Building edit nbsp The Asian inspired fieldstone seminary at Maryknoll a hill on the outskirts of Ossining N Y Designed by Maginnis amp Walsh 22 39 nbsp Panorama of a missionary station built by Maryknoll Fathers Makoko Tanzania The Maryknoll Seminary Building is located in Ossining Westchester County New York The building currently houses the headquarters of Maryknoll missions The building has distinctive design specifically with pagodas built into its architecture to honor its founding purpose as a mission order to the Far East 40 Martyrs editFrancis Xavier Ford Maryknoll martyr Fr Ford was one of the first four Maryknollers to arrive in China in 1918 41 and died in a Canton prison in 1953 42 A primary school named Bishop Ford Memorial School was founded by the Maryknoll Fathers in Hong Kong in 1952 The school is now run by the Catholic Diocese of Hong Kong 43 Other notable Maryknollers edit nbsp Residents at Gate of Heaven Leprosarium in Kongmoon 厓門倉山 Many of the buildings there erected by Bro Albert Staubli are still standing today Photo taken on 2011 March 20 Maryknoll Seminary alumni Roy Bourgeois was ordained to the priesthood in the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers in 1972 after which he worked with the poor in Bolivia until 1975 An outspoken critic of US foreign policy in Latin America he founded the non profit human rights organization School of the Americas Watch SOA Watch in 1990 In 2005 he was awarded the Thomas Merton Award for his work Following his participation in a women s ordination to the priesthood ceremony in August 2008 he was warned of possible excommunication latae sententiae marking the beginning of a four year long period of discussion and negotiation between Bourgeois and the Church through the Maryknoll Society Finally on November 19 2012 it was announced that Bourgeois had been officially canonically dismissed from both the Maryknoll Society and the Roman Catholic priesthood effective October 4 2012 44 Everett Francis Briggs Maryknoll missionary studied the history of the Monongah Mining Disaster of December 6 1907 described as the worst mining disaster in American History After discovering there was no memorial he sought to ensure that the victims of the tragedy were not forgotten Miguel d Escoto Brockmann Foreign Minister of Nicaragua in the Sandinista government Pope John Paul refused to meet him during his papal visit to the country on 4 March 1983 as he remained in that government contrary to Church discipline 45 Patrick Joseph Byrne Apostolic Delegate to Korea from 1949 to 1950 who died in the custody of the Communists in Korea Fr Vincent Robert Capodanno former Maryknoll missionary Servant of God and Medal of Honor winner during the Viet Nam War as a Navy Chaplain attached to the US Marines He did his missionary work in Taiwan Fr Robert W Greene served in China placed under house arrest on Oct 15 1950 banished from China and marched under guard to Hong Kong on Apr 13 1952 Later authored best selling novel Calvary in China about his work and incarceration published in 1953 46 47 Fr Joseph G Healey serves in Kenya He is noted for his innovative use of proverbs and other local verbal arts in ministry James Keller founder of The Christophers Thomas Melville a former Maryknoll priest Catholic activist one of the nine Catholic activists of Catonsville Nine 48 Bishop Adolph John Paschang Maryknoll missionary A primary school named Bishop Paschang Memorial School was set up by Fr John M Mcloughlin M M in Hong Kong in 1969 The school is still run by the Maryknoll Fathers in Hong Kong 49 Thomas Frederick Price one of the two Maryknoll founders Fr Price was one of the first four Maryknollers to arrive in China in 1918 50 Price Memorial Catholic Primary School was founded in Hong Kong for his labour in missionary work Bishop James E Walsh Maryknoll missionary Fr James Edward Walsh was one of the first four Maryknollers to arrive in China in 1918 41 Consecrated bishop of Kongmoon in 1927 he was imprisoned in 1959 and released in 1970 due to the improving US China relationship He became the last American missionary to be released by the Communist Chinese government 51 A primary school named Bishop Walsh Primary School was set up by the Maryknoll Fathers in Hong Kong in 1963 The school is now run by the Catholic Diocese of Hong Kong 52 Unfortunately as with many dioceses and religious orders within the Catholic Church around the world Maryknoll has been tainted with sex abuse allegations among its clergy About eight priests all now deceased were part of the sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic Diocese of Honolulu Though Maryknoll is a foreign mission order priests and brothers are assigned at times to dioceses around the country From the time it was a U S territory Maryknoll priests have served in Hawaii According to the 2015 Maryknoll annual report the organization charged a significant amount 19 million to address claims in Hawaii Currently at its headquarters in New York several priests are monitored as they have been associated with inappropriate engagement with youth or vulnerable adults either while serving overseas or in the U S citation needed An ex Maryknoll priest now deceased recently was reported to have sexually abused a young boy for about eight years during the 1960s when he was assigned to parishes in Westchester County This filing was reported in the June 13 2019 issue of The Journal News 53 Another former Maryknoll priest also deceased has been cited for child sex abuse allegations in the Virginia Diocese of Richmond He is one of six clergy recently added to the list priests from the diocese cited for credible and substantiated allegations of sexual abuse against a minor The announcement was made during June 2019 54 A deceased Maryknoll priest was accused of abuse in a claim filed during 2019 by the son of lay missioners who lived close to the Maryknoll campus in Ossining New York The family ate their meals at the Maryknoll dining room The claim was reported in the January 13 2020 issue of The Journal News 55 Schools in Hong Kong editSeveral notable schools in Hong Kong were founded by Maryknollers and several are still run by them Founded by the Maryknollers edit Bishop Ford Memorial School a co educational primary school This is the first ever school founded by the Maryknoll Fathers in Hong Kong after the Second World War 56 It was founded in 1952 after the Maryknoller Fr Francis Xavier Ford for his mission in China This school is now managed by the Catholic Diocese of Hong Kong Kwun Tong Maryknoll College a secondary school for boys now managed by the Catholic Diocese of Hong Kong Bishop Walsh Primary School a co educational primary school This school was founded in 1963 after the Maryknoller Bishop James Edward Walsh who had suffered a lot for his mission in China This school is now managed by the Catholic Diocese of Hong Kong 52 Pope Pius XII Primary School a co educational primary school in Hong Kong founded in 1953 closed in 1979 Her legacy is inherited by Chai Wan Kok Catholic Primary School and Sham Tseng Catholic Primary School both now run by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Hong Kong St Patrick s School a co educational primary school now managed by the Catholic Diocese of Hong Kong St Patrick s Catholic Primary School Po Kong Village Road formerly PM section of St Patrick s School also a co educational primary school now managed by the Catholic Diocese of Hong Kong Marymount Secondary School initially known as the Holy Spirit School then the Maryknoll Sisters School a secondary school for girls founded in 1927 This is the very second school set up by Maryknollers in Hong Kong 56 Marymount Primary School a primary school for girls Maryknoll Convent School primary and secondary school for girls The last three schools were in fact founded by the Maryknoll Sisters Maryknoll Convent School is still managed by them in Hong Kong However sponsorship of the two Marymount schools was transferred to Christian Life Community Nevertheless these three schools are frequently viewed as members of the Maryknoll family in Hong Kong The first school managed by the Maryknollers in Hong Kong was called St Louis Industrial School between 1921 and 1927 run by Fr Raymond Lane and Brother Albert Staubli Management of the school was handed over to the Salesians in 1927 and later renamed as St Louis School 56 Likewise the first school founded by the Maryknollers in China was called St Thomas School a primary school in Yangjiang previously known as Yeungkong with the first graduation held in July 1923 56 The second school founded by the Maryknollers in China was called Sacred Heart School also a primary school set up by Fr Bernard F Meyer in Gaozhou previously known as Kochow with inauguration held on 5 October 1923 and first graduation in 1926 56 Fr Adolph John Paschang once served in this Sacred Heart School in Gaozhou 57 Still run by Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers edit Maryknoll Secondary School formerly known as Maryknoll Technical Secondary School a co educational secondary school Maryknoll College Senior Form formerly known as Maryknoll Technical Secondary Evening School a private co educational evening school senior forms only Maryknoll Fathers School secondary section a co educational secondary school Maryknoll Fathers School Primary Section a co educational primary school Bishop Paschang Catholic School formerly known as Bishop Paschang Memorial School a co educational primary school This school was founded after the late Maryknoller Bishop Adolph John Paschang who had suffered a lot for his missionary work in China See also edit nbsp Catholicism portal Catholic Church in China Catholic Church in Japan Catholic Church in Korea Consecrated life Dalian Catholic Church Institute of consecrated life Roman Catholic Diocese of Jiangmen Secular institute Society of apostolic life Maryknoll House Stanley References edit a b c Kashuba Cheryl October 12 2012 Local History Maryknoll Fathers trace roots to Hill Section Scranton PA The Scranton Times Tribune Retrieved 8 June 2014 The Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America commonly known as the Maryknoll Fathers was in its infancy In 1911 deeply convinced of the need to train Catholic priests for foreign missions Father Thomas Price a native of North Carolina and Father James Walsh of Boston received permission to travel to Rome where Pope Pius X granted their request to found their new society The following year 1912 the Maryknoll Fathers opened their first major seminary at Maryknoll a hill on the outskirts of Ossining N Y dedicated to Mary Mother of God a b Price Thomas October 1917 The Pioneer s Log Fr Superior s Knolligram The Field Afar 11 151 152 Retrieved 10 June 2014 a b c deChillo Suzanne March 19 1985 Maryknoll Pursues Its Vision of Mission The New York Times Retrieved 15 June 2014 Located across the road from each other the Maryknoll Sisters of St Dominic as they are officially called and the Maryknoll Society which is officially known as the Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America and includes priests brothers and lay missionaries are separate organizations but often cooperate on projects Their work in 27 countries in churches schools and orphanages and with lepers factory workers farmers and the homeless rarely makes the headlines Founded in 1911 the Maryknoll Society was the first Catholic Church missionary society in the United States The members of the society quickly became known as the Marines of the Church Fraser Barbara J September 28 2011 The church s Marines Maryknollers older fewer but still going strong Catholic News Service Catholic News Service Archived from the original on 17 October 2011 Retrieved 15 June 2014 Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers The Maryknoll Society Retrieved 15 June 2014 Maryknoll Lay Missioners Our Mission Maryknoll Lay Missioners Retrieved 11 June 2014 Maryknoll Maryknoll Retrieved 10 February 2023 Powers George C 1926 The Maryknoll movement 1st US ed Catholic foreign mission society of America Retrieved 11 June 2014 The Maryknoll Affiliates Retrieved 11 June 2014 Maryknoll Magazine Maryknoll Magazine Maryknoll Retrieved 12 June 2014 a b c Yik yi Chu Cindy 2007 Maryknoll sisters in Hong Kong 1921 1969 in love with the chinese S l Palgrave Macmillan p 15 ISBN 978 0230602311 Retrieved 11 June 2014 a b Keane James T June 20 2011 Outward Bound America Press Inc AMERICA The National Catholic Review Retrieved 11 June 2014 That year 1911 was far from the heyday of American Catholic missionary enterprises rather the editor James A Walsh M M was addressing readers in the United States whose church had been removed from the Vatican s roster of mission territories only three years before and for whom the notion of sending missionaries abroad was a foreign one indeed In the words of the historian Msgr John Tracy Ellis the first decade of the 20th century was a time when the Catholic Church in the United States finally attained ecclesiastical adulthood The great migrations of European Catholics to the United States were ongoing and Catholics were trying to take root in a culture more or less hostile to popery As a result the energies of the institutional church were often directed inward Out of the 17 000 Americans serving as Catholic priests at the time for example the number serving in foreign missions was 14 LaVerdiere Claudette 2011 On the threshold of the future the life and spirituality of Mother Mary Joseph Rogers founder of the Maryknoll Sisters Maryknoll N Y Orbis Books ISBN 978 1570759420 a b Byrne Patrick James June 1923 Father Price of Maryknoll A short sketch of the life of Reverend Thomas Frederick Price missioner in North Carolina co founder of Maryknoll 1ST ed Maryknoll N Y Catholic foreign mission society of America pp 40 55 ISBN 1149364084 Retrieved 12 June 2014 Several reasons conspired to defeat Father Price s plan of a religious order for the South but we may say in a word that he was so overwhelmed with the labor of build ing and money getting that he could not give to the rising Society the minute attention it demanded His labors were gigantic since he had to be superior builder money getter editor and missioner all in one Then too in his ardent zeal he wanted big results quickly When two souls animated by the same spirit and purpose come together it is to be ex pected that they should desire and plan to join forces Such was the decision of these two apostolic workers and then and there was conceived the idea of supplying what they considered America s greatest spiritual need a national foreign mission seminary which would not only take away our reproach Marie Andre June 30 2011 Back to the Roots Examining Maryknoll s Heroic Beginnings The Evangelical Vision of Father Thomas Fredrick Price Catholic Online Retrieved 11 June 2014 Maryknoll priests visit grave of Fr Thomas F Price in Hong Kong China 1923 Retrieved 2011 05 14 a b c Moorman Dennis Cherishing Maryknoll s History as we reach 100 years The Maryknoll Society Retrieved 9 June 2014 a b c Maryknoll History Maryknoll Vocations Maryknoll Missionary Vocations Retrieved 9 June 2014 In 1912 the young missionary Society established their headquarters on a hilltop farm above Ossining N Y The founders dedicated the hill or knoll to the Blessed Virgin Thus Mary s Knoll was born In 1918 Maryknoll sent its first members to China including Father Price who died the following year Three years later six Maryknoll Sisters sent their first missioners to South China The mission soon expanded to include northern China and Korea The Society did not hesitate to try new approaches to attract and include as many people as possible Before it had its first seminarian one young man applied who felt called to mission but not priesthood Thomas McCann became the first Maryknoll Brother in 1912 Whitehead Kate 11 March 2014 Documentary on the Maryknoll nuns sets its director on new path South China Morning Post Retrieved 9 June 2014 In 1912 the Maryknoll Sisters were the first group of Catholic nuns in the United States to found an overseas mission When six sisters arrived in Hong Kong 10 years later they had few resources at their disposal aside from their faith determination to succeed and brains what comes across clearly through the documentary is that these women who traveled all over the world were very well educated Tang Nancy Brief History of the Maryknoll Sisters Trailblazers in Habits Fishtailsoup Productions Inc Retrieved 9 June 2014 In 1912 the Maryknoll Sisters were the first group of Catholic Sisters in the United States founded for overseas mission Ten years later in 1922 a group of six Sisters in sweeping grey habits arrived by steamer in Hong Kong to begin their mission They had few resources other than their own faith dedication and what can only be described as a divinely inspired ingenuity Over the next nine decades the Maryknoll Sisters established six thriving schools and a hospital in Hong Kong and basically laid the foundation for Hong Kong s social welfare system Munch Janet Butler September 1992 How the Sidewalks of New York Came to Maryknoll PDF The Hudson Valley Regional Review 11 Hudson River Valley Institute 93 97 Retrieved 9 June 2014 The Rockefeller Family which had its estate just south of Mr Oussani s property did not want to see the seminary relocate to the area The Rockefellers in fact wanted this very same 52 acre property and contested the Society s claim on the land Litigation upheld the Society s right to the property On August 14 1912 a satisfactory financial arrangement was reached with the Rockefeller Family and the Society relinquished its claim on the Oussani property This financial windfall enabled the Society to purchase an even larger parcel of land further up the river On August 20 1912 this 93 acre property became the present day headquarters of Matyknoll a b Maryknoll Society Website The History of Maryknoll s Seminary Building Maryknoll Maryknoll Society Retrieved 9 June 2014 A larger facility was required and the Boston architectural firm of Maginnis and Walsh Timothy Walsh was the brother of Father Walsh was commissioned to design the Seminary Building that today dominates the grounds Armstrong Richard 1984 Out to change the world a life of Father James Keller of the Christophers New York Crossroad ISBN 0824506510 Jones Penny Lernoux with Arthur Ellsberg Robert 2012 Hearts on fire the story of the Maryknoll Sisters Centenary ed Maryknoll N Y Orbis Books p 31 ISBN 978 1570759345 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Marie Jeanne Maryknoll s first lady New York NY Dodd Publishers p 327 a b c Mollie s Legacy of Love Summer 2012 Maryknoll Affiliates Maryknoll Summer 1912 Archived from the original on 11 June 2014 Retrieved 11 June 2014 On September 14 Father Walsh wrote to Mary Louise Sara Mary Augustine and Nora asking On September 18 1912 the Fathers Students and Brothers moved from Hawthorne to Maryknoll as Father Walsh was already calling his farm on the hill above Ossining After a period of straightening up and settling down which Father Walsh crisply defined as chaos and just as things were becoming normal they woke up one morning to find that their cook had departed and left them breakfastless Father Walsh had only to tell Mollie what had happened After consulting the secretaries she set out immediately for Maryknoll from Hawthorne Hannah who had been cooking for the secretaries joined Mollie the following day and together they turned out three robust meals a day with occasional evidence of Mollie s special touches They also cleaned all the pots and pans stocked the empty shelves met the usual situations of unexpected guests late and early dinners and the lack or delay of supplies They slept in the old farmhouse down the hill from the seminary later St Teresa s Lodge a b Rogers Mary February 20 1920 The Teresians of Maryknoll The Field Afar Maryknoll p 319 Retrieved 9 June 2014 Duggan MM Michael Fall 2011 Maryknoll at 100 PDF CMCS CMSM Archived from the original PDF on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 11 June 2014 In 1912 three young men arrived at Maryknoll to become auxiliary Brothers of St Michael These numbers 3 increased so that in one period of twenty years 380 Brothers were professed These were the years after World War II and the Korean Conflict when the U S Church was seeing a great growth in vocations to the priesthood and religious life A third person Mary Josephine Rogers who would become the foundress of the Maryknoll Sisters and take the name Mother Mary Joseph was truly a mother to the Society that was being born in the minds of Frs Walsh and Price She met Fr Walsh in 1906 and volunteered to help publish his magazine She gathered a few women to help and they and other women eventually became the Maryknoll Sisters of St Dominic with Molly Rogers as their superior and foundress From the very beginning the founders relied on the help and experience of others realizing that they could not accomplish anything productive and long standing as a missionary society if they did not Fr Walsh the manager and director of the venture was particularly aware of the need to rely on others expertise and experience in the mission field Perhaps it was this realization that inspired Fr Walsh to look beyond the needs of the Society and help those who did not have the access he had to sustain themselves Be bigger than your Society was one instruction he gave to his young seminarians He insisted despite the observation that there was not always enough money to meet demands of daily living that there always be some money for the people who came to the door asking for help Lane Raymond January 1961 The Early Days of Maryknoll Literary Licensing LLC May 5 2012 p 310 ISBN 1258327260 Sisters Centennial Reflections Maryknoll Affiliates Maryknoll Affiliates 5 July 2011 Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 11 June 2014 We will need at Scranton a woman to assist Fr John I Lane 1 As supervising housekeeper 2 As secretary and accountant and we have decided that although our numbers are few at Maryknoll one of our own should be at Scranton I do not wish to ask any one of you to go but I do ask for volunteers Please read this note to all your flock instruct them not to act hastily but to say a prayer and leave a note in my basket before next Monday On July 31 Father Walsh returned from a long trip After supper on August 1 he visited the Teresians giving an interesting account of his trip including his visits to Detroit Notre Dame in Indiana Chicago Des Moines St Louis and Scranton where he encountered difficulty in leasing a house for the Apostolic School Finally came the announcement that Mary Augustine Dwyer was chosen to go to Scranton Father Walsh said he considered the position a very responsible one a possible beginning of a series of foundations of the same kind On September 8 Mary Augustine left for the Venard in Scranton a b Wiest Jean Paul 1988 Maryknoll in China a history 1918 1955 Paperback ed Armonk N Y M E Sharpe ISBN 0873324188 The Departure The Field Afar 12 160 162 October 1918 The date set for their leaving was September 7 the eve of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Immediately after the Superior s address the four missioners read in his hearing their Propositum a purpose to remain for life in the service of the Society and each received a Missioner s Crucifix As the Veni Creator began the Pax was given by the Superior to each of the missioners before whom then filed priests students and auxiliaries in turn receiving the kiss of peace in a farewell embrace Young Ernest P 2013 Ecclesiastical colony China s Catholic Church and the French religious protectorate New York Oxford University Press pp 175 177 ISBN 9780199924622 a b Smith Jim Downs William 1978 Maryknoll Hong Kong Chronicle 1918 1975 Chronicle Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America Hanlon Kevin The Gift of Our Founders Fr Thomas Frederick Price PDF Maryknoll Sisters Archived from the original PDF on 2014 07 14 Retrieved 15 June 2014 Walsh James Edwward 1947 The Man on Joss Stick Alley The biography of Father Daniel L McShane With plates including a portrait New York Toronto Longmans Green amp Co p 146 ASIN B0006AR8A4 a b Mungello D E 2008 Drowning girls in China female infanticide in China since 1650 Lanham MD etc Rowman amp Littlefield p 117 ISBN 978 0742555310 100 Years of History About Us Maryknoll Sisters Retrieved April 12 2012 Maryknoll Seminary Ossining NY HV Rob Retrieved 2021 11 10 a b A Brief History The sending of missioners from the U S Church was seen as a sign of the U S Catholic Church finally coming of age Retrieved 2011 05 01 Jean Paul WIEST 1988 Maryknoll In China A history 1918 1955 M E Sharpe Inc Armonk NY ISBN 0 87332 418 8 Bishop Ford Memorial School official web page Retrieved 2011 04 30 Sadowski Dennis 19 November 2012 Maryknoller dismissed from priesthood for supporting women s ordination Catholic News Service Archived from the original on 27 November 2012 Retrieved 21 November 2012 Conor Cruise O Brien Passion and Cunning p 95 Calvary in China G P Putnam amp Sons January 1953 Father Robert W Greene MM Archives Retrieved 2023 02 10 Astor Maggie 19 May 2018 Their Protest Helped End the Draft 50 Years Later It s Still Controversial The New York Times Retrieved 7 February 2019 Bishop Paschang Catholic School official web page Retrieved 2011 04 28 Thomas Frederick Price A devout Catholic in the tar heel state of North Carolina Rev Thomas Frederick Price found a natural calling to share his faith in the midst of antipathy Retrieved 2011 05 01 Rev James E Walsh M M PDF Retrieved 2011 05 14 a b Bishop Walsh Primary School official web page Retrieved 2011 04 30 Ex Maryknoll priest faces sexual abuse allegation in religious order previously cited Catholic Diocese of Richmond adds names to list of priests facing credible child sex abuse allegations 27 June 2019 Maryknoll priest accused of sexually abusing the son of a missionary a b c d e in Chinese BARRY Peter 溫順天神父 1977 瑪利諾會在華傳教簡史 Masters thesis 台灣大學歷史學研究所 Fr Paschang and graduating class at Gaozhou China 1926 Retrieved 2011 05 01 52 School History Maryhill External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Maryknoll Official website nbsp Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers website Maryknoll Sisters website Maryknoll Lay Missioners website Maryknoll Affiliates website Maryknoll Office of Global Concerns website Maryknoll Mission School at the Chinese Wikipedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maryknoll Society amp oldid 1221739719, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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