- William Conway (cardinal)
infobox cardinalbiog
name = William Cardinal Conway
See = Armagh
Title = Cardinal Archbishop of Armagh
Period =9 September 1963 –17 April 1977
cardinal =22 February 1965
Predecessor = John Cardinal D'Alton
Successor = Tomás Cardinal Ó Fiaich
post =Auxiliary bishop , Armagh
date of birth =22 January 1913
place of birth =Belfast William John Cardinal Conway (
22 January 1913 –17 April 1977 ) was an IrishCardinal-Priest of "St. Patricii ad locum vulgo" in Rome,Roman Catholic Archbishop of Armagh andPrimate of All Ireland . He was head of the Catholic Church in Ireland during the reforms of theSecond Vatican Council .Education and pre-episcopal career
He was born in Dover Street, Belfast on 22 January 1913 and baptised in St. Peter's Pro-Cathedral. He was the eldest of nine children. His father, Patrick Conway was a house painter and ran a paint shop near Royal Avenue while his mother, Annie Donnolly, came from Carlingford in Co. Louth. He attended Boundary St Primary School, St Mary's CBS,(now
St Marys CBGS Belfast ),Queen's University, Belfast ;St. Patrick's College, Maynooth ;Pontifical Gregorian University , Rome. He emerged with a doctorate inCanon Law "summa cum laude" tieing for a gold medal with a German Jesuit.Ordained for the Diocese of
Down and Connor , June 20, 1937. After further studies inRome , 1937-1941 he served on the staff ofSt. Malachy's College , Belfast, 1941-42 teachingLatin and English. In 1942 he was appointed Professor of Moral Theology in Maynooth and of Canon Law the following year, holding both Professorships until 1958. He was Vice President from 1957-1958.Two of his brothers, alumni of St. Mary's CBS, also became Priests of the Diocese of
Down and Connor . Fr. Joseph Conway, ordained in 1947 taught atSt. Malachy's College until his appointment as President of St. Patrick's College, Knock in 1967 while a younger brother, Noel Conway was ordained in 1957 and also taught atSt. Malachy's College where he became President in 1983.Episcopal career
He was appointed
Titular Bishop of Neve andAuxiliary Bishop ofArmagh on31 May 1958 , consecrated on 27 July 1958 in St Patrick's Cathedral, Armagh) where he served underJohn Cardinal D'Alton . He was made Administrator of St. Mary's Church inDundalk and at forty-five was the youngest Bishop in Ireland at the time. After D'Alton's death Conway was appointed Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland on9 September 1963 byPope Paul VI .Conway was the leading Irish participant in the Second Vatican Council, at which his
Peritus was future Archbishop of ArmaghCahal Daly .On
22 February 1965 he was raised byPope Paul VI to the Cardinalate at the same consistory as his friendJohn Carmel Heenan of Westminster. Cardinal Conway was madeCardinal-Priest of "San Patrizio ".Pre-Troubles Cardinalate
In the years after Vatican II, Cardinal Conway worked hard to implement the decrees of the Council. Ireland was well ahead of other countries in introducing the vernacular into the Mass on 7 March 1965. Cardinal Conway marked the day by celebrating Mass in Irish in the Franciscan College in Gormanstown, Co. Meath.
He reorganised the Irish Bishops Conference, setting up several commissions such as Justice and Peace, Laity, Social Welfare. He was invited to Poland in 1966 to mark the celebrations to mark one thousand years of Polish Christianity but he was refused a visa by the Communist government and could not attend.
Cardinal Conway and the Troubles
He presided over the Irish Church at the outbreak of the Troubles and, as a native of
Belfast and a priest of the diocese ofDown and Connor was well-placed to respond to the demands of the era. On September 12, 1971, after the introduction of internment he and his fellow Northern bishops issued a statement in which they both criticised internment and denounced theProvisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) as 'the small group of people who are trying to secure a united Ireland by the use of force. In a much-quoted phrase of the Cardinal's the statement went on to pose the question 'Who in their sane senses wants to bomb a million Protestants into a united Ireland?' infobox cardinalstyles
cardinal name=William Cardinal Conway
dipstyle=His Eminence
offstyle=Your Eminence
See=Armagh|Later that year after the murder of anUlster Defence Regiment (UDR) soldier by the IRA nearCaledon Cardinal Conway said "This latest and most cruel murder will send a chill of horror throughout the whole community. The persons responsible for such a barbaric act have lost all sense of the sacredness of human life and have thereby become less than human." He was equally strong in his condemnation of loyalist paramilitaries who killed members of his diocese and whose funerals he often attended.In May 1974 when James Devlin, a well-known
Gaelic Athletic Association player inCo. Tyrone was killed along with his wife Gertrude around 2,000 people attended their funerals. On that occasion Conway said "In the past three days I have looked upon coffins of seven utterly innocent people who have been ruthlessly cut down. During the past week eleven people have been murdered, one a member of the security forces, the other ten all Catholics. One must raise one's voice to high heaven against this slaughter of the innocent, irrespective of the religion of the victim."Ecumenical relations
Conway was keen throughout his time as Primate of All-Ireland to develop and maintain good relations with the leaders of other Christian churches on the island. He enjoyed a particularly close friendship with his fellow Primate in Armagh
George Otto Simms . In 1973 Archbishop Simms invited theArchbishop of Canterbury Michael Ramsey to lecture at the Refresher Course forChurch of Ireland Clergy. The visit took place from 30 April to 3 May and Simms arranged for Ramsey and Cardinal Conway to meet. Conway held to the policy of Church Leaders acting together when they could best advance their cause for peace.In the 2006 releases of Public Records from the year 1975 there exists a one page note of a meeting between Harold Wilson, then British Prime Minister, and the leaders of the main Churches in Northern Ireland (Cardinal Conway, Archbishop Dr GO Simms, Dr Temple Lundie, Rev Harold Sloan, Rev Donald Fraser.) The background to this was the fact that representatives of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) had held secret talks with Protestant clergymen at a location in Feakle, County Clare, on Tuesday 10 December 1974. On Wednesday 18 December 1974 the Protestant clergymen met with Merlyn Rees, then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, to report on their meeting with the IRA. These developments had led to an IRA ceasefire that began at midnight on Friday 22 December 1974 and was scheduled to end at midnight on 2 January 1975.
"The Prime Minister said that he had been impressed by the earlier reference to children going out to parties again. Peace created its own dynamic. The Church leaders had planted a fragile tree (which one might call a Christmas tree) in the desert of terrorism and we must consider how this tree could be watered."
Death and succession
For much of his time in Armagh, Conway did not have an
auxiliary bishop to assist him in his many duties as bishop of a large diocese, head of theIrish Episcopal Conference and a senior advisor to PopePaul VI . Only in 1974 was a former secretary Fr. Francis Lenny appointed as auxiliary bishop. Lenny was appointed as Bishop of Rotdon and received Episcopal Ordination from Conway on 16 June 1974. Illness prevented the Cardinal from attending thecanonisation ofSt. Oliver Plunkett in Rome in October 1975, a highly unusual absence given than he was a successor to Plunkett and that this was the first new Irish saint for almost seven hundred years. The strain of overwork took its toll on Cardinal Conway who contracted cancer late in 1976. He died after a short illness on 17th April 1977.The
Requiem Mass was celebrated by the senior suffragan of theArmagh province, BishopWilliam Philbin assisted by the late Cardinal's two brothers. He is buried in the grounds of St Patrick's Cathedral, Armagh.In a debate in
Seanad Éireann after his death tributes were paid to him by members of all parties. One Senator said of him "His selection as Cardinal was a source of pride, joy and satisfaction to the whole country. As Cardinal and Primate of All Ireland he displayed the qualities of the truly great. Holding his high office at a time of undoubted difficulty, he gave courageous and faithful leadership without losing his inherent patience and gentleness. He will be remembered as a great churchman, a strong and fearless leader, a talented teacher and a devoted and patient pastor."Brian Lenihan, on behalf of the
Fianna Fáil said "during his period of primacy, in charge of the major church in this island, he had to cope with a period of very profound change within the Church itself. He coped with it successfully by combining a degree of realism and humanity in his administration of the Church during its period of change. Unfortunately during most of that time of primacy one had a period of almost revolutionary political developments causing great sorrow to all of us and he, in particular, must have suffered very intensely during that time which, unhappily, is still with us. At all stages during that development he showed leadership and courage and maintained a sense of dignity, showing at all times his abhorrence of all things violent and at the same time emphasising the basic virtues of peace, tolerance and charity which alone can bring all of us on this island out of the sorrow of the past ten years.After a relatively short interregnum he was succeeded as Archbishop of Armagh, Primate of All Ireland, and later as cardinal, by
Maynooth College academic and native priest of the Armagh Archdiocese MonsignorTomás Ó Fiaich .External links
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/2594079.stm BBC News profile of Cardinal Conway]
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