- Joseph Aloysius Durick
Joseph Aloysius Durick (
October 13 ,1914 –June 26 ,1994 ) was aU.S. Roman Catholic bishop and civil rights advocate.Born in
Dayton, Tennessee , he grew up inBessemer, Alabama . He studied atSt. Mary's Seminary inBaltimore and was ordained inRome .On December 30, 1954, he was appointed
auxiliary bishop of Mobile-Birmingham, Alabama, andtitular bishop ofCerbali . At age 40 he was one of the youngest bishops in the U.S. On December 11, 1963, he was appointedcoadjutor bishop ofNashville, Tennessee ; he succeeded as bishop on September 10, 1969, and resigned April 2, 1975, devoting himself fully to prison ministry.Originally a conformist cleric, he and some colleagues wrote the letter "
A Call For Unity ", calling onMartin Luther King and "outsiders" during the Birmingham protests of 1963 to stop and let the courts work toward integration. King responded with hisLetter from Birmingham Jail , voicing disappointment in the white clergy, who should be "among our strongest allies". This, and the message he got fromVatican II , led Durick to become a strong voice for civil rights in the segregated South, for which he was called a heretic and a communist by his tradition-bound congregation. In 1968-69 especially, he faced serious opposition in the form of boycotts of his public appearances.Bishop Durick publicly opposed the
Vietnam War and thedeath penalty , leading to more criticism from conservative circles.He died in Bessemer, Alabama.
External links
* [http://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/imagegallery.php?EntryID=D065 Tennessee Encyclopedia on Bishop Durick]
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