- Victor Guazzelli
Victor Guazzelli was a Roman Catholic priest who served as Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Westminster. He was known as a devoted supporter of social justice.
Biography
Victor Guazzelli was born in
Stepney on19 March 1920 of Italian immigrants. His father, Cesare Guazzelli, worked as an iceman. Two of his three sisters died from childhoodpneumonia .At the age of nine, Victor told his father he wanted to enter the priesthood. Cesare gave his blessing, and in 1935 Victor left for the
English College in Lisbon . Whilst attending theseminary ,World War II broke out and Victor was unable to return toLondon until 1945, by which time he was already a priest. His father had died during his absence.Now fluent in Portuguese and Italian, Victor took up a post at St Patrick’s, Soho Square, before being recalled to Lisbon as
bursar , and to teachChurch History andScripture .In 1958 Victor came back to the staff at
Westminster Cathedral , asPope John XXIII and theVatican Council tried to modernise the Catholic Church. It was a movement that would seeVatican II and the replacement of the Latin Mass with English.Guazzelli was made
Bishop of Lindisfarne in 1970 – sees often bear no relation to where the bishop actually has his ministry. But things changed in 1976 when Cardinal Hume divided the country into pastoral areas. Guazzelli was made bishop of East London, with the deprived boroughs of Tower Hamlets and Hackney. Guazzelli came home, making his base in Pope John House in Poplar – not far from where Cesare pushed his ice cart 50 years before.The bishop’s willingness to support just causes (no matter how unpopular with the Church establishment) came to the fore. In 1975, he discomfited fellow bishops by becoming president of peace movement,
Pax Christi (which opposes the current war inIraq ). In May 1982 he condemned theFalklands War and called for British troops to return. In 1983, he backedBruce Kent , one of his own priests and General Secretary ofCND . The Pope’s man in London described Kent as an ‘idiot’, remarks Guazzelli furiously condemned as offensive. That year, Guazzelli was the only English Catholic bishop to join a big CND demonstration inTrafalgar Square .Now he turned his attentions to an
East End in the throes of change. TheIsle of Dogs was a huge building site forCanary Wharf , an increasingly bitter strike was being played out at theNews International plant atWapping , and the parties of the far right were mobilising againstimmigration into the East End.Guazzelli, from his Poplar base, saw a way to bring together residents and community leaders and make their voice heard. He invited all to have their say at the new East London Pastoral Area (
ELPA ). There were workshops, training days, and discussion sheets printed, with cartoons explaining the Work of theSecond Vatican Council .As the physical and social fabric of the East End was stretched to the limit, the role of the parish priest was to change too – with less emphasis on ‘maintaining’ the parish, more on going out on ‘missions’. Guazzelli gathered a ‘hit squad’ of priests to conduct intensive six-week missions in the parishes.
Meanwhile, the tireless bishop was active as a member of the Latin American Desk of the Catholic Relief Agency
Cafod , visitingBrazil in 1981. He was also the English representative on theApostleship of the Sea – the mission to seafarers.He stayed on at Poplar after retirement age but, after a
haemorrhage , his life saved by thenuns at Pope John House, he decided to return toWestminster Cathedral . He kept working to the end – leisure time was filled withstamp collecting , playingBach on the organ, and a round ofgolf . TheLindisfarne connection came in handy: he became an overseas member ofShooters’ Hill Golf Club , on the basis that his see was an island!Guazzelli died on
June 1 ,2004 .External links
* [http://www.rcdow.org.uk/cardinal/default.asp?library_ref=1&content_ref=150 Obituary]
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