Renegade priest: Father William Dubay

Each week, a big pile of books comes across my desk. Very rarely, however, does one rock me back in my chair.

Recently it was William H. Dubay’s The Priest and the Cardinal, Race and Rebellion in 1960s Los Angeles. In the tumultuous mid-1960s, depending on one’s stance on the controversies that rocked the church, Mr. Dubay was one of the most admired or despised spokesmen for reform. But I had not heard or read his name in almost 47 years. He was either working quietly on a remote island or dead.

The battle that made him famous combined the three most heated domestic issues to rock the post-Vatican II Catholic Church: religion, race and authority. Born in 1934, he entered the seminary at 13, was ordained in the Archdiocese of Los Angeles in 1960 and stationed in a segregated white parish in the San Fernando Valley. The cardinal, James Francis McIntyre, was known for the discipline administered to his priests who spoke out on controversial issues, like racial segregation, which many priests and bishops considered morally wrong. Meanwhile Father Dubay built a reputation as a writer for the Catholic press, including two articles for America, “Protestants Teach, Too” (9/6/62), a survey of Protestant books on the Bible and “Who’s Got the Hymns” (9/17/63), a proposal of a common hymnal for all Christian denominations.Father Dubay also published a Sunday newsletter calling on Catholics to support integration.

Disciplined for this and sent to a mixed-race parish, Father Dubay continued his efforts, organizing fellow priests to join his movement. In June 1964, he cabled Pope Paul VI asking him to remove Cardinal McIntyre for intimidating Catholics leaders of the civil rights movement. The  cardinal told Edward Sheehan that the diocese had built schools for Mexicans and blacks: “What is wrong, what is immoral, that they should live among their own kind—Irish with Irish, Poles with Poles, Mexicans with Mexicans, and Negroes with Negroes?”

Meanwhile the fight over integration tightened with the battle over Proposition 14, an initiative referendum outlawing all fair housing legislation as prejudicial to property rights. This would be on the ballot in November 1964; but the cardinal still insisted that segregation was a political, not a moral, question.

As Father Dubay became depressed over the reluctance of his fellow priests to stand up on this issue, he writes, “It seemed to me to be no longer a question of tactics but simple courage to do what had to be done. Any type of confrontation, I thought, would be more suitable than the present inaction.”

His book The Human Church (1966) combined his pastoral experience with a spirituality that would, through making the church structures more democratic, create a new atmosphere of human interaction that would replace the top-down rule of the hierarchy. It would include a union of priests similar to the secular labor movement. Though rejected by authorities, some suggestions, like moving seminary education to university campuses and increased Bible reading among the faithful, were ahead of their time.

One proposal that gained strong support was a call to reform the church’s interior judicial system. Father Dubay was calling upon the pope to grant him a courtroom style trial that might overturn Cardinal McIntyre’s judgments against him. An America editorial (8/27/66) “offered no sympathy for Dubay’s doctrinal or practical positions,” especially the call for priests’ unions. But the editors did support him on his right to a fair trial. “It must be candidly confessed that, by modern standards, canon law is sadly deficient in procedural safeguards for the diocesan clergy who find themselves in serious conflict with their bishops.” Over the next four years Cardinal McIntyre would move Father Dubay at least four times. He even made Father Dubay a hospital chaplain forbidden to discuss race or mingle with people he might influence.

In August 1966 when I was in my third year of theology at Woodstock College in Maryland and also writing a column on social and literary topics for America, the editors sent me to Los Angeles to cover a meeting at Loyola University. There 125 delegates for the Jesuit Educational Association received the results of a broad sociological study of all 7,307 boys in 44 Jesuit high schools by Joseph Fichter, S.J. The report, titled “And Get Back A Man,” was controversial because it revealed that a good number of seniors graduated with more negative behavior and attitudes than those entering.

Besides my report on the study (10/1/66), I also wrote a short piece under “Of Many Things” on my adventures, which included a visit with Father Dubay, who at that time was assisting the men and women at the Santa Monica Synanon House struggling to overcome drug addiction through mutual support. Father Dubay was just two years younger than I, not tall, but well built, with a look of gentleness and peace. We talked for about six hours, and I saw him as a man of courage who had suffered for his ideals. A memory of us swimming in a rough ocean surf and his refusal to be swamped and beaten down by the angry waves sticks out years later.

I recently reread The Human Church and The Priest and the Cardinal. I also checked on where he has been since we parted. In August 1968 he married Mary Ellen Wall, a divorced woman with three children. They had a child of their own. They lived in Seattle then Alaska until returning to California where he lives on an island. He writes books about language and comments on civic affairs on his website.

According to a July 14, 1969 interview with the Ogdensburg Journal in Mountain Center, Calif., a year after his marriage, Mr. Dubay began seeing a psychiatrist once a week to help him adjust to his new life. He no longer goes to Mass and is either an agnostic or an atheist. I wonder if he started seminary life too early. If he had joined a religious order that might have given him more moral support or if he had become a university professor, would he still be a priest? I pray that he is happy and will find his way back to the Eucharist again.

Raymond A. Schroth, S.J. is America’s books editor.

Son of Raymond A. Schroth, of Trenton, N. J., a World War I hero and editorial writer and reporter for the Trenton Times, Brooklyn Eagle and New York Herald Tribune for over 40 years, and of Mildred (Murphy) Schroth, of Bordentown, N. J., a teacher in the Trenton public and Catholic school systems, Raymond A. Schroth, S.J., has spent his life as a Jesuit, journalist, and teacher.

After graduating from Fordham College in 1955--where he majored in American civilization, studied in Paris, and was editorial editor of the Fordham Ram--he served as an antiaircraft artillery officer in Germany for two years and joined the Society of Jesus in 1957. Ordained a priest in 1967, he obtained his PhD in American Thought and Culture at the George Washington University and taught journalism at Fordham until 1979. During that time he was also associate and book editor of Commonweal magazine.

After two years as academic dean of Rockhurst College in Kansas City, he became academic dean of the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Mass. In 1985-86 he held the Will and Ariel Durant Chair in the Humanities at Saint Peter's College in Jersey City. From 1986 to 1996 he taught journalism at Loyola University in New Orleans and was adviser to the Maroon, its award-winning newspaper. In 1995 the Southeast Journalism Conference named him Journalism Educator of the year. In 1996 he returned to Fordham as assistant dean of Fordham College Rose Hill and director of the Matteo Ricci Society, which prepares students to compete for prestigious fellowships. Meanwhile, from 1967 he served as a resident faculty member in the student residence halls.

He has published eight books, including: The Eagle and Brooklyn: A Community Newspaper (Greenwood); Books for Believers: 35 Books Every Catholic Should Read (Paulist); with Jeff Theilman, Volunteer: with the Poor in Peru (Paulist); and The American Journey of Eric Sevareid (Steerforth), a biography of the CBS commentator.

In 1999 he moved to Saint Peter's College, where he wrote two books: From Dante to Dead Man Walking: One Person's Journey through Great Religious Literature and Fordham: A History and Memoir, (Loyola Press in 2001-2002). In 2000 Saint Peter's College named him the Jesuit Community Professor in the Humanities. In Spring 2003 he was made editor of the national Jesuit university review, Conversations and will continue to serve in this position until 2013. His The American Jesuits: A History, (New York University Press, 2007), was followed by Bob Drinan: The Controversial Life of the First Catholic Priest Elected to Congress, (Fordham University Press, 2010). He taught a graduate journalism course at NYU in 2004 and journalism history at Brooklyn College in 2006.

In recent summers he has traveled to Gabon, South Africa, Peru, Iraq, Jordan, Syria, France, Thailand, Vietnam, Cuba, Indonesia, the Czech Republic, and China to educate himself, write articles, and take pictures. In 2003 his National Catholic Reporter media essays won the Catholic Press Association's best cultural columnist award. His over 300 articles on politics, religion, the media, and literature have appeared in many publications, including the Columbia Journalism Review, Commonweal, America, the New York Times Book Review, the Los Angeles Times, New York Newsday, Kansas City Star, Boston Globe and the Newark Star Ledger, where he was a weekly online columnist for several years. From time to time he lectures and appears on radio and TV. He is listed in Who's Who and Contemporary Authors. In his free time he swims, bikes, walks, reads, goes to movies and restaurants, and prays.