This is Part II of a three-part story. The first installment, "French Jesuits in New Orleans," is available here. In spite of its rich missionary history with its roots in Spain and France, the American Catholic church traditionally traces its birthday to the colonial period during wh
Raymond A. Schroth, S.J.
Raymond A. Schroth, S.J., was the literary editor of America and the author of six books, including Dante to Dead Man Walking: One Reader’s Journey through the Christian Classics and American Journey of Eric Sevareid.
American Jesuits, Buried and Brought Back: Part I: French Jesuits in New Orleans
In 1814 John Adams wrote to Thomas Jefferson that he was unhappy with the Restoration of the Society of Jesus. Read today, the expression is surprising. One of the fruits of the revolution was religious freedom, and the American Catholic Church, concentrated in Maryland and Philadelphia, at that tim
My Three Lives in Journalism: America, Commonweal and NCR
Two days last month I flew to Kansas City and next took the F train and walked to Pier 60 on the Hudson River to help celebrate the anniversaries of the National Catholic Reporter 50th and Commonweal 90th One in the ldquo heartland rdquo of America the other in the center of the world The lo
Readings: Israel, The Smoke Still Rises
Israel-Gaza still smolders The op-ed pages news stories and recent books still argue about the outcome of the war Some even suggest that Gaza with its 2000 dead has won because it withstood Israel rsquo s overwhelming land and air attack Other commentators toy with despair because peace seems
An ‘America’ reading list: 150 short essays on 270 books
Reading suggestions from scholars—some long, some short…
Readings: “The Notebook” and What War Does to Us
I viewed Janos Szasz rsquo s strange and prize-winning film The Notebook the same week that Israel rsquo s invasion of Gaza allegedly to punish Hamas for aiming rockets at Israel reached its ugliest pitch As this is written 1 650 citizens of Gaza mostly civilians including 500 children and 64
The Battle of the Nuns
ldquo In a selfish world they epitomize selflessness and compassion rdquo New York Times 9 17 Who rsquo s that It rsquo s rough out there Maybe he rsquo s taking about well-trained kindly policemen One of the remarkable cultural developments within the American Catholic Church during the l
Readings: Israel vs. Israel
The obligations we have as Americans and Christians to the home of the Jewish people.
My father’s war: A note to my father on the 100th anniversary of the US entrance into WWI
World War I stories include several about enemies who discovered one another’s humanity. On the 100th anniversary of the United States’ entry into the war, this is one.
