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School Enrollment
In Savannah Diocese
Near Record 10,000
10c Per Copy — $3 A Year
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1963
Has Done More Harm Than War With Reds
Buddhist-Government Dispute
Could Have Been Avoided
The author of the following
analysis of the current Budd
hist conflict with the Vietna
mese government of President
Ngo dinh Diem has spent almost
two decades covering the news
in the Far East, or the past
two years he has maintained
headquarters in Saigon, Viet
nam's capital, and kept a close
eye on the complex political
currents active in that commun
ist-embattled country.
By Father Patrick O’Connor
Society of St. Columban
(Radio, N.C.W.C.
NEWS SERVICE)
SAIGON, Vietnam—Fifteen
Vietnamese soldiers and five
civilians were killed and 38
were wounded by communists
in south Vietnam on August 21.
Early the same day government
forces broke into a dozen or
more Buddhist pagodas and ar
rested hundreds of bonzes, bon-
zesses and lay persons. Among
them were bonzes and students
enjoying exemption from mili
tary service.
Government raids on the
Buddhist pagodas received
worldwide attention—far more
than the communist attacks on
villages, outposts and patrols
that cost some 50 casualties,
killed and wounded, every day.
These casualties were suffer
ed on August 21 and every day in
defense of the free world’s
interests, including the com
plaining Buddhists who have
been engaged in a 14-week dis
pute with the Vietnamese gov
ernment.
What started as an avoidable
dispute about flying Buddhist
flags in Hue on May 8 is now
doing more harm to the Viet
namese government and people
than several years of com
munist warfare.
Some of the harm arises from
confusion, also avoidable.
How many Buddhists are
there in south Vietnam?
Nobody can say, even within
one million, what the number is.
People who know the country
well put practicing Buddhists
somehwere between 20 and 30
per cent of the total population,
which is 14 or 15 millions.
Because Catholics are organi
zed into parishes and dioceses,
one can better estimate their
number: about 1.5 million, that
is roughly 10 per cent.
Is Buddhism a native religion
of Vietnam?
No. Buddhism came to Viet
nam, by way of China princi
pally, about 1,800 years ago.
The original religion of the
Vietnamese was a form of an
cestor worship.
Is there a Buddhist Church
now in Vietnam?
No. Buddha founded a moral
system but no church. Further
more, Buddhism is split into
numerous sects.
Buddhist associations are
modern developments. A person
can be a Buddhist without be
longing to any of them. There
are various Buddhist associa
tions in Vietnam, not all in
agreement. The General Budd
hist Association, whose legal
existence dates from 1953, has
been the most militant in the
recent controversy.
In July, 1962, it claimed only
one million registered mem
bers and about three million
nonregistered adherents—a fi
gure impossible to check and
probably exaggerated.
Has Buddhism been active in
Vietnamese life?
Buddhism everywhere tends
to be passive, though many
Buddhists are distinguished for
charity. Vietnamese Buddhists
have lagged in the field of edu
cation. They have established
no hospitals or leprosaria. They
have a few outpatient clinics
and some orphanages.
Has there been a religious
persecution of Buddhists in
Vietnam?
No. The last religion perse
cution in Vietnam was of Chris
tians. It ended one century ago.
Measures taken by the Viet
namese government against
anything that might turn into
political opposition have af
fected Christians as well as
Buddhists. When Buddhists be
gan holding organized demon
strations in the streets in re
cent months, the police inter
vened with unwarrantable
harshness. Thus Buddhist
groups who started out in May
with no solid grievances de
serving worldwide sympathy
were given grievances. Devout
Buddhist bonzes, bonzesses and
laity are now emotionally
aroused and feel that their most
sacred beliefs and practices are
at stake.
Vietnamese Buddhists pro
bably have made more progress
in the nine years since Presi
dent Ngo dinh Diem came into
office than in any century of
modern times. The government
has given them money, mater
ials and land for constructing
and renovating pagodas. An-
Quang pagoda in the Cholon
section of Saigon, one of the
centers of the recent agitation,
stands
government since pre-Diem
times. Asked how much rent
they have to pay the govern
ment, a bonze there told me:
"Formerly we paid 10 piasters
per square meter yearly. Now
we pay only two piasters.’’That
(Continued on Page 8)
Scholars Say Common
Bible Is Possible
SAN FRANCISCO, (NC)—
Scholars attending the Catholic
Biblical Association of Ameri
ca meeting here agreed that a
common Bible acceptable to all
faiths is a possibility.
They credited the Second
Vatican Council for increased
interest in Biblical studies and
noted that scholars are coming
to closer agreement on the ori
ginal text of the Bible.
"A common Bible is not a
project that will be realized
overnight, however,” Father
Eugene B. Maly, president of
the association, said. Father
Maly is an official theologian
for the council and professor
of Sacred Scripture at Mount
St. Mary’s of the West Semi
nary, Norwood, Ohio.
A group of scholars, both
Catholic and non-Catholic, Fa
ther Maly said, is preparing a
series of translations and com
mentaries which will eventually
be published.
With Father Maly at a press
conference at the University of
San Francisco were Msgr. Pat
rick W. Skehan of the Catholic
University of America, Wash
ington, D. C., a former direc
tor of the American School of
Oriental Research in Jeru
salem; Father Raymond E.
Brown, St. Mary’s Seminary,
Baltimore, Md., a specialist on
the New Testament; and Fa
ther Louis F. Hartman, C.SS.R.,
Holy Redeemer College, Wash
ington, a specialist in Semitic
studies.
STUDENTS AT CATHEDRAL DAY SCHOOL in Savannah step toward their classrooms
after beginning first school day of the 1963-64 academic year with The National Anthem
on grounds outside School Building. Scene was duplicated at schools throughout the
Savannah Diocese on September 3rd.
Mt. de Sales
Macon Ground Breaking
Ceremony Set For Sunday
On Sunday, September 8 at
12 o’clock noon, His Excellency
Thomas J. McDonough, D. D.,
J. C. D., Bishop of Savannah,
will preside at the ground
breaking ceremony for the new
gymnasium-cafeteria at Mount
de Sales. During the ceremony
the bishop will be assisted by
on land rented from-the 1 Monsignor Thomas Sheehan,
Reverend Robert Brennan, and
Reverend Stephen T. Mayer.
Friends and those interested in
Mount de Sales are invited to
attend the ceremony.
The new buidling will contain
a gymnasium, a cafeteria, kit
chen, dressing rooms for both
boys and girls, and storage
facilities for athletic equip
ment. The gymnasium and cafe
teria will be separated by a
stage that can be used for dual
purposes. McAuley Hall, as the
new building will be called in
honor of Mother Catherine Mc
Auley, the foundress of the Sis
ters of Mercy, will face Apple-
ton Avenue. Newly acquired
property will provide parking
area and an exit on College
Street. Mr. Albert Ordway
is the architect for the build
ing and the Chris R. Sheridan
Co. was the lowest bidder for
construction.
The Sisters of Mercy opened
Mount de Sales Academy in
1876 to girls. Throughout the
years both boarding and day stu
dents attended the academy. In
1953 an increased enrollment
necessitated the first step in the
Mount de Sales Expansion Pro
gram—the construction of
Mercy Hall. At the request of
Bishop McDonough, in 1959, the
Sisters of Mercy opened Mount
BISHOP McDONOUGH is shown above with priests of
Savannah Diocese and chaplains from several Georgia
military installations at their annual Spiritual Retreat held
August 26-30. After offering morning Masses, priests days
were filled with spiritual conferences, meditation, spiritual
reading and personal devotions.
de Sales High School to the Ca
tholic boys of Macon. As a se
cond step in the Expansion
Program St. Joseph Hall was
built in 1960. In May of 1963
the first coeducational class
graduated from Mount de Sales
High School. With an enrollment
of 230 students this year, the
present cafeteria, auditorium
and athletic facilities are in
adequate.
Last February, Sister Mary
Aurelia, R. S. M., superior of
Mount de Sales, announced a
drive for funds to build the
proposed gymnatorium - cafe
teria, the third project of the
Expansion Program. The Sis
ters of Mercy, Province of Bal
timore, are grateful to the peo
ple of Macon, Warner Robins,
and Robbins Field for $125,000
in pledges realized during the
drive. The chairmen of the
drive, Mr. William Crawford,
Mrs. Charles T. Lueckenhoff,
and Major Edward C. Quigley,
have consented to continue to aid
the Sisters as a planning com
mittee.
SAVANNAH — Although final
figures will not be available
until September 15th, a record
enrollment of almost 10,000
is expected in the schools of the
Diocese of Savannah, according
to the Rev. John Cuddy, Dio-
c e s a n Superintendent of
Schools.
‘ ‘The increased enrollment is
not startling, when compared
with the number of children who
attended our schools last year,”
he said, * ‘but it will require
increased classroom space. For
example, at St. Mary’s on-the-
hill, in Augusta, and St. Tere
sa’s in Albany, additional class
room space is in the planning
stage and construction should
begin during the current school
year.”
For the first time in the
history of Catholic education in
the Savannah Diocese, Negro
and white children began at
tending classes together on
September 3rd at previously
all-white schools in several
cities if the Diocese. Neither
the exact number of Negro chil
dren registered nor the schools
involved is known yet.
' ‘Those figures should be
available by mid-September,”
said Father Cuddy. He also no
ted that, contrary to fears ex
pressed in some quarters, there
has apparently been no signi
ficant drop in enrollment at any
Savannah Catholic school which
could be attributed to the de
segregation policy of the Dio
cese. Father Cuddy also an
nounced the adoption in all dio
cesan elementary schools, in
grades one through eight, of
“Modern Mathematics”.
“This will be a year of trans
ition in our method of teaching
mathmatics, phasing out the
traditional method which we
learned as children, and which
required so much rote-memory
work.
“By September of 1964 all our
elementary schools will be us
ing only the new method, which
will require more thinking on
the part of students, but
which will enable them to learn
more in a shorter period of
time,” he said.
Asked whether the diocese
anticipated any increase in
the number of teaching sisters,
Father Cuddy said, "It is doubt
ful that there will be any size
able increase in the size of the
religious staff at any of our
schools in the forseeable future.
We will have to find the answer
to our growing teacher need in
qualified lay teachers.”
There has been one change
in school principals. Sister
Mary Consolata, R.S.M. re
places Sister M. Martina Jo
seph R.S.M. as principal of
Cathedral Day School.
Legal Test Looms
Board Approves
Bus Service For
Parochial Students
WEST MILFORD, N. J., (NC)
—Presented with a petition
signed by 3,027 citizens, the
West Milford Board of Edu
cation reversed an earlier de
cision and agreed to provide
direct bus transportation to two
parocial schools for 480 child-
Cardinal Koenig
Reports Cardinal Mindszenty
To Be Freed Are False
ASSISI, Italy, (NC)—Franzis-
kus Cardinal Koenig has brand
ed as false recent reports that
Jozsef Cardinal Mindszenty,
Primate of communist-ruled
Hungary, will soon be free or
able to come to Rome.
The Archbishop of Vienna
spoke at a press conference.
He publicly admitted for the
first time that he was on a spe
cial mission for the late Pope
John XXIII when he went to
Hungary to see Cardinal Mind
szenty, who has been living in
asylum at the U. S. legation in
Budapest since 1956. The Hun
garian Cardinal sought refuge
at the legation when Soviet
troops put down the anticom
munist uprising which had freed
him for a few days from the
jail where he was serving a life
sentence.
Cardinal Koenig was in Assisi
to deliver a speech at the 21st
annual Course of Christian Stu
dies at the Citadella Cristiana,
a center for the rejuvenation of
Catholic life in Italy through
lay action.
The Austrian Cardinal said in
his address that Catholic in
tellectuals must prepare them
selves for leadership in the
coming greater role which lay
men will play in the Church.
He told newsmen at the press
conference that the Church’s
attitude toward priests behind
NFCCS Meeting Speaker
Professional Role
Of Laity Stressed
MINNEAPOLIS, (NC)—Lay
people have a profession com
parable to that or art, law or
medicine, and Catholic students
need to be prepared for their
professional role in the Church
as well as for their other ca-
PRAY FOR OUR
PRIESTLY DEAD
REV. THOMAS O’REILLY
Sept. 6, 1872
RT. REV. EDWARD
BARRON, D. D.
Sept. 15, 1854
Oh God, Who didst give to
thy servants by their sacredotal
office, a share in the priest
hood of the Apostles, grant,
we implore, that they may-
also be one of their company
forever in heaven. Through
Christ Our Lord, Amen.
reers.
The observation was made by
Joyce A. Hugenberg, member of
the Catholic Students Mission
Crusade national staff in Cin
cinnati, at the National Federa
tion of Catholic College students
national congress here.
, A 1962 graduate of Our Lady
of Cincinnati College and for
mer NFCCS official, Miss Hu
genberg spoke (Aug. 28) at a
religious affairs seminar at
which Father Godfrey Diek-
mann, O. S. B., editor of Wor
ship magazine, presided.
Pointing out that her com
parison did not mean that phy
sicians, scientists and artists
were excluded from the pro
fession of the laity, Miss Hu
genberg declared:
"Every Catholic is a repre
sentative of the Church in what
ever walk of life he is placed.
His profession as a lay person
(Continued on Page 7)
the Iron Curtain who have pled
ged themselves to the so-called
state churches is one of "sus
pended judgement.”
Speaking of his mission to
Hungary, he said:
”1 have been an ambassador
of peace for Pope John XXIII in
Hungary, but I do not know whe
ther I shall be one again. That
will depend on the situation and
on the will of the Vatican.”
"Perhaps journalists are not
very content with me because
I have said nothing about my
missions into various commun
ist countries.”
Then he pointed out that he is
still not free to divulge anything
about his missions. He did say,
however, that it is untrue, as
some newspapers have been
claiming recently, that Cardinal
Mindszenty will soon be free
to leave the U. S. legation.
Cardinal Koenig said reports
that the Hungarian Primate will
attend the second session of the
ecumenical council opening
September 29 are also false.
Bishop
To Speak
At Augusta
AUGUSTA — Bishop Thomas
J. McDonough will address a
Communion Breakfast for Men
and 6oys at St. Mary’s On-the
Hill Church on Sunday, Septem
ber 15th.
His Excellence will celebrate
the 8 a.m. Mass which will be
the Holy Name Mass. The
breakfast will follow immedia
tely in the School Cafeteria.
Harry Best, Sr., is president
of the Holy Name Society at
St. Mary’s.
All Catholic Men and boys of
the Augusta area are invited
to attend the Mass and Com
munion Breakfast.
ren.
The decision averted enroll
ment of the children in public
schools, some grades of which
already are on double sessions.
The petitioners included
non-Catholics who asked the
board to spend an estimated
$5,000 to provide transportation
rather than face construction
and teaching costs for another
480 pupils.
The board voted the rides
(Aug. 29) when a “Committee
for Improved Education” (CIE)
pledged to repay all expendi
tures if the procedure is found
illegal by the courts. The board
earlier had said it was in sym
pathy with the request but could
not legally provide the bus rides
under state law.
A start toward litigation has
been made. The case is now be
fore State Education Commis
sioner Frederick M. Raubin-
ger, who conducted hearings
July 6 and 31. If his opinion
is unfavorable, an appeal is
expected to be taken to the
State Education Board, from
where it can go to the courts.
Thomas Byrnes, CIE presi
dent, said the group is ready
to take the case “all the way
to the highest court” if neces
sary.
The case could result in the
first court interpretation of the
state bus law since the famed
1947 Everson decision of the
U. S. Supreme Court held pub
lic funds could be provided for
transportation of parochial
school pupils.
At issue now is how far a
district may go in providing
transportation.
The first section of the law
makes it possible for boards
to provide rides to pupils of
private non-profit schools.
However, the second section
has been consistently interpre
ted by state officials to mean
transportation must be limited
to existing routes.
Parents here challenge that
interpretation. They say the
section simply sets the mini
mum of service to be pro
vided and does not prevent a
board from providing maxi
mum service.
The section in question states
that where transportation is
provided public school students,
* ‘transportation from any point
in such established school route
to any other point in such es
tablished school route” must
also be provided students at
tending any non-profit school.
Such transportation was pro
vided here up to last year be
cause the school district had
to send some students to near
by Butler.
Vol. 44. No. 9