From Company Man: My Jesuit Life, 1950-1968:
Teacher I was again, making a splash, but I had great things on my mind, not realizing I had great things already in hand. Off I went next door, to the U. of Illinois campus, when I should have just held my ground and the neighborhood, having appointed myself ambassador to the projects.
I went knocking on doors across the street in the high-rise. I walked down Roosevelt Road and into the low-rise buildings that were also part of ABLA Homes—Abbott, Brooks, Loomis, Addams—getting to know people, becoming a familiar face.
THE STREET Down Roosevelt a few blocks, past the projects to the west, was the storefront headquarters of the West Side Organization, more or less headed by an ex-con named Chester Robinson and funded in part, probably large part, by the Union Church of Hinsdale.
Yes, upscale suburban Hinsdale. Rev. Bob Strom, the quintessential white liberal Protestant activist who brought Union Church into the civil rights revolution, was the connection. Friendly, good-looking, the size of a linebacker, he had his apostolate, as it were, among the black downtrodden.
The WSO storefront office hosted meetings and other gatherings. I was welcome as a useful idiot if nothing else. It became one of my ports of call. I was on or near the cutting edge. It’s what the activist priest did. I was engaged, relevant, and open-minded. Apart from all that, I was getting an education in what was going on in American cities.
I’d sit in a meeting at WSO while Robinson cracked wise about how the white people who came around were smiling all the time or ogled black women. I listened to the angry rhetoric. I came calling at night after riots and found Chester, Rev. Strom, and friends partying with food I had cadged for the needy from the Ignatius kitchen—and smoking something pungent while they were at it. Very interesting, all of it, contributory to my ongoing inoculation to the appeal of the civil rights professional.
THE BOARD ROOM In those days I was also on the board of the Interreligious Council on Urban Affairs (IRCUA), where Msgr. Jack Egan was the Catholic linchpin-figure and co-organizer. He and his friend Rev. Edgar Chandler, of the Church Federation of Greater Chicago, had started it with the help of a rabbi who had dropped out by the time I showed up.
His place was taken by Rabbi Robert Marx, who filled out the American triumvirate delineated by Will Herberg in 1955—Protestant, Catholic, and Jew. We met downtown, at the Church Federation offices on Michigan Avenue. We were presumed urban-problems specialists from then-mainstream denominations. Among us was a distinguished geographer from U. of Chicago named Harold M. Mayer, a paunchy, dumpy-looking man in his early 50s, who shook his head as the “race problem” was discussed as solvable, indicating that he saw no solution. But he was one voice. For the most part, hope was springing.
Lew Kreinberg was there for the Jewish Council on Urban Affairs. He worked in Lawndale with Father Dan Mallette, pastor of St. Agatha parish, and other mostly young priests and citizens. Lew’s wife had their child at Cook County hospital, of which I was informed by Tom Gaudette, a Catholic-parish-based community organizer who lived in Chicago’s Beverly neighborhood.
Gaudette and Kreinberg were two different kinds of radical. Gaudette had no use for what he considered the aimless, hands-on, theoretical-leftist Kreinberg approach. He reported this baby-delivery item to me as reflecting badly on Kreinberg, who had grown up in (also upscale) Highland Park.
Kreinberg apparently took it in stride, being of the people as he saw it and committed to breaking from the middle-class mode. Gaudette, on the other hand, parish- and institution-oriented in his work, saw no benefit to anyone in living like the people he wanted to help.
THE MONSIGNOR Jack Egan had recruited me for the IRCUA. I had met him in one of my early-‘60s summers in Chicago while a theologian. My classmate Pat Henry and I, the two of us working at settlement houses between years of theology, had gone to meet him at his office on Superior Street near the cathedral.
It was in a converted three-story stone front residence with big windows looking out on Superior. Jack saw us after his nap; he was taking one daily since his heart attack, suffered months earlier while with Edgar Chandler, who had called for help.
In his office at one point with Pat and me, he stood looking out of the big window while enunciating somewhat melodramatically his vision for the city. Pat and I looked at each other. We weren’t used to such a display.
Years later, after Jack had made one of his sweeping forays into the city room, Royko came over to my desk. Impressed, he likened Egan to the Bing Crosby priest-character in “Going My Way.”
So he was, if you add a touch of irascibility that popped up now and then. Winnie and I went to his 40th-anniversary ordination celebration at a beer hall near Cermak Road, Sauer’s, as did the Callahans and Sullivans, Oak Park couples, with whom we gathered afterwards.
Gene Callahan had been executive director of the Chicago Conference on Religion and Race, formed after a 1963 gathering, and later was an Oak Park village trustee. He had been close to Egan and had named one of his sons after him. But they had drifted apart at the time of this 40th anniversary, in 1973. Gene went anyhow and afterwards marvelled at how resentment melted.
Later, Jack put in a word for me at the Daily News and may have had more than anyone else to do with my getting my job there. But in the ‘65–’67 period, he was part of my wandering from what I now consider would have been a more reliable path. He wanted me on his side, and I profited in a number of ways from joining his team, but my best bet would have been to go Jesuit in all I did, clinging to everything Jesuit and tending to my spiritual life. Or so it seems 45 years later.
ASKING PERMISSION Not that I went off on my own in my projects. I tested my initiatives, as it were, putting my ideas to various superiors along the way. In the summer of ‘66, for instance, I drove down to Mississippi to march with James Meredith, who had been shot while marching but had recovered.
The provincial, John Connery, gave the go-ahead, remarking in his laid-back fashion that I was riding a hobby horse.
But in no way was I harrassed for it or for other out-of-the-way ventures. My classmate Pat Boyle said something to the effect that I’d make a good point man for the province in these matters, because I could be counted on not to do something stupid. Another Jesuit said much the same thing.
Indeed, as an activist priest, I was fairly conservative, doing my best to dot i’s and cross t’s. I took a day to decide to go to Mississippi, for one thing, astonishing a young nominally Lutheran hotshot who worked with us on organizing high-rise residents. This fellow, full of misguided enthusiasm, told a young black man he shouldn’t trust whites, for instance, he himself being white. His was an impulse-driven approach. Mine wasn’t.
— More to come . . .