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Cardinal O'Connor's mother was convert from Judaism, research shows
cns ^ | May 2, 2014 | Claudia McDonnell

Posted on 05/02/2014 3:20:26 PM PDT by NYer

NEW YORK (CNS) -- Cardinal John J. O'Connor, who as archbishop of New York cultivated and cherished his strong ties with the Jewish community, was born of a mother who was born Jewish.

It is not known whether he knew that his mother, Dorothy Gumple O'Connor, was born Jewish. She converted to Catholicism before she met and married Thomas O'Connor, the late cardinal's father.

Mary O'Connor Ward, the cardinal's sister, told Catholic New York, newspaper of the New York Archdiocese, that her mother never spoke about having belonged to another faith.

The fact that Dorothy O'Connor was Jewish by birth came to light during a genealogical search undertaken by Ward at the prompting of one of her daughters, Eileen Ward Christian, who had begun digging into the family's history. Ward said that when she was growing up, she surmised that her mother was a convert, but that the family never discussed the matter.

Asked whether Cardinal O'Connor was aware of his Jewish lineage, she said, "I have no way of knowing that." But she added, "I just don't understand, if he knew, why something wouldn't have come up before. He was so close to the Jewish community."

Musing about his probable reaction to the news, she said, "I think he would have been very proud of it." Ward added that she was proud when she discovered her Jewish ancestry, and she noted that Cardinal O'Connor often spoke of the Jewish people as "our elder brothers" in faith.

Cardinal O'Connor apparently felt that connection in ways that, in retrospect, seem prophetic. On May 3, 1987, he watched thousands of people march down Fifth Avenue protesting the oppression of Soviet Jews. Later, he joined the protesters at a rally near the United Nations and told them, "As I stood on the steps of St. Patrick's Cathedral this morning and watched you stream by, I could only be proud of those who streamed out of Egypt several thousand years ago, winning freedom for themselves and for all of us. They are your ancestors and they are mine."

He added, "I am proud to be this day, with you, a Jew."

At a synagogue service in 1988 commemorating the 50th anniversary of Kristallnacht, when Nazis destroyed synagogues and Jewish homes and stores in Germany and Austria, the cardinal told the congregation that he had placed a candle in the window of his residence on Madison Avenue. "That candle says, to those who would accuse, 'Paint your swastika on the walls of my house, because herein lives a spiritual Semite,'" he said.

Mother Agnes Mary Donovan, superior general of the Sisters of Life, the religious congregation Cardinal O'Connor founded in 1991, was joyous about the news of the cardinal's heritage. In an interview, Mother Agnes spoke about the cardinal's 1977 visit to the World War II-era Dachau concentration camp, which profoundly affected the rest of his life.

Mother Agnes said the sisters in the congregation were moved by the news of their founder's Jewish heritage.

"It leaves us with a greater wonder and awe at the magnificence of God's grace, at the gift of a charism of life given to a priest ... who did not know that he was Jewish, a gift of grace given by God in one of the 20th century's darkest places," she said.

Cardinal O'Connor was the archbishop of New York from his appointment by Pope John Paul II in 1984 until his death at age 80 on May 3, 2000. His relationship with the Jewish community in New York was strong from the beginning and it was rooted in actions as well as words. The cardinal was one of the key movers behind the Vatican's diplomatic recognition of Israel, which was formalized with the opening of a Vatican nunciature in Israel and an Israeli embassy at the Vatican in 1994. History shows he was a vocal supporter of Jews and Jewish causes, and he often spoke before Jewish groups and organizations. But to many Jews in New York, he was more than a leader in the field of interfaith affairs; he was a friend.

The discovery of the cardinal's Jewish background began when Ward, found that their mother's parents, Tina and Gustav Gumple, were buried in a Jewish cemetery in Bridgeport, Conn., where they had lived. Tina Gumple died in the 1800s, and at the time, no woman who was not Jewish could have been buried in a Jewish cemetery, Ward said.

Additional research led Ward and her daughter to the archives of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, where the marriage record for Dorothy and Thomas O'Connor revealed that Dorothy Gumple had been baptized at Sacred Heart Church in Bridgeport, Conn., April 3, 1908. She was 19 at the time.

"What brought it about, I'll never know," Ward said. "None of us will ever know why she became a Catholic."

Later, Dorothy Gumple went to Atlantic City where her sister lived, and through her sister's husband, she met Thomas O'Connor. They married Dec. 26, 1909.

"I just drew my own conclusion that my mother was a convert. The only way I knew (was that) she had a sister who didn't go to church," Ward explained, adding that she and her brother, the future cardinal, were "very close" but did not discuss their mother's religious background.

Ward reaffirmed what her brother had often said: Their mother was a deeply devout Catholic, a woman of prayer who literally died while sitting in a chair and saying the rosary.

She added that her brother might have thought that their mother was originally Lutheran, because her parents, Tina and Gustav Gumple, came to the United States from Prussia.

There is some support for that theory. Sister Maris Stella Karalekas of the Sisters of Life has been researching the life of Cardinal O'Connor for several years. She spoke with a Lutheran pastor and former U.S. Navy chaplain, the Rev. George Evans. He told her that the future Cardinal O'Connor, when he was chief of Navy chaplains, told him, "If things had turned out differently, I could have been Lutheran. My mother was born Lutheran."

Sister Maris Stella is convinced that Cardinal O'Connor did not know that his mother was born Jewish.

"If he did know, he would have been so proud of it," she said.

"It's quite a wonder to me. It's something so beautiful, that God chose him as this instrument of grace in the church."



TOPICS: Catholic; History
KEYWORDS: cardinaloconnor; catholic; chaplain; convert; converts; jewish; judaism; mother; navy; nyc; philadelphia; sistermarisstella; sistersoflife; usnavy

1 posted on 05/02/2014 3:20:26 PM PDT by NYer
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To: Tax-chick; GregB; Berlin_Freeper; SumProVita; narses; bboop; SevenofNine; Ronaldus Magnus; tiki; ...

Dig deep enough and you will discover your ancestral roots are either Jewish or Pagan.


2 posted on 05/02/2014 3:21:10 PM PDT by NYer ("You are a puff of smoke that appears briefly and then disappears." James 4:14)
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To: NYer

Jews are a strange obsession for those who claim being one doesn’t mean anything since Jesus came.


3 posted on 05/02/2014 3:33:12 PM PDT by jjotto ("Ya could look it up!")
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To: NYer
Unfortunately when he died, the Clintons were still President and invited themselves to his funeral.

I once met a young man (Protestant) who believed that all Jews knew their family tree back to the people mentioned in the Bible.

4 posted on 05/02/2014 3:35:04 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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To: Verginius Rufus

Well, Kohens and Levis do...

And then there’s...

http://www.thesanhedrin.org/en/index.php?title=Rabbi_Yosef_Dayan

A group of Jewish scholars attempts to recreate the ancient Sanhedrin tribunal in Jerusalem. According to the Jerusalem Post, the 71 Orthodox scholars who convened believe they can reconstitute the Second Temple-era Sanhedrin and that one of their members, Rabbi Yosef Dayan, could qualify as a Jewish monarch because he can trace his lineage to King David.


5 posted on 05/02/2014 3:39:56 PM PDT by jjotto ("Ya could look it up!")
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To: NYer

Very neat! I bet he would have been delighted. I wonder what her conversion story was.

BTW, many of Spain’s most famous saints, including St. Teresa and St John of the Cross, were the descendants of Jewish conversos. The great Cardinal Cisneros was also of Jewish ancestry.

I loved Cardinal O’Connor! He was truly wonderful for the Faith in New York City.


6 posted on 05/02/2014 3:40:31 PM PDT by livius
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To: NYer; Zionist Conspirator
Dig deep enough and you will discover your ancestral roots are either Jewish or Pagan.

Dig a little deeper, and you'll find that they're all Jewish.

7 posted on 05/02/2014 3:40:53 PM PDT by Alex Murphy ("the defacto Leader of the FR Calvinist Protestant Brigades")
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Comment #8 Removed by Moderator

To: lostboy61

Wow! I didn’t know that!


9 posted on 05/02/2014 3:44:25 PM PDT by jjotto ("Ya could look it up!")
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To: NYer
Who cares? Really. I couldn't care less or more. This means nothing to me, nor should it anyone else. JMHO.

FMCDH(BITS)

10 posted on 05/02/2014 4:04:38 PM PDT by nothingnew (I fear for my Republic due to marxist influence in our government. Open eyes/see)
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To: livius; Verginius Rufus
I loved Cardinal O’Connor!

As did I! Many are unfamiliar with the work he did at night, visiting and washing AIDS patients in a local hospital. Freeper Verginius Rufus commented on the Cintons' attendance at O'Connnor's funeral. One of the best accounts of that day:

At one point in the sermon, O'Connor's hand picked homilist said, "What a great legacy he has left us in his constant reminder that the Church must always be unambiguously pro- life."

There was a beat and then applause broke out. It grew louder, increasing as the cameras fixed on the Clinton-Gore party showing them on screens throughout the cathedral. Cardinal Law attempted to quiet the crowd with his hand, when suddenly the congregation began to stand up, applauding in a wave that moved from the back of the church to the front. If it hadn't been a funeral they would have cheered. It was a defiant, pivotal moment.

Then the bishops and cardinals in the sanctuary stood up. The elder George Bush stood up applauding, as did his son somewhere off camera. The camera panned back to the Clinton- Gore party who looked bemused and bewildered.

Having no water glasses to reach for as they did in 1994 when Mother Teresa received a thunderous ovation for telling the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington that there could be no peace as long as a mother could kill the child in her womb, Clinton leaned back and started whispering in Hillary's ear. Gore's face was as blank, flat and white as a sheet of paper. Behind them another abortion "rights" supporter, Rudy Giuliani, began to applaud, albeit weakly, and stood. And lest they be the only ones left seated, the Clintons and Gores lamely stood up but refrained from applauding.

Cardinal John O'Connor gets last word at his own funeral

And then there was the incident in 1989, when AIDS activists protested the cardinal's condemnation of the use of condoms to prevent HIV transmission and legalized abortion. The protest began as Cardinal O'Connor was holding Sunday-morning Mass. Edward Koch, then the mayor of New York, was among the worshippers, sitting in a front-row pew. Teams of police officers were there as well, having been warned about the demonstration.

A few dozen of the Act Up protesters entered the cathedral. Their impact was dramatic. Several stood, chanting a statement of complaint against the Catholic Church. Others lay down in the aisles, chaining themselves to pews.

Jeff Stone, a gay Catholic who was among the protesters outside the church, says many demonstrators felt uncomfortable about the audacious confrontation with Cardinal O'Connor despite their anger over his stance on AIDS and abortion.

11 posted on 05/02/2014 4:26:29 PM PDT by NYer ("You are a puff of smoke that appears briefly and then disappears." James 4:14)
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To: NYer

Thanks for posting this. Cardinal O’Connor was a blessing to us all. And thanks for retelling of his funeral which I watched on TV. He was courageous as a lion defending our Faith and as gentle as a lamb in his compassion for all souls.


12 posted on 05/02/2014 4:57:00 PM PDT by victim soul
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To: Alex Murphy

On the sixth day God created Abraham? Perhaps the Calvinists have a slightly different Bible?


13 posted on 05/02/2014 7:06:32 PM PDT by Hieronymus ( (It is terrible to contemplate how few politicians are hanged. --G.K. Chesterton))
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To: NYer

The mother of the late Bishop Joseph Brunini, of the Diocese of Jackson MS, was Jewish.


14 posted on 05/03/2014 4:25:42 PM PDT by SuziQ
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To: NYer
Jeff Stone, a gay Catholic who was among the protesters outside the church, says many demonstrators felt uncomfortable about the audacious confrontation with Cardinal O'Connor despite their anger over his stance on AIDS and abortion.

Yeah, Act Up was always on Cardinal O'Connor's case, saying he hated homosexuals, even though you wouldn't find any of THEM washing, cleaning, and caring for people dying from AIDS in NY hospitals, as the Cardinal did.

15 posted on 05/03/2014 4:29:26 PM PDT by SuziQ
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