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Vatican appoints Bishop Edward Egan to succeed O'Connor

May 11, 2000
Web posted at: 11:06 a.m. EDT (1506 GMT)


In this story:

New bishop hails from Illinois

Known for commitment to education

RELATED STORIES, SITES icon



VATICAN CITY -- Bishop Edward Egan of Bridgeport, Connecticut, has been appointed archbishop of New York, the Vatican said.

The appointment Thursday follows the death last week of Cardinal John O'Connor. Egan, 68, was consecrated a bishop in 1985, and has headed the Bridgeport diocese since 1988, according to the Vatican.

Egan has a degree in philosophy; licentiate in sacred theology and a doctorate in canon law.

New archbishop hails from Illinois

O'Connor died May 3 at the age of 80 after a long battle with brain cancer. He was entombed Monday at St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York after a large service attended by many dignitaries including President Clinton and former President George Bush.

Egan has been praised by Jewish leaders for his work against anti-Semitism.

"Jews are not collectively responsible for the death of Jesus," the Catholic News Service quoted Egan as saying at a 1995 conference on Catholic-Jewish relations. "Our sins made Christ suffer on the cross. The religious life of Jesus was that of obedience to Jewish law."

Regarding his views on abortion-related issues, Egan once headed a committee at a national conference of Catholic bishops which repeatedly made statements against genetic research using embryonic cells from fetuses.

Egan, who was born in Oak Park, Illinois, just outside Chicago, is head of a diocese with 367,000 Catholics in 88 Connecticut parishes. He has regionalized the Catholic school system and established the diocese's Inner City Foundation for the needy.

Egan was ordained in Rome in 1957, and he spent 22 years there as a professor of canon law at the Gregorian University and as a judge in the Sacred Roman Rota, a church tribunal. He also served as secretary to His Eminence, John Cardinal Cody, in Chicago, and later as the co-chancellor of the Archdiocese of Chicago.

In 1985, O'Connor appointed Egan auxiliary bishop and vicar for education for the Archdiocese of New York after receiving a personal request from Pope John Paul II.

Known for commitment to Catholic education

Nora Murphy, a spokeswoman for schools of the New York archdiocese, said she was impressed by Egan's commitment to Catholic education while he was vicar for education from 1985 to 1988.

"He made that quite clear to us -- that he wanted strong Catholic schools, quality schools, that we were here to serve them and to help them grow," Murphy said.

His work ended when the pope appointed him to head the Connecticut diocese, which includes the city of Bridgeport as well as the affluent suburbs of Greenwich, New Canaan and Darien.

"What we know about Bishop Egan is that he is very conservative and takes a very legalistic approach," said Linda Pieczynski, a spokeswoman for Call to Action, a Chicago-based Catholic church reform group. "My understanding is that he is very personable, but also very rigid in his approach to issues."

Rome Bureau Chief Gayle Young and The Associated Press contributed to this report.



RELATED STORIES:
O'Connor entombed at St. Patrick's Cathedral
May 8, 2000
Crowds throng as Masses celebrate life of Cardinal O'Connor
May 7, 2000
Cardinal John O'Connor dies
May 4, 2000

RELATED SITES:
Archdiocese of Chicago
New York Archdiocese
St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York
Cardinal O'Connor IN MEMORIAM 1920-2000

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