Catholic
Colleges & Universities Jewels of Southern Catholicism
By DEBORAH HALTER
New Orleans
Not every archive is stuffy. The new Center for the Study of
Catholics in the South at Loyola University, New Orleans, offers scholarly
research material, but just as important, it preserves the lives of Catholic
Southerners for future generations. The center is inviting scholars and the
public to help identify and document the vibrant faith and colorful activities
unique to Southern Catholic life.
Like what, for instance?
Picture it. Sicily. The Middle Ages. St. Joseph hears the pleas of
a famine-plagued community. The famine ends. In gratitude and celebration, the
people take the best foods from their harvest and build an altar to their
patron saint. They then distribute the food to needy visitors.
A few centuries later, when Sicilians emigrate to the New World,
specifically to New Orleans, they take the memory of St. Josephs mercy
with them, along with distinctive Sicilian recipes and a unique tradition of
altar-building.
These days, during the week leading up to St. Josephs Day on
March 19, the New Orleans Times Picayune announces when and where the
public can view St. Joseph Altars, constructed and displayed by
Sicilian descendents who greet strangers at the front door and invite them into
the house to appreciate.
The altars are large, sometimes huge -- taking up entire walls of
living rooms or even the entire living room itself. The colorful concoctions of
popular piety include crusty Italian bread, wine, cakes and cookies, flowers
and fruit, candles, and dried vicia fava, beans that symbolize survival.
The beans are blessed and given to visitors, or thrown, Mardi Gras-style, to
St. Joseph Day parade spectators. The candles are sometimes kept to light when
hurricane season descends with force in September and October.
Like the Italian population in New Orleans itself, nothing about
the St. Josephs Altar is without symbolism and deep meaning for those who
carry on the tradition. But wait, theres more.
Picture it (again). Sicily (where else?). 1623. St. Rosalie gazes
upon a cholera-plagued crowd and encourages a local woman, Girolama Gatto, to
find blessed Rosalies tomb. Poor Girolama cant find it, but a few
months later some townspeople find bones believed to be those of St. Rosalie,
place them in a reliquary, and carry them in loving procession through Palermo.
The plague stops. In gratitude and celebration, they annually carry Rosalie, or
whats left of her, through the streets.
So naturally, when Sicilian emigrants reached New Orleans, the
spirit of St. Rosalie, and the tradition of transporting her through the town,
was with them. Today, Italian New Orleanians annually hoist a life-sized statue
of St. Rosalie on their shoulders and carry her in procession through the
crowded streets, where local and tourist traffic stops for the duration.
Catholic tourists sit in their cars, trying to figure out which saint
theyre seeing. Non-Catholic tourists sit gape-mouthed. After nodding
their respects, the locals make cell phone calls and straighten their hair in
the rearview mirror.
Such jewels sparkle in the crown of Southern Catholicism, whose
tradition is made rich not only by Italians, but also by French, Irish,
Germans, Canadians, Latin Americans and many other groups. It is these groups
and their traditions that the Center for the Study of Catholics in the South,
located in the archives of Loyola University New Orleans, hopes to
preserve.
Over 8 million Catholics reside in the South, approximately
one-ninth of all Southerners and, similarly, one-ninth of all American
Catholics, says center director David Estes. In fact, the number of
Catholics as a percentage of the Southern population has nearly tripled in the
last three decades. The South is home to large concentrations of
African-American, Cajun and Creole Catholics, as well as significant numbers of
Catholic immigrants from the Caribbean, Latin America and Vietnam. The Center
for the Study of Catholics in the South plans oral history projects that will
preserve the experiences of these groups.
The first project was a C-Span broadcast appearance last spring by
former Ambassador to the Vatican and former U.S. Congresswoman Lindy Boggs.
Titled A Catholic Woman: Life in Politics and International
Affairs, the program featured a seasoned Boggs recounting her childhood
on a plantation in New Roads, La., her years as wife of U.S. Congressman Hale
Boggs and mother of their children, her four years as ambassador to the Holy
See, and her own 17 years in Congress.
Boggs said that many women, for all their belle-ringing, are
indeed steel magnolias. Empowered by her service on the House Appropriations
Committee, she drafted banking legislation making credit accessible to women.
At the time, women were required to rely upon a husbands income in
applying for loans. When Boggs retired and decided to purchase a condominium,
she encountered a bank officer who followed the old guidelines concerning
credit for women and demanded additional support documents before granting her
a loan. She gently informed the officer of her role in drafting equal-access
legislation.
St. Joseph, St. Rosalie and Lindy Boggs are only three of the many
famous names contained in the centers archives, where students and
scholars of the Catholic South can look up all sorts of interesting tidbits on
fascinating people. The centers mission includes promoting scholarship on
Southern Catholicism and sponsoring programs for the general public that foster
a deeper understanding of Catholic institutions, individuals and ethnic groups
in the South, a region generally associated with Protestantism, evangelism, and
TV evangelism.
In the 1970s, religious scholars studied evangelism in the South,
Estes explains. In the 1980s, scholars focused on Southern cultures that were
African-American. Roman Catholicism in the South has not been systematically
documented and studied, until now.
Were arguing that Southerners are Protestant and
Catholic, says Estes. The center will document the lives and faith
expressions of Catholics through immigration records, oral histories and
ethnographies. Other archival holdings document the involvement of Catholics in
literature and the arts, environmental issues and politics.
The center is housed in Loyola University New Orleans
recently completed J. Edgar and Louise S. Monroe Library. Researchers can
explore the archives from the comfort of a warmly colored wood-paneled room
that is at once friendly and quiet.
The center also is expanding public access to a significant
collection of historical documents concerning the universitys founding
fathers, the Jesuits. The collection includes the complete records of the
10-state New Orleans Province of the Society of Jesus, dating from 1837.
Jesuits were among the earliest explorers and settlers of the South.
Letters, diaries and daybooks document the growth of
Catholic institutions and provide a unique perspective on cultural life in the
region, Estes says of the Jesuit collection, which includes financial
records and photographs. For example, letters from antebellum
missionaries to their superiors in France read like travel accounts filled with
lengthy descriptions of daily life.
The centers archives also house documents of Jesuit Fr.
Louis J. Twomey, a well known civil and labor rights activist in the 1950s and
60s. Also archived are papers of Jesuit Fr. Joseph J. Fichter, author of
more than 30 books about church and society. For good measure, included
are letters written to Loyola Jesuits by Catholic novelists Flannery
OConnor and Walker Percy, although to be honest the center
has few of the latter, Estes says somewhat ruefully.
Estes, an associate professor of English, has taught Southern
literature and folklore at Loyola since 1983 and has written two books about
Louisiana authors, Critical Reflections on the Fiction of Ernest J.
Gaines and A New Collection of Thomas Bangs Thorpes Sketches of
the Old Southwest: A Critical Edition. As assistant provost for teaching,
learning and faculty development, he is responsible for fostering a
learner-centered environment and promoting the scholarship of learning and
teaching at the university, an apt job description for a man who describes this
work as my passion.
The center plans to enlarge the archive through documentary
projects focusing on todays Catholics, so that future generations will
have a better understanding of their past, he says. Shared
traditions are a positive source of identity. Folklore is an important part of
history that continues in contemporary life.
As important as the archives are, Estes says that outreach is a
crucial element of the centers mission.
Our interest is in public programs, to raise awareness
of Catholicism in the South, he says. This is a seed waiting to
open.
On Estes wish list are regular faculty symposia, extended
study of Southern religious women, quality production videos
concerning immigrants to the South, and exploring the religious histories of
Catholic populations. And, he envisions teaching parishes how to archive their
own stories, so that faith communities anywhere may leave a full legacy for
future generations.
The center is the nations only Catholic studies institute
focusing on religious life in the South. In time for Christmas last year, it
received a Challenge Grant for $500,000 from the National Endowment for the
Humanities. The center now seeks private donors to help raise $1.5 million
required to match the three-to-one grant.
Deborah Halter lives in New Orleans. She is former editor of
Arkansas Catholic, a newsweekly for the Little Rock diocese.
For more information
David Estes, Director, Center
for the Study of Catholics in the South
Loyola University Campus Box
198 6363 St. Charles Ave New Orleans, LA
70118 504-865-2476 estes@loyno.edu
National Catholic Reporter, October 25,
2002
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