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Updated: Tuesday, 03 Mar 2009, 9:23 AM EST
Published : Tuesday, 03 Mar 2009, 9:18 AM EST
MYFOXNY.COM - In his first sit-down interview since a new archbishop for the Archdiocese of New York was announced, Edward Cardinal Egan said he's confident in his replacement.
(Watch the video, left.)
NEW ARCHBISHOP OF NEW YORK NAMED
Pope Benedict XVI has named Milwaukee Archbishop Timothy Dolan the new archbishop of New York. Dolan will replace outgoing Cardinal Edward Egan. (Watch the video report, left.)
The Vatican said Dolan would succeed Cardinal Edward Egan, 76, who is retiring as archbishop after nearly nine years. The post is the most prominent in the American Catholic Church. Pope John Paul II called the job "archbishop of the capital of the world."
Egan welcomed Dolan at St. Patrick's Cathedral on Monday.
Dolan did not speak, but beamed as he passed out Holy Communion.
"I've known him many years," said Egan. "And I told him how I
delighted I am to welcome this wonderful priest and bishop."
Dolan said in statements issued by the two archdioceses that
he was "deeply honored" and "grateful for the confidence of Pope
Benedict XVI," but sad about leaving Milwaukee. He pledged to the
New York faithful "my love, my life, my heart."
Parishioner Marian Roach was among those who attended the
morning Mass at St. Patrick's where Egan welcomed his successor.
"There's a fresh face, someone who will have to face the challenges
we have today," she said. "It will be difficult for him. So we must
have faith."
Egan, ordained in 1957, was bishop of the Bridgeport, Conn., diocese for 12 years before Pope John Paul II appointed him to lead the New York Archdiocese in 2000.
You can watch Archbishop Dolan's statement to the media below:
STATEMENT FROM NEWLY APPOINTED ARCHBISHOP OF NEW YORK TIMOTHY
DOLAN:
His Holiness, Pope Benedict XVI, has appointed His
Excellency, Archbishop Timothy M. Dolan, Archbishop of Milwaukee,
to the Archdiocese of New York. Archbishop Dolan has served as
the Archbishop of Milwaukee since 2002. He will be the 13th
Bishop and 10th Archbishop of the See of New York. He succeeds
His Eminence, Edward Cardinal Egan, who submitted his letter of
retirement upon reaching the age of 75 on April 2, 2007.
Cardinal Egan has been named Apostolic Administrator of
the Archdiocese of New York until the Installation of Archbishop
Dolan. The Archbishop will be installed by His Excellency,
Archbishop Pietro Sambi, Apostolic Nuncio to the United States at
Saint Patrick's Cathedral on April 15, 2009.
In a statement, Archbishop Dolan addressed New Yorkers,
saying, "My brother bishops, priests, religious women and men,
seminarians, committed Catholics of this wonderful Church, I
pledge to you my love, my life, my heart, and I can tell you
already that I love you, I need so much your prayers and support,
I am so honored, humbled, and happy to serve as your pastor."
Born in 1950, the oldest of five children to Robert and
Shirley Dolan, Archbishop Dolan's education began at Holy Infant
Grade School in Ballwin, Missouri, and continued at St. Louis
Preparatory Seminary, Cardinal Glennon College, and the
Pontifical North American College, in Rome.
Ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of St. Louis on June
19, 1976, Father Dolan then served as a parish priest, earned his
doctorate in Church History at The Catholic University of America
in Washington, D. C., worked at the Apostolic Nunciature (Vatican
Embassy) in Washington, D.C., served on the faculty at
Kenrick-Glennon Seminary in St. Louis, and returned to Rome as
rector of the Pontifical North American College.
He came back to the Archdiocese of St. Louis as auxiliary
bishop in June 2001, to be appointed Archbishop of Milwaukee a
year later.
The New York archdiocese is the second-largest in the U.S., behind the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, serving 2.5 million parishioners in nearly 400 churches. It covers a region from Manhattan to the Catskill mountains, and includes a vast network of 10 colleges and universities, hundreds of schools and social service agencies, and nine hospitals that treat about a million people annually.
Dolan's selection continues a chain of Irish-American
bishops that was broken only once in the history of the
archdiocese, when French-born prelate John Dubois was appointed in
1826. Yet, Dolan, 59, takes over at a time of growing
diversity in the local church, with a sizable and growing Latino
population in the New York-area. He speaks Spanish, among other
languages, and can preach and celebrate the sacraments in
Spanish.
When Egan became New York's archbishop, the archdiocese had
an annual $20 million operating deficit. Egan closed or merged
about
two dozen parishes as the Catholic population shifted to the
suburbs, where new schools were being planned. He said he wiped out
the budget shortfall.
On Sept. 11, 2001, and the days after the terrorist attacks,
he led worship in St. Patrick's Cathedral for thousands of shaken
New Yorkers. Last year, the cardinal hosted Pope Benedict XVI in
his first U.S. visit as pontiff, an event marked by festive crowds
in the tens of thousands.
But unlike many previous New York archbishops, Egan did not
embrace the chance for a broad public role in the city. Some
priests circulated an anonymous letter in 2006, accusing the
cardinal of arrogance and of ignoring the pastoral needs of priests
and parishioners. Egan called the complaints a "vicious
attack."
Dolan was sent to Milwaukee under challenging circumstances.
His predecessor, Archbishop Rembert Weakland, had abruptly retired
after news broke that the archdiocese had paid a $450,000
settlement to a man claiming Weakland tried to sexually assault
him. Weakland admitted an "inappropriate relationship" but
denied abuse.
The Rev. Jim Connell, moderator of the Milwaukee Presbyteral
Council, a panel of archdiocesan priests, called Weakland's
departure a "very sad and tragic situation" for local clergy. But
he said Dolan reached out to them, distributing his e-mail and
phone number, and calling them on their birthdays, the
anniversary of their ordinations, or just to say hello.
A year after Dolan took the Milwaukee post, about a quarter of
his priests signed a public letter saying that celibacy should be
optional for future clergy. Dolan disagreed, but did so without
apparent bitterness, emphasizing how much he appreciated the
clergymen and their work.
"This is the time we priests need to be renewing our pledge
to celibacy, not questioning it," Dolan wrote. "The problems in the
church today are not caused by the teachings of Jesus and of
his church, but by lack of fidelity to them."
Dolan began his path to the priesthood as a boy. A St. Louis
native and the oldest of five children, Dolan has said he would set
up cardboard boxes with sheets to make a play altar in the
basement. He attended a seminary prep school in Missouri and by
1985, earned a doctorate in church history from The Catholic
University of America.
After working as a parish priest and professor, Dolan spent
seven years as rector of the North American College in Rome,
considered the West Point for U.S. priests, where he had studied
for his own ordination years earlier.
He served briefly as an auxiliary bishop in the Archdiocese
of St. Louis before his 2002 appointment to Milwaukee, which serves
about 675,000 parishioners and 211 churches.
Dolan is an outspoken opponent of abortion, comparing the
moral urgency of the issue to ending slavery. The American Life
League,
an anti-abortion group that has pressured Catholic bishops to
speak out more forcefully on the issue, called Dolan "one of our
pro-life heroes." However, he does not deny Holy
Communion to Catholic lawmakers who support abortion rights, nor
does he single them out publicly.
He thinks each parishioner should decide whether he or she
should receive the sacrament. Every other year or so, he has
invited
Catholic city and state officeholders for a daylong session
on church teaching and public life.
Dolan had served as a point-person for abuse claims for
several months in St. Louis and was confronted with years-old
unresolved
abuse cases in Milwaukee.
In 2004, he joined the minority of U.S. bishops who publicly
released the names of local diocesan priests who had been
credibly accused of molesting children. The archdiocese posts
the names on its Web site and updates the list when needed.
"Anything we can do to keep children safe, we must do,"
Dolan said when he revealed the names. "Anything we can do to help
people who have been victimized come forward, we must do."
However, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests
has accused him of, among other things, failing to work more
closely with civil authorities to publicly identify accused clergy
from the independently governed religious orders who work in the
archdiocese. In 2006, the archdiocese agreed to a nearly $17
million settlement involving abusive former Milwaukee priests who
had worked in California. Insurance covered half the claim, but
Dolan said that the archdiocese's share put its annual budget in
the red, contributing to a $3 million deficit last year. Dolan had
to cut about a fifth of the jobs in the archdiocese. He hoped to
sell a 44-acre archdiocesan property, the Cousins Center, but the
sale stalled.