The view from his window
A fellow catechist at
St. Al's has also read
The Education of an Archbishop by Paul Wilkes. My counterpart characterized the book as showing Archbishop Weakland as controversial merely because he was willing to listen to all views. That sent me back to pages 38-39 of the book. We find the Archbishop recalling receiving "vistors--including industrialist
J. Peter Grace, former Treasury Secretary
William Simon, and
Michael Novak, a senior analyst with a conservative think tank" in June 1984. They came to discuss the draft of the U.S. Bishops' document Economic Justice for All.
"I looked out the window," the Archbishop said, remembering the day that the group of neo-conservative Catholics was scheduled to arrive, " and up pulled these limousines with smoked windows, having whisked the occupants from their private planes, which had landed minutes before at the Milwaukee Airport. All I could think of was it looked very much like a meeting of high level Mafia leaders."
That doesn't sound very open-minded, unless our then-Archbishop's intended meaning anticipated the opinion of
Governor Frank Keating.