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JESUIT UNIVERSITY ENDOWS HUMAN RIGHTS CHAIR IN NAME OF PRO-ABORTION PRIESTWashington DC, Oct. 24, 2006 (CNA) - Georgetown University Law Center
has named a human rights chair for a controversial priest who has been
actively supportive of abortion during and after his time as a U.S.
Congressman. Dean T. Alexander Aleinikoff announced the establishment of the Robert
F. Drinan, SJ, Chair in Human Rights at a formal ceremony Oct. 23; Yale
Law School Dean Harold Hongju Koh gave the keynote address. "Few have accomplished as much as Fr. Drinan, and fewer still have done
so much to make the world a better place," Aleinikoff reportedly said.
"This new Chair honors Fr. Drinan's lifelong commitment to public
service and will allow us to bring distinguished human rights scholars
and advocates to Georgetown Law.” Fr. Thomas Euteneuer, president of Human Life International, has called
the naming of the new Chair “deeply disturbing” and “hypocritical.” The
university has established a human rights chair “in the name of a
heretical priest who has spent much of his lifetime advocating for the
most heinous of human rights violations: abortion,” he said in a statement. Fr. Drinan has been a strong supporter of abortion rights, during his
time in public office and afterwards as well, stating that while he was
personally opposed to abortion, its legality was a separate issue from
its morality. Fr. Drinan joined the Jesuit Order in 1942 and was ordained in 1953. He
was admitted to the bar in 1956 and served as a U.S. Representative
from Massachusetts for five terms (1971-1981). Fr. Drinan left his
congressional seat in 1981, when Pope John Paul II declared that no
priest should hold an elected political seat. Fr. Euteneuer said
Drinan was, “ordered by Pope John Paul II to relinquish his seat in the
U.S. Congress because of the unrepentant aid and comfort he
consistently gave to the purveyors of the culture of death.” Since
1981, Drinan has been a professor at Georgetown Law. He is one of the founders of the Lawyers’ Alliance for Nuclear Arms
Control and the National Interreligious Task Force on Soviet Jewry. He
is also the vice-chair of the National Advisory Council of the ACLU and
a member of the Helsinki Watch Committee. However, many say the priest’s human rights work is all for not, due to
his work against the fundamental right to life. Euteneuer cited Pope
John Paul II’s encyclical Christifideles Laici, in which he says: “The
common outcry, which is justly made on behalf of human rights—for
example, the right to health, to home, to work, to family, to
culture—is false and illusory, if the right to life, the most basic and
fundamental right and the condition of all other personal rights, is
not defended with maximum determination.” (n.38). Euteneuer said he prays that Georgetown will reflect upon John Paul’s
words “and come to the obvious conclusion that they must rescind this
award and fully embrace their Catholic heritage by defending the most
vulnerable members of our society, the unborn.” Click here to share this news story with a friend. |
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