|
|
- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
Religion: For Tolerance
"How Far Must We Tolerate Intolerance?" demanded Rev. Wilbur Larremore Caswell last week in the liberal Episcopal Churchman. Mr. Caswell thus stated a dilemma which bothers many a religious liberal. It was posed for him last month by a Nazi Bund rally on Washington's Birthday in Manhattan's Madison Square Garden. That rally loudly cheered Adolf Hitler and Rev. Charles Edward ("Silo Charlie") Coughlin, loudly booed President Roosevelt ("Rosenfeld" to Bund speakers). Ejected from the meeting was Pundit Dorothy Thompson, who laughed shrilly at a speaker's citation of the Golden Rule. The rally was perfectly legal, and Bund-sters' freedom of speech was protected by police. All this moved Liberal Caswell to write: "It could well be that a rather severe limitation of liberty and even a censorship might not be too high a price to pay to save democracy from complete destruction." To a liberal group which met last week in a West Philadelphia Y. M. C. A., intolerance of intolerance seemed a contradiction in terms. It acted on its convictions. This Committee for Racial and Religious Tolerancean organization headed by such men as Quaker Rufus Matthew Jones, Baptist Daniel Alfred Poling, Congressman Francis J. Myerswas in session when 30 hecklers burst into its meeting. The Committee tolerantly let them heckle. The invaders shouted denunciations of Jews and praise of Hitler, tossed around anti-Semitic pamphlets and stickers.
Detectives of Philadelphia's radical squad were not so tolerant. They arrested eleven hecklers, including the chairman of a "Philadelphia Committee for the Defense of Constitutional Rights," which pickets Station WDAS for not broadcasting Radiorator Coughlin's speeches. The eleven, charged with inciting to riot, were each held in $1,000 bond, the dangers of intolerance have been Father Coughlin's efforts to link Jews with Communism. This charge was lately riddled (in a Commonweal article) by an outstanding Catholic, Washington's Monsignor John Augustine Ryan. Last week brought more rebukes, tacit and otherwise, for the radio priest.
> Rev. Dr. Maurice Stephen Sheehy, able young Catholic University executive (TIME, Feb. 13), went on the radio with a scholarly speech detailing the pro-Jewish policies of the Popes, from the earliest (the first Pope, St. Peter, and several of his immediate successors were born Jews) to the late Pius XL Father Sheehy's talk was made under the auspices of a new, interfaith Council Against Intolerance in America.
> Father Coughlin's weekly Social Justice (price 10¢) ceased to print the statement that it was published "By permission of His Superior." Reason: the Detroit archdiocese now considers it a secular, not a Catholic, organ.
>Chief radio critic of Orator Coughlin is Father William Charles Kernan (pronounced Kernan), a Yale-trained ('23) high church Episcopalian, rector of Bayonne, N. J.'s Trinity Episcopal Church. Last fortnight, in the fourth of a series of anti-Coughlin blasts on Manhattan Station
WEVD, Father Kernan said of Father Coughlin's "American Christian Program":
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- Facebook's Secret Code
- Tiger Gets Mulligan from the TV Networks
- Uganda's Anti-Gay Bill: Inspired by the U.S.
- The Troubles at Kroger: Frugal Consumers
- TIME's Top 10 Medical Breakthroughs of 2009
- The Growing Backlash Against Overparenting
- Why Greece Could Be the Next Dubai
- Why Does Google Search Love Examiner.com?
- Putin: Yes, I May Run Again. Thanks for Asking
- Family Feud Imperils a Prized Spanish Art Collection
- Uganda's Anti-Gay Bill: Inspired by the U.S.
- Facebook's Secret Code
- The Job Market: Is a College Degree Worth Less?
- The Troubles at Kroger: Frugal Consumers
- Why Greece Could Be the Next Dubai
- TIME's Top 10 Medical Breakthroughs of 2009
- Tiger Gets Mulligan from the TV Networks
- Family Feud Imperils a Prized Spanish Art Collection
- Will Fashion's Biggest Names Kiss the Runway Goodbye?
- Why Does Google Search Love Examiner.com?





RSS