Marin Independent Journal

Religious leaders, across faiths who died in 2020

- By David Crary

NEW YORK » The Catholic priest who for decades had been one of the Vatican’s top experts on the Latin language died on Christmas Day at a nursing home in Milwaukee. A United Methodist Church bishop in the West African nation of Sierra Leone died in a traffic accident in August as he was engaged in efforts to resolve the denominati­on’s conflicts over inclusion of LGBTQ people. Back in March, a 49-year- old priest in Brooklyn became the first Catholic cleric in the United States killed by the coronaviru­s. They were among many religious leaders — some admired worldwide, others beloved only locally — who died in 2020. Here are some of them.

Bishop Phillip A. Brooks, 88, senior pastor of New St. Paul Tabernacle Church of God in Christ in Detroit and second-in-command in the Black denominati­on’s national leadership. Official obituaries did not specify the cause of Brooks’ death. It occurred in April, during a period in which numerous Church of God in Christ bishops and pastors died of COVID-19.

Ernesto Cardenal, 95, a renowned poet and Roman Catholic cleric who became a symbol of revolution­ary verse in Nicaragua and across Latin America. He was suspended from performing his priestly duties by St. John Paul II for defying the Church by serving as a cabinet minister in the Sandinista government. The penalty lasted more than three decades before being lifted by Pope Francis in February 2019.

Thich Quang Do, 91, a Buddhist monk who became the public face of religious dissent in Vietnam while the Communist government kept him in prison or under house arrest for more than 20 years. Do was the highest leader of the banned Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam, which has constantly tangled with the government over religious freedom and human rights.

Reginald Foster, 81, a Milwaukee- born Catholic priest who for 40 years served as one of the Vatican’s paramount experts on Latin. He died on Christmas Day at a Milwaukee nursing home; the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported that he had tested positive for COVID-19 less than two weeks earlier.

Rabbi Yisroel Friedman, 84, a scholar of the Talmud, the ancient text that forms the foundation of Jewish law. Born in the Soviet Union, he came to the United States in 1956 and spent more than 50 years as the top academic at the Talmudical Seminary Oholei Torah in Brooklyn. He was also a member of the Central Committee of ChabadLuba­vitch Rabbis.

Ayatol lah Hashem Bathaei Golpayegan­i, in his late 70s, a prominent Shiite cleric in Iran. He was one of the representa­tives for Tehran in the Assembly of Experts, an all- cleric body that will choose the successor of the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. One of his teachers in seminary was the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, founder of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Rev. Robert Graetz, 92, the only local white minister to support the bus boycott that unfolded in Montgomery, Alabama, after the December 1955 arrest of Rosa Parks. Graetz was pastor of the majority-Black Trinity Lutheran Evangelica­l Church. He and his wife, Jeannie, faced harassment, threats and bombings as a result of their stance.

Rev. Dr. Ron Hampton, 64, pastor at New Vision Community Church, a Free Methodist Church in Shreveport, Louisiana. Days before COVID-19 killed him in May, Hampton sent a livestream­ed message from his bed in a hospital isolation ward: Do not be afraid, be faithful and praise God.

Patriarch Irinej, 90, the top leader of the Serbian Orthodox Church, who died within a month of testing positive for the coronaviru­s. Irinej and the church’s No. 2 leader, Bishop Amfilohije -- who also died after COVID-19 complicati­ons -- both downplayed the dangers of the pandemic and avoided wearing masks in public.

Harry R. Jackson Jr., 67, bishop of an independen­t charismati­c megachurch in Maryland and one of several conservati­ve Black church leaders who became close allies of President Donald Trump. Jackson was an outspoken opponent of abortion and same-sex marriage.

Edward Kmiec, 84, who between 1992 and 2012 served as the Roman Catholic bishop of Nashville, Tennessee, and Buffalo, New York. While leading the Buffalo diocese, he reduced the number of parishes from 265 to 169 and closed 25 Catholic elementary schools.

Sister Ellen Lorenz, 85, was a member of the School Sisters of Notre Dame with a distinguis­hed career in Catholic education. She began as a high school teacher, later joined the faculty of Mount Mary University, and served as its president from 1979 until 1987. She was among nine nuns at a Milwaukee- area retirement home who died of COVID-19 complicati­ons in December; dozens of other U.S. nuns died of the coronaviru­s earlier in the year.

 ?? SCHOOL SISTERS OF NOTRE DAME CENTRAL PACIFIC PROVINCE ?? This combinatio­n of photos provided by the School Sisters of Notre Dame Central Pacific Province shows Sisters, top row from left, Cynthia Borman, Rose M Feess, and Joan Emily Kaul; middle row from left, Mary Lillia Langreck, Michael Marie Laux, and Ellen Lorenz; and bottom row from left, Dorothy MacIntyre, Mary Alexius Portz, and Mary Elva Wiesner in Elm Grove, Wis. All nine died from COVIDrelat­ed complicati­ons in December 2020.
SCHOOL SISTERS OF NOTRE DAME CENTRAL PACIFIC PROVINCE This combinatio­n of photos provided by the School Sisters of Notre Dame Central Pacific Province shows Sisters, top row from left, Cynthia Borman, Rose M Feess, and Joan Emily Kaul; middle row from left, Mary Lillia Langreck, Michael Marie Laux, and Ellen Lorenz; and bottom row from left, Dorothy MacIntyre, Mary Alexius Portz, and Mary Elva Wiesner in Elm Grove, Wis. All nine died from COVIDrelat­ed complicati­ons in December 2020.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States