Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Cardinal helped improve ties with other denominati­ons

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CATONSVILL­E, Md. — Cardinal William Keeler, who helped ease tensions between Catholics and Jews and headed the oldest Roman Catholic diocese in the United States for 18 years, died Thursday. He was 86.

Archbishop William Lori said in a statement that Keeler died at St. Martin’s Home for the Aged in Catonsvill­e. No cause of death was released. Funeral arrangemen­ts have not been finalized.

Keeler retired in 2007 as the head of the archdioces­e of Baltimore.

He devoted much of his clerical life to improving ties with other denominati­ons, especially Jews. From 1992 to 1995, he was president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops. He also served as moderator for Catholic/ Jewish Relations and was a member of the Committee on Ecumenical and Interyear. religious Affairs.

In a 1993 interview with The Associated Press, Keeler said he developed his strong ecumenical focus while attending summer camp as a boy with Protestant­s and Jews. The experience, Keeler said, offered him, “many opportunit­ies to work with people from other churches and to engage in a kind of informal dialogue with them, to see their goodness and their interest in things that were good.”

Keeler was a priest for 37 years and served as an expert adviser to Pope John XXIII at the reforming Second Vatican Council of 1962-65.

He took over the Baltimore Archdioces­e in 1989 after serving as bishop of Harrisburg, Pa. He was elevated to cardinal on Nov. 26, 1994.

Keeler’s mother was a schoolteac­her and the daughter of an Illinois farmer. She married Thomas Love Keeler, a steel-casting salesman, in 1930 and the couple had five children.

Her son, William, was born in San Antonio and grew up in Lebanon, Pa. He attended St. Charles Seminary at Overbrook in Philadelph­ia, where he received a bachelor’s degree in 1952. He received a degree in sacred theology from Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome in 1956 and a doctorate in canon law in 1961. He was ordained on July 17, 1955.

Several times during his career, Keeler worked as a liaison to Jewish leaders. In 1987, he helped arrange meetings between the pope and American Jewish leaders, who felt stung by John Paul II’s earlier reception at the Vatican of former Austrian President Kurt Waldheim, alleged to have past Nazi links.

Perhaps the high point of Keeler’s career was Oct. 8, 1995, when Pope John Paul II visited Baltimore. The pope led a Mass for 50,000 people at the Baltimore Orioles’ stadium.

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