Los Angeles Times

Cardinal William Keeler, longtime archbishop of Baltimore, was 86.

WILLIAM HENRY KEELER, 1931 – 2017

- By Doug Donovan and Jacques Kelly news.obits@latimes.com Donovan and Kelly write for the Baltimore Sun.

Cardinal William Henry Keeler, the longtime leader of the Archdioces­e of Baltimore whose influence in the Catholic Church spanned internatio­nal borders over nearly six decades, has died at 86.

The retired archbishop of Baltimore, who led the region’s nearly 500,000 Catholics from 1989 until 2007, died Thursday while under the care of the Little Sisters of the Poor at St. Martin’s House for the Aged in Arbutus, the archdioces­e announced.

During his years as archbishop, Keeler hosted Pope John Paul II in 1995, voted in the conclave that chose Benedict XVI to succeed him, and raised more than $100 million for programs, schools and scholarshi­ps for low-income city students.

The cardinal was a leading national voice against abortion, and he built an internatio­nal reputation for forging ties with believers of other faiths.

He was also thrust into the national spotlight by the priest sexual abuse scandal when a Baltimore man shot a priest who was later convicted of molesting him as a child.

The cardinal was lauded by many for being the first in the nation to name accused priests, detailing financial settlement­s and publicly apologizin­g for priests’ crimes.

“He has been one of the leading statesmen of the Catholic Church throughout his career,” said Sean Caine, vice chancellor of the archdioces­e. “He will be deeply missed and not forgotten.”

William Henry Keeler was born March 4, 1931, in San Antonio to Thomas and Margaret Keeler. The family moved to Lebanon, Pa., where he attended St. Mary School and Lebanon Catholic High School. He earned a bachelor of arts degree from St. Charles Borromeo Seminary in Wynnewood, Pa., in 1952 and studied at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome and was ordained to the priesthood on July 17, 1955.

He quickly rose through the ranks of the Catholic Church. He earned a doctorate in canon law in 1961 and worked in the Diocese of Harrisburg, Pa. Harrisburg Bishop George Leech invited him to accompany him to the Second Vatican Council, the ecumenical council from 1962 to 1965 that transforme­d the church.

One of his responsibi­lities was to explain every document the council produced to journalist­s. The council is credited with bringing the church into the modern world.

He was consecrate­d an auxiliary bishop of Harrisburg in 1979. He took as his episcopal motto Opus Fac Evangelist­e — Do the Work of an Evangelist. He became the seventh bishop of Harrisburg in 1984.

In 1989, Pope John Paul II appointed him archbishop of Baltimore, the nation’s first diocese.

Keeler was elected president of the organizati­on that became the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops in 1992. He had been elected the organizati­on’s vice president in 1989, while hosting the bicentenni­al celebratio­n of the archdioces­e. He chaired the 1993 World Youth Day in Denver attended by Pope John Paul II.

He was created a cardinal by the pontiff in 1994 and his achievemen­ts helped draw Pope John Paul to Baltimore in 1995.

Keeler developed a reputation for effectivel­y building ecumenical and interfaith bonds, particular­ly with Protestant­s and Jews. He was appointed to the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity in the summer of 1994 and to the Congregati­on for the Oriental Churches in November 1994.

He was instrument­al in arranging Pope John Paul’s meetings with Jewish leaders in Miami and with Protestant leaders in South Carolina, and he participat­ed in drafting the Catholic-Jewish reflection on the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

“He’s as beloved by those of the Jewish faith as he is by those of the Catholic faith,” Caine said. “He was a true champion of that relationsh­ip. It’s an important relationsh­ip, especially here in Baltimore where there is such a big Jewish and Catholic population.”

One of Keeler’s priorities was the strengthen­ing of Catholic schools. His fundraisin­g prowess led to a record-setting $100-million campaign in the early 1990s. He led efforts to raise a $25million scholarshi­p fund to help low-income Baltimore youth attend Catholic schools. Nearly 17,000 scholarshi­ps have been awarded, mostly to non-Catholic students.

Keeler was commended for his transparen­cy when in September 2002 he released the names of 56 priests accused of sexual abuse in Baltimore since the 1930s and disclosed all informatio­n related to the nearly $6 million in settlement­s and other expenses the sexual abuse had cost the archdioces­e.

“He was the first bishop to release the names of every priest who had been credibly accused,” Caine said. “He was a very principled man, a man of courage and strength.”

Earlier that year. Keeler publicly apologized to those who had been sexually abused by priests, and said he regretted his decision in 1993 to return the Rev. Maurice Blackwell to his parish after an abuse allegation.

Father Blackwell was shot in May 2002 by 26-yearold Dontee D. Stokes. Stokes, who was acquitted later that year of attempted murder, said he had been molested by the priest in 1993.

“I take full responsibi­lity for the decision I made in 1993 given the facts and circumstan­ces before me,” Keeler wrote in an opinion piece published in The Baltimore Sun on May 17, 2002. “In light of what has occurred and of what was revealed in 1998, I would not make the same decision today.”

Keeler submitted his letter of resignatio­n to the Vatican in April 2006, a month after he turned 75, in accordance with canon law. Bishops must retire at age 80.

The cardinal and two friends were injured in a car crash about 60 miles outside Rome that October. One priest, a longtime friend of Keeler’s, was killed. Keeler and the priest who was killed were passengers in the car. The cardinal suffered a broken ankle.

Pope Benedict XVI appointed Bishop Edwin F. O’Brien to succeed Keeler in 2007. Cardinal Keeler remained in Baltimore at St. Martin’s House and was serving as president of the Basilica Historic Trust at the time of his death.

 ?? Michele Ricci La Presse ?? STATESMAN Cardinal William Henry Keeler was a leading voice against abortion, and he forged ties with other faiths.
Michele Ricci La Presse STATESMAN Cardinal William Henry Keeler was a leading voice against abortion, and he forged ties with other faiths.

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