Roman Catholic Diocese of Buffalo
Latin Catholic ecclesiastical jurisdiction in New York, USA From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Latin Catholic ecclesiastical jurisdiction in New York, USA From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Diocese of Buffalo (Latin: Diœcesis Buffalensis) is a Latin Church diocese of the Catholic Church in Western New York in the United States. It is a suffragan diocese within the metropolitan province of the Archdiocese of New York.
Diocese of Buffalo Diœcesis Buffalensis | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | United States |
Territory | Western New York (Counties of Erie, Niagara, Genesee, Orleans, Chautauqua, Wyoming, Cattaraugus, and Allegany, New York) |
Ecclesiastical province | Archdiocese of New York |
Headquarters | 795 Main Street Buffalo, New York 14203 |
Statistics | |
Area | 16,511 km2 (6,375 sq mi) |
Population - Total - Catholics | (as of 2018) 1,527,681 727,125 (47.6%) |
Parishes | 161 |
Information | |
Denomination | Catholic |
Sui iuris church | Latin Church |
Rite | Roman Rite |
Established | April 23, 1847 |
Cathedral | St. Joseph Cathedral |
Patron saint | St. Joseph[1] |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Francis |
Bishop | Michael William Fisher |
Metropolitan Archbishop | Timothy M. Dolan |
Bishops emeritus | Richard Joseph Malone Edward M. Grosz |
Map | |
Website | |
www |
The Diocese of Buffalo includes eight counties in New York State. It was erected in 1847. The mother church of the diocese is St. Joseph Cathedral in Buffalo.
Since December 2020, Michael Fisher has served is the bishop of Buffalo.[2]
The Diocese of Buffalo covers 6,455 square miles (16,720 km2) .
As of 2018, the diocese has a Catholic population of 725,125.[3] The diocese had 161 parishes, 15 high schools, 52 elementary schools, seven colleges and universities, one seminary and four hospitals.
In 1678, Louis Hennepin, accompanying French explorer René-Robert La Salle, celebrated the first mass in present day Buffalo.[4]
During the British rule of the Province of New York in the 18th century, Catholics were banned from the colony.[5] Richard Coote, the first colonial governor, passed a law at the end of the 17th century that mandated a life sentence to any Catholic priest. The penalty for harboring a Catholic was a £250 fine plus three days in the pillory. In 1763, Catholic bishop Richard Challoner of London stated that:
“...in New York, one may find a Catholic here and there, but they have no opportunity of practicing their religion as no priest visits them, and … there is not much likelihood that Catholic priests will be permitted to enter these provinces."[5]
Anti-Catholic bias in New York abated during the American Revolution when Catholic France provided its support to the American rebels. After the approval of the New York Constitution in 1777, freedom of worship for Catholics was guaranteed. This was soon followed by the same guarantee in the US Constitution.
In 1784, the Vatican erected the Prefecture Apostolic of United States of America, covering the entire new nation. This action was necessary to remove the American church from British jurisdiction.[6] The Vatican in 1789 converted the prefecture into the Diocese of Baltimore. It was the first diocese in the United States, covering the entire country.
In 1808, as the population of the country grew, the Vatican created several new dioceses, including the Diocese of New York.[6] Western New York and the Southern Tier would be part of the Diocese of New York, followed by the Archdiocese of New York, for the next 39 years.
By 1820, many Catholic Alsatians had moved to Western New York. The Diocese of New York had few priests in region; resident Catholics might not see a priest for weeks or months. Some Catholics would travel with their children to Albany or Michigan to have them baptised. Most of the time, they would wait to receive sacraments until a priest showed up in their town.[4]
Bishop John Connolly of New York sent Patrick Kelly on a trip to Buffalo in 1821 to minister to these people. He celebrated one mass in a small building in the city.
Stephen Badin, a missionary from Kentucky, spent six weeks in Buffalo as the guest of Louis Le Couteulx, a French businessman.[7] Badin celebrated public masses at Le Couteulx's home, urging the attendees to form a congregation.[8] Le Couteulx donated a site for construction of a church, cemetery, and rectory. He later donated land for the Deaf Mute Institute, the Infant Asylum, Immaculate Conception Church, and the Buffalo orphan asylum.
After visiting Buffalo in 1829, Bishop John Dubois of New York sent John Mertz to Buffalo to become its first resident priest, assisted by Alexander Pax. Mertz in 1832 constructed the Lamb of God Church, the first Catholic church in the city. Over the next five years, Mertz formed congregations in Lancaster, Williamsville, North Bush, East Eden, and Lockport.[4]
Dubois sent Mertz to Europe to raise funds for the diocese and dispatched John Neumann to Buffalo in 1836 to assist Pax.[9] Based out of Williamsville, Neumann served in the Erie County for four years. He walked many miles over rough roads and through woods carrying his vestments, to minister to parishioners.
Bernard O'Reilly ministered to laborers on the Erie Canal and in constructing the canal locks at Lockport. Thomas McEvoy of Java worked with Catholics in Allegany, Wyoming, Steuben, and Chautauqua counties in the Southern Tier of New York.
In 1837, the English-speaking parishioners at Lamb of God withdrew from the church as it was primarily a German-speaking parish. They formed a separate congregation, renting the second floor of a building in Buffalo where Charles Smith celebrated mass once a month. The congregation later purchased property to build their own church.
In 1847, Pope Pius IX erected the Diocese of Buffalo, taking its territory from the Archdiocese of New York. He appointed John Timon as its first bishop. Timon was fluent in Gaelic, which helped him minister to the Irish community in Buffalo.[10] He appointed O'Reilly as his vicar general his vicar-general. The diocese rented several buildings near construction sites in the region to serve their workers. In 1848, the Sisters of Charity Order opened the first public hospital in Buffalo, Sisters of Charity Hospital.[11]
Timon laid the cornerstone of St. Joseph Cathedral in 1851. During its construction, a storm destroyed several homes in the area. Timon allowed displaced families to set up tents in the shelter of the cathedral's walls for several weeks. The cathedral was usable, but not complete, when it was dedicated in 1855.[12] In 1851, Lucas Caveng, a German Jesuit, founded St. Michael's Church in Buffalo.
The Oblate Fathers in August 1851 founded a seminary and college in Buffalo. The financial Nicholas Devereux established St. Bonaventure College in Allegheny in 1855 as a Franciscan college for men.[13] In 1856, the Vincentian Order founded Our Lady of the Angels Seminary in Lewiston, which later evolved into Niagara University.[14]
In 1861, the Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia established a Home for the Aged. Two years later, the sisters in Buffalo formed a separate congregation, the Sisters of St. Francis Third Order Regular of Buffalo.[15] The Grey Nuns order in 1865 founded The Holy Angels Infirmary Academy for girls in Buffalo; it would eventually become D'Youville University.[16] In 1870, the Jesuit Order founded Canisius College in Buffalo to educate the sons of German immigrants.[17][18]
After Timon's death in 1867, Pope Pius IX named Stephen V. Ryan from the Archdiocese of Philadelphia as the second bishop of Buffalo.[19] That same year, the pope erected the Diocese of Rochester, taking the eastern counties from the Diocese of Buffalo.[20] Ryan unified the Catholic school system in the diocese and established a commission to supervise it.[21] He founded the diocesan newspaper called The Catholic Union.[22] Ryan died in April 1896. Soon after his death, the diocese moved the four Southern Tier counties (Steuben, Schuyler, Chemung, and Tioga) from the Diocese of Buffalo to the Diocese of Rochester.[23] In December 1896, Pope Leo XIII appointed James Edward Quigley as bishop of Buffalo.[24]
In 1899, the Longshoremen's Union, representing 1,500 workers in Buffalo who hauled grain out of grain ships into the grain silos, went on strike against the Lake Carriers Association. The Association paid these men through saloon keepers, who would subtract charges for room, board and drinks from the workers' wages, leaving them very little. When the saloon keepers raised their fees, the workers went on strike. Quigley opened St. Bridget Church as a base for the strikers, gave them strategic support, and acted as a mediator. The strike ended when the carriers agreed to pay their workers directly.[25][26]
In 1902, Quigley embarked on a public campaign against what he termed "socialism" in labor unions in Buffalo. He claimed that Catholic workers felt that some union regulations were unjust and oppressive. Quigley wrote a pastoral letter in German to be read in ethnic German parishes that called on union members to assert their rights regarding union governance. He also spoke at mass meetings. While claiming to support the union movement, Quigley denounced socialism and gave his interpretation of why the Catholic Church opposed it.[25] As a result of his anti-socialism campaign in Buffalo, Quigley gained a national reputation.[27][28] In 1905, Quigley became archbishop of the Archdiocese of Chicago.
The fourth bishop of Buffalo was Charles H. Colton of New York, selected in 1903 by Pope Leo XIII.[29] During his tenure, the diocese had 72 churches, 18 combination school-churches, 30 schools, 12 academies, 13 hospitals and charitable institutions, six convents, and 28 rectories.[30] In 1904, the Sisters of Mercy opened Mercy Hospital to serve residents of the south side of Buffalo.[31]
After Colton died in 1915, Pope Benedict XV named Bishop Dennis Dougherty from the Diocese of Jaro in the Philippines as Colton's successor in Buffalo.[32] At the time of Dougherty's arrival, the diocese was burdened with a $1.6 million debt from the construction of the new cathedral.[33] He dramatically reduced the debt by taxing the diocese's parishes according to their means.[34]: 110 During his tenure, he also established 15 new parishes and supported the World War I effort through liberty bond campaigns and Red Cross drives.[35] In 1918, Dougherty became archbishop of Philadelphia.
Benedict XV in 1919 appointed William Turner as the next bishop of Buffalo.[36] 1922, Turner helped lay the cornerstone of the Basilica of Our Lady of Victory in Lackawanna. Turner was a supporter of the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul, and in 1924 began a Catholic Charities chapter in Buffalo. He established more than 30 new parishes during his administration,[37] including Our Lady of Czestochowa Parish in North Tonawanda.
Turner died in 1937. His successor was Bishop John A. Duffy from the Diocese of Syracuse, appointed by Pope Pius XI that same year.[38] During his tenure, Duffy established the Diocesan Fund for the Faith for those impacted by the Great Depression and erected parishes in rural areas of the diocese. He organized the Catholic Youth Organization, the Bishop's Committee for Christian Home and Family, the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, and Newman Clubs at the local universities.[39] Duffy died in 1944.
Pope Pius XII selected Auxiliary Bishop John O'Hara of the United States Military Ordinariate as the next bishop of Buffalo in 1945.[40] O'Hara expanded Catholic education in the diocese, and eliminated racial segregation in schools and churches. He became archbishop of Philadelphia in 1951. To replace O'Hara, Pius XII in 1952 named Auxiliary Bishop Joseph A. Burke, the first native of the diocese to become its bishop.
During his 10-year-long administration, Burke supported Holy Name Society, missions, the Pre-Cana program, Puerto Rican migrants, and displaced persons. He also continued the expansion and construction of educational institutions, including St. John Vianney Seminary in East Aurora, New York.[41]
After Burke died in 1962, Pope John XXIII in 1963 appointed Bishop James A. McNulty from the Diocese of Paterson as the tenth bishop of Buffalo.[42] He reduced the diocesan debt which stood at $30 million through a three-year Diocesan Development Fund.[43] McNulty oversaw the implementation the Second Vatican Council reforms, including the establishment of a priests' senate. McNulty promoted religious vocations and expanded inner city ministry. He established the Liturgical Commission, the Pastoral Council, a lay steering committee to oversee finances, and the Communications Office. McNulty began the television program The Bishop Visits Your Home.
McNulty died in 1972; Pope Paul VI then appointed Auxiliary Bishop Edward D. Head of New York as the next bishop of Buffalo.[44] Head established the Religious Education Coordinators Council, the Priests' Retirement Board, the Center for Church Vocations, the Western New York Catholic Hospital Health Care Council, the Peace and Justice Commission, the Office of Vicar for Religious and the Permanent Diaconate Program.[45] Head ordained 124 priests and confirmed 50,000 people during his 22 years in Buffalo.[46][47] Head retired in 1995.
Pope John Paul II appointed Auxiliary Bishop Henry J. Mansell of New York as the twelfth bishop of Buffalo in 1995.[48] Mansell established the Catholic Health Care System of Western New York, combining the local Catholic hospitals, nursing homes, and other health care facilities. In 1996, he instituted the diocese's vicariate structure and in 1997 celebrated the diocese's 150th anniversary.[49] He instituted a televised "Daily Mass" celebrated from a chapel at St. Joseph Cathedral.[50] Mansell became archbishop of the Archdiocese of Hartford in 2004.
To replace Mansell in Buffalo, John Paul II appointed Bishop Edward Kmiec from the Diocese of Nashville as the next bishop of Buffalo.[51] In 2007, Kmiec announced that the diocese had a balanced budget, after spending cuts reduced a $2.1 million deficit from the previous year.[52]
In August 2009, the Buffalo News reported the removal of Fred R. Voorhes, as Administrator of St. Teresa's Parish in South Buffalo and the subsequent dismissal of Marc J. Pasquale, as business administrator and director of religious education at St. Teresa's. Parishioners expressed in interviews their discontent with these removals. Pasquale had gone to the Erie County District Attorney's Office prior to his dismissal to raise concerns about questionable financial practices in the diocese.[53]
Kmiec was heavily criticized for downsizing the diocese from 274 parishes and missions in 2005 to 170 in 2011. He also oversaw the closures of 25 elementary schools.[54][55][56] The diocese under Kmiec ordained only 18 priests from 2004 to 2011.[54] He retired in 2012.
In 2012, Pope Benedict XVI appointed Bishop Richard Malone of the Diocese of Portland as bishop of Buffalo.[57] In 2015, he issued a letter condemning the 2015 film Fifty Shades of Grey. In his statement, Malone spoke of:
"...the beauty of the Church's teaching on the gift of sexual intimacy in marriage, the great dignity of women, and the moral reprehensibility of all domestic violence and sexual exploitation."[58]
In September 2019, leaked audio recordings of Malone revealed that he had diverted 40 percent of donations sent to Catholic Charities in the diocese to a foundation known as "The Bishop's Fund for the Faith."[59] The foundation was included in the diocese's budget as a separate corporate entity, which would protect the money from lawsuits and bankruptcy filings.[60]
In October 2019, the Congregation for Bishops in Rome assigned Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio from the Diocese of Brooklyn to lead an apostolic visitation, or investigation, of the Diocese of Buffalo.[60] After the visitation, Pope Francis accepted Malone's resignation as bishop in December 2019.[61][62] 60 Minutes Overtime reported that month that Malone's resignation was linked to documents leaked in 2018 by his executive assistant, Siobhan O'Connor, detailing his concealment of sexual abuse by priests.[63]
With Malone gone, the pope named Bishop Edward B. Scharfenberger from the Diocese of Albany as apostolic administrator to manage the diocese.[64][65] In February 2020, the Diocese of Buffalo filed for bankruptcy as a result of the numerous sexual abuse lawsuits.[66] The diocese in March 2020 announced the closing of Christ the King Seminary in East Aurora.[67] The diocese in April 2020 appointed Mary McCarrick[68][69] as its first chief operating officer (COO).[70]
To replace Malone, Francis in December 2020 named Auxiliary Bishop Michael Fisher from the Archdiocese of Washington as the new bishop of Buffalo.[71][72] As of 2023, Fisher is the current bishop of Buffalo.
In February 1986, Gerald C. Jasinski, a priest of St. Mary's Parish, was charged with first-degree sodomy, first-degree sexual abuse and unlawful dealing with a child.[73] He was accused of sexually assaulting two teenage boys at a cabin in Sheldon.[74] He pleaded guilty to misdemeanor sexual assault in August 1986, receiving five years of probation. The Vatican laicized Jasinski in 1988. In 2019, a man sued the diocese, claiming that Jasinski in 1969 had raped him in the rectory at St. John’s Church in Sinclairville.[75]
Another priest, Benedict P. Barszcz, was arrested in Buffalo in 1999 on a misdemeanor charge of public lewdness. The parents of two teenage girls accused him of masturbating in his car in view of the girls. A visiting priest from Poland, Barszcz was immediately removed from ministry by the Diocese of Buffalo.[76]
In 2011, Bishop Kmiec suspended Art Smith, a priest who taught at St. Mary of the Lake School in Hamburg, from ministry. The school principal had asked the diocese to remove Smith after he posted a love message to an eighth grade boy on Facebook. After his removal, Smith continued to show up around the school for the next several months. The diocese sent him to Philadelphia for treatment. In November 2012, Bishop Malone assigned him as chaplain to a nursing home in Clarence. However, after receiving complaints from two male workers, the administrators of the facility fired him. Smith was sent away again for treatment. In 2017, Malone assigned Smith to a parish in Depew, where an allegation of child sexual abuse soon arose.
Michael F. Whalen Jr in February 2018 accused the priest Norbert F. Orsolits of sexually assaulting him in 1979 or 1980 during a ski trip. When Whalen's parents complained to the diocese, Malone called them and offered paid counseling to the boy.[77] When interviewed by a Buffalo News reporter after Whalen's statement, Orsolits admitted to sexually abusing dozens of boys during his career, but claimed it was consensual. He said that he could not specifically remember Whalen.[78][79][80][81]
In September 2018, a diocesan database showed over 106 clergy with credible accusations of sexually abusing children. This number exceeded the list of 42 clergy that the diocese had released in March 2018.[82] The diocese said that the March list reflected "priests against whom we had substantiated allegations – meaning more than one allegation – and were accused of abusing minors, not adults."[83] A few active clergy on the list were suspended.[84][85][86] In September 2018, Malone named Steven L. Halter, a former FBI investigator, as director of the diocese's newly created Office of Personal Responsibility, tasked with handling sex abuse complaints.[87][88]
In February 2019, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo signed the Child Victims Act. The law created a one-year lookback period in which victims of child sex abuse could file civil lawsuits against abusers that were previously barred by the statute of limitations.[89] In May 2019, the diocese announced that its voluntary compensation program had paid $17.5 million to 106 childhood victims of clergy sexual abuse; the diocese had rejected 135 applicants.[90]
In May 2019, Paul K. Barr sued the diocese, claiming that he had been sexually abused by the priest Michael Freeman, then posted at Sacred Heart Parish in Niagara Falls. Barr said that Freeman, who died in 2010, fondled his genitals one night in the rectory. Barr complained to the youth minister at the church, who did nothing.[91] In June 2019, James Bottlinger publicly accused Freeman of sexually abusing him in Lancaster in 1984. After he was assaulted, Bottinger said that he complained to the auxiliary bishop Donald Trautman, who scolded him for making the accusation. Bottlinger said that he had rejected a $650,000 settlement offer from the diocese and was planning a lawsuit.[92][93] By September 2019, 100 individuals had filed sexual abuse lawsuits against the diocese.[94] That same month, the diocese published an Adult Sexual Misconduct Policy and Procedures and a new Code of Pastoral Conduct for Clergy.[95] After the apostolic visitation in October 2019, Malone retired in December 2019.
In February 2020, the Diocese of Buffalo filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy amid numerous sex abuse lawsuits.[96] In April 2020, Bishop Scharfenberger, the apostolic administrator of the diocese revealed that as part of the bankruptcy agreement, the diocese would halt cash payments and benefits to 23 diocesan priests suspended due to sex abuse allegations.[97][98] One of these 23 priests was Paul Salemi. In 2012, after having consumed alcohol at a dinner with a young man, Salemi suggested that he stay the night with him and engage in oral sex. The man fled the apartment, leaving his shoes behind. The diocese permanently removed Salemi from ministry. Although he moved to Georgia, the diocese continued to pay him until April 2020[99]
Also in April 2020, Cuomo extended the statute of limitations deadline to file sex abuse lawsuits in New York, originally set for August 2020 to January 2021.[100] In response, the diocese filed an adversary motion to freeze the lawsuits, stating that it could not pay future sex abuse settlements if the lawsuits continued.[101][102]
In November 2020, New York Attorney General Letitia James sued the diocese, Malone, and Auxiliary Bishop Edward M. Grosz. She charged the defendants with the misuse of funds to cover up alleged sex abuse by more than 24 priests. The Office of the Attorney General released a 218-page report detailing the results of a two-year investigation into all the parties named in the lawsuit.[103]
In March 2024, the Diocese of Buffalo, which was still in Chapter 11 bankruptcy and facing sex abuse lawsuits, agreed to sell at least 22 properties, including Diocese headquarters, for $9.8 million.[104]
The Diocese of Buffalo includes the following eight counties in Western New York State:[3]
The seminary was founded in 1857 as part of the new St. Bonaventure College in Allegany. In 1974, Christ the King moved to its own 132-acre campus in East Aurora.[111] The seminary closed in 2020.[67]
In 2007, the diocese closed 14 Catholic schools. The closures included:
According to the diocese, in 2007 the average cost of teaching a student in the 14 schools was $4,738 while the schools only received an average tuition per student of $1,525. To assist parishes who had run out of money to support their schools, the diocese had contributed millions of dollars. In 2007, the diocese had a $2.1 million deficit, due in part to the school subsidies.[114][115]
Many of the 14 schools had experienced declines in enrollment. Cheektowaga, which lost five schools in 2007, had suffered a large decline in its Catholic family population. One of its schools, Infant of Prague School, had an enrollment of 1,120 students in 1960. By 2007, the school had only 117 students. In Depew, St. Barnabas School had only 57 students enrolled in 2007.[114][116]
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