[Congressional Record Volume 153, Number 33 (Tuesday, February 27, 2007)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E401-E402]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IN REMEMBRANCE OF REVEREND ROBERT DRINAN
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HON. DENNIS J. KUCINICH
of ohio
in the house of representatives
Tuesday, February 27, 2007
Mr. KUCINICH. Madam Speaker, I rise today in honor of Reverend Robert
Drinan. Father Drinan was a great humanitarian that showed the world
that being a servant of the people was not a conflict of interest when
serving the Lord.
Father Robert Drinan effortlessly assimilated pious servitude with
politics, showing that the purpose of both was oftentimes the same. He
was an active and prominent voice when it came to civil rights, and as
the Dean of Boston College Law School he called for and supported
desegregation. He also challenged the students of Boston College Law
School to be active in the civil rights movement.
Father Drinan was the first Roman Catholic priest to be elected to
Congress. In 1970, Father Drinan ran for Congress on an anti-war
[[Page E402]]
platform after a visit to South Vietnam, where he discovered that the
number of political prisoners was increasing despite claims from the
State Department. He later urged the Catholic Church to condemn war as
``morally objectionable.'' Father Drinan continued to serve faithfully
as he represented the constituents of Massachusetts in the House of
Representatives for ten years.
His attention was not reserved to Vietnam or civil rights. Father
Drinan also was an outspoken advocate for the underprivileged and,
after leaving his Congressional office in 1980, he maintained his
commitment to the poor and the marginalized. He served as the president
for Americans for Democratic Action, and traveled the country giving
speeches on hunger and the dangers of the arms race.
Madam Speaker and colleagues, please join me in honoring the memory
of Reverend Robert Drinan, whose fierce devotion to the most vulnerable
among us serves as a model for all of us who continue to serve those in
need.
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