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Faith was integral to Bobby Kennedy's life and politics
Sen. Robert Kennedy shakes the hand of a Catholic nun as he is surrounded by elementary students in a visit to an anti-poverty program in Greenville, Miss., in April 1967. (AP Photo)
Larry Tye | Aug. 17, 2016
The following are excerpts from the Random House biography Bobby Kennedy: The Making of a Liberal Icon by former Boston Globe reporter Larry Tye. The book explores Kennedy's dramatic transformation from the Cold Warrior he was at the start of his career to the hot-blooded liberal he'd become by the end when, on the eve of his greatest political victory in the 1968 California Democratic presidential primary, he was felled by an assassin.
One arena in which Bobby Kennedy had always shown his softer side was his faith. All the Kennedys called themselves Catholic, but Bobby practiced his religion in ways that endeared him to his mother and distinguished him from his brother Jack. During his three years at Portsmouth Priory School in Rhode Island, he went to church the required four times a week plus the three optional services. Ritual played an even bigger part of life in his and Ethel's home than it had in Rose and Joe's. The young couple outfitted each of the 13 bedrooms with a Bible, holy water, and a crucifix or statute of St. Mary. There were prayers every morning, before and after each meal, and at bedtime when the children assembled to recite as one "Now I lay me down to sleep." Benediction was offered for the family, too, and as the list of deceased relatives grew, the children named each one and asked God to vault them straight to heaven. Also named were the saints they prayed to -- Anthony to end poverty and find a parking place, Francis for the growing menagerie, and Christopher when they took off in a plane. Bobby's St. Christopher medal never left his neck, which made sense given his nonstop traveling.
Most observers assumed Ethel was the keeper of the flame of faith, and that she was more wed to liturgy than Bobby. But the reassurance he found in his religion was apparent when, as a young man, he stepped over the railing and volunteered as an altar boy at St. Francis Xavier Church in Hyannis, Mass., to the delight of his mother, who attended early Mass every morning. He did the same thing in random cities across America during his many investigations and campaigns. "The priests couldn't believe the delicacy with which he did it," recalls advance man James Tolan. "They told me they never saw an individual serve Mass in that way other than a seminarian."
His Catholicism was integral to his politics, too. It reinforced the sense of public service drilled into the children by Rose and Joe. It was consistent with his commitment to the sanctity of the family -- and to big ones like he was born into and that he and Ethel would more than replicate. Bobby shared the church's conscientious division of the world into good and evil, along with its judgment that communists are godless and the poor blessed. His life centered on three totems in those years of early adulthood: the Democratic Party, the Kennedy family, and God.
https://www.ncronline.org/books/2016/08/faith-was-integral-bobby-kennedys-life-and-politics
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Faith was integral to Bobby Kennedy's life and politics (Original Post)
rug
Aug 2016
OP
rustbeltvoice
(448 posts)1. The event in my lifetime
which changed American history the most was the bullet that killed Robert Kennedy. President Robert Kennedy would have done things that would have made a better America, a better world. Think of all the careers that would not have damaged America: no Nixon presidency, no Nixon to advance George Bush out of obscurity; no GHWB, then no idiot son; Reagan would only have been a failed political curiosity....
rug
(82,333 posts)2. If he lived to get the nomination and win the election we would be living in a different world.
Different problems no doubt, but a better world.