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By Chris Lovett
Special to the Reporter
Editor's note: The Archdiocese of Boston is
finalizing plans this month to restructure our
neighborhood's remaining Catholic grammar schools,
a process known as the 2010
Initiative. Cardinal Sean O'Malley is
expected to announce details of the plan, which is
likely to include school closings, by the end of
this month. In this context, this article looks
back at the roots of Catholic education in
Dorchester.
Marie St. Fleur was 6 years old when her family
left Haiti for the United States. After being
excluded from a Catholic School in New Jersey, she
would become one of the first black students at St.
Patrick's School in Roxbury, and only the second at
Monsignor Ryan Memorial High School.
"The reason we came to Boston was Catholic
schools," she said.
The future state Rep. for Dorchester was a
pioneer, but she was also following in the
footsteps of her parents, who had gone to Haiti's
Catholic schools. Catholic immigrants from Haiti,
Vietnam, and Cape Verde have made Dorchester's
Catholic schools and parishes more diverse. But the
attraction of Catholic schools for immigrants is
hardly new.
In World War II Boston, Catholic schools were
part of a flourishing institution. The prolific
fund-raising powers of Cardinal Richard Cushing
pushed unprecedented school expansion. Religious
nuns who took vows of poverty taught classrooms
that might seat more than 50 children.
Even when students chose an elite public school
or went to high school outside their parish, they
could keep a connection to the Catholic Youth
Organization (CYO). Under supervision of clergy and
adult volunteers, teens could perform in marching
bands, play for sports teams, or stage a production
with their CYO.
In the decades before WW II, Catholic schools
around Boston expanded with the population. But,
according to historian James W. Sanders, the rate
of expansion in Boston lagged behind that of other
Catholic communities around the country. Among
other factors, Boston's overwhelmingly
Irish-American Catholics - unlike large French,
Polish, or German Catholic concentrations -didn't
need a separate school system for teaching children
their parents' native language.
Additionally, by 1915, Irish-American political
control in Boston had spread to the public school
system. Public school teachers and administrators
were required to be non-denominational, according
to Sanders, but they were strongly influenced by
their own Catholic educations.
"Because Catholics were in almost total control
of the Boston public schools by the 1920s, many
Catholics probably saw little difference between
them and the parochial schools," wrote Sanders.
"The two systems seemed to be converging."
During the early 20th century, Sanders noted,
the idea that all students should finish high
school was a novelty. But post WW II, the GI Bill
made higher education more common. It was during
these decades that the Archdiocese saw dramatic
growth in the number of trans-parish Catholic high
schools. Instead of just being a part of parish
life, Catholic schools could give students an edge
getting into college.
In these same years, Sanders believes the paths
of public and Catholic schools began to diverge. In
public schools, the changing student population led
to a growing disconnect with teachers and
administrators in some schools, and a growing
recognition of racial inequality. Attempts to
remedy this through desegregation, for better or
for worse, only increased the upheaval in the
public system, compared to the relative stability
of the Catholic schools.
When state Rep.
Martin Walsh attended St. Margaret's School on
Columbia Road in the early 1970's, he noticed the
students coming from the William E. Russell School
- just down the street - usually came home without
books.
"If I didn't come home with a book," said Walsh,
"there was something wrong."
Walsh's parents were from Ireland, where,
Catholic education was "very strict." Any lapse in
his Dorchester classroom would be reported to his
parents. Skipping homework was not an option.
"I think there was a lot more emphasis on
education," he said.
St. Fleur remembers her Catholic school teachers
as "engaged," with "authority over students to make
sure they did what was necessary."
"I think the authority of the teacher is very
important," said St. Fleur. "If you're in a
classroom that's being run by children, there's no
learning going on."
When Alexis de Tocqueville wrote about his
travels around early America, he described
Catholicism as preparing parishioners more for
obedience than inequality&emdash;and the Protestant
approach more toward independence than equality.
But there was also a difference from European
Catholicism, often a state religion. Catholic
clergy in America saw themselves as leaders of a
vulnerable minority, so they were more disposed to
carry the idea of equality of conditions into the
realm of politics.
More than a century and a half later, Dorchester
legislators still see the potential of Catholic
values to further equality, now by breaking down
racial barriers.
"One of the beautiful things about Catholicism,"
said St. Fleur, "is that it's universal."
Walsh sees the effect of those values on little
leaguers he coaches in Savin Hill.
"I have kids from different backgrounds on my
team [that] go to the same (Catholic)
school," he said. "There's a sense of respect."
The dean of the Lynch School of Education at
Boston College, Rev. Joseph O'Keefe, S.J., says
urban Catholic schools can still combine "a sense
of high expectations about academics and behavior"
with values that reinforce the sense of self-worth
among all students. And the message for each
student is, as he put it: "This kid is a child of
God and has potential."
And, by Catholic teaching, self-worth is not
defined strictly by scores on tests or playing
fields.
"It's also a sense of how you want to live your
life," said Rev. O'Keefe, "of community service,
and dedication."
Rev. O'Keefe believes students from
disadvantaged backgrounds can benefit from urban
Catholic schools, provided there are certain
conditions.
"They tend to be smaller. They tend to have a
higher level of family engagement," he said. "For
every kid who goes to a Catholic school, somebody
made the choice for them to go there."
Boston Archdiocese spokesperson Terrence Donilon
said Catholic schools have a very high percentage
of students who complete grade 12, and then go on
to college. By contrast, he referred to charter and
district public schools that lose relatively high
numbers of students before grade 12, as "dropout
factories."
There's also concern
about how advantages of a Catholic education can be
sustained, given the shift of Boston's Catholic
population and assets to the suburbs.
In the 70s, Walsh said his family spent $280 a
year to educate two children in St. Margaret's.
"But, today," he said, "you're talking about
three, four, and five thousand dollars per kid, and
you're talking about a working-class
neighborhood."
Rev. O'Keefe said the struggle for resources
could force urban Catholic schools to leave the
parish model behind. There will have to be more
partnerships with community agencies and even
public schools.
"Bake sales just don't make it any more," he
said.
Urban Catholic schools will also have to be more
responsive to neighborhood violence, he said, and
compete with public schools that can demonstrate
their advantages through test scores.
But St. Fleur said she's concerned that
consolidation might leave some students in
Dorchester behind.
"These kids are looking for a place where they
can have what I found," said St. Fleur. "My hope is
that there is a fair assessment of where the
demographic growth is in the Archdiocese."
Walsh acknowledged that as the number of urban
Catholic schools must decrease along with
enrollment, they will have to attract families by
adding new programs, and even take on some of the
features of charter schools. But, he said, a sense
of community would be even more difficult to retain
in Dorchester if school or parish consolidations
turn more Catholics away from the church.
"Dorchester is still a neighborhood-driven part
of Massachusetts, unique to the rest of the
country. And if we lose the churches, we lose our
identity," he said. "If we lose that sense of
community, people are going to go where they can
find that sense of community."
Chris Lovett is the news director of
Neighborhood Network News on Boston's BNN-TV.
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