The Kingdom Began in Puerto Rico

Dr. Michael Lee talks to community organizer Angel García about his recent book on the priesthood of Fr. Neil Connolly in the South Bronx, 1958-1980s

Church on the streets: Father Neil Connolly with Seneca Chapel youth procession in the late 1960s/early 1970s, Hunts Point, Bronx, NY. Photo: Mili Bonilla

 
 

The late Msgr. Neil A. Connolly served as a parish priest for close to 60 years. After his ordination at age 24, he spent eight weeks in Ponce, Puerto Rico, taking part in a pioneering New York Archdiocesan language-immersion program in Spanish. The young Irish-American priest quickly adapted to an environment that was predominantly Latino. His priesthood would be defined by the South Bronx and Puerto Rican migration as he learned to both serve and be part of a community that struggled for a decent life. Passionate about issues of social justice, Fr. Connolly was a champion for lay leadership and community organization. While vicar for the South Bronx in the 1970s, he co-founded and was chairman of South Bronx People for Change, a Church-based, direct-action membership organization. Community organizer Angel García has served as its Executive Director.

 In this episode of OP Talks, Dr. Michael E. Lee, Director of Fordham University's Francis & Ann Curran Center for American Catholic Studies, talks to García about his recent book The Kingdom Began In Puerto Rico: Neil Connolly’s Priesthood in the South Bronx (Fordham University Press, 2021). In this history of faith and community building, García chronicles the work of Rev. Connolly from 1958 to the 1980s.

Reflecting on Fr. Connolly’s ministry in the Bronx, García says, “When one thinks about it…you’ve been an altar boy, you’ve gone to these traditional churches [and] seminary preparation. And then you come here, and you’re looking for the church, and they say, ‘It’s right here. It’s a bodega. This is where the church is.’ And Fr. Connolly essentially surrendered himself to that.”

 

GALLERY


RESOURCE

Organize! : A Manual for Leaders (Paulist Press, 1990) by Rev. Dean Brackley and South Bronx People for Change, where he worked for nearly a decade before leaving to serve in war-torn El Salvador.


 
 

The Puerto Rican migration after the Second World War challenged the Catholic Church of New York. Through the efforts of priests like Fr. Neil Connolly, they and the other Latinos who followed became the heart of that Church in the South Bronx. Campaigns for human dignity and social justice played a large part in that process. Angel Garcia captures the spirit of the era, and the spirit of the man.

James Martin, SJ
Author, Jesus: A Pilgrimage and My Life with the Saints

 

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