Patrick Flores
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Styles of Patrick Flores |
|
Reference style | The Most Reverend |
Spoken style | His Excellency |
Religious style | Monsignor |
Posthumous style | not applicable |
Patrick Fernández Flores (July 26, 1929), is a Roman Catholic cleric and was Archbishop of San Antonio from 1979 until 2004. Flores was the first Mexican American to become a bishop of the Roman Catholic Church.
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[edit] Early life
in 1929, Flores born to Patrico and Trinidad Fernandez de Flores, Mexican immigrants and migrant workers, in Ganado, Texas. In the tenth grade he considered dropping out of school after his father had become ill, but was persuaded to stay after a bishop agreed to finance his education. He worked as a janitor at a local cantina and decided to make the world a cleaner and more habitable place by becoming a priest.
He graduated from Catholic Kirwin High School (now O'Connell Consolidated High School) in Galveston, Texas. He studied at St. Mary's Seminary in La Porte, Texas and at St. Mary's Seminary in Houston. He received his divinity degree and was ordained a priest on 26 May 1956 by bishop Wendellin Nold in Galveston. He then served as a parish priest in the Diocese of Galveston-Houston.
In the early 1960s, he directed the Christian Family Movement in the Galveston-Houston diocese and the Bishop's Committee for the Spanish Speaking, a ministry that encouraged bilingual congregations. Later, in October 1969, Flores joined forty-seven other Hispanic priests to establish PADRES Padres Asociados para Derechos Religiosos, Educativos, y Sociales (Spanish for "Priests Associated for Religious, Education, and Social Rights"), an organization meant to draw attention to the problems of Hispanics in the church and society.
[edit] As bishop and archbishop
On 5 May 1970 he was ordained a bishop with Luigi Cardinal Raimondi as the principle consecrator. He was appointed as auxiliary to the archbishop of San Antonio. Also in May of 1970, Flores was appointed chairman of the Texas State Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, and that July he became national chaplain for the League of United Latin American Citizens. In 1972, he was co-founder and honorary chairman of the Mexican-American Cultural Center in San Antonio.
In 1978 he was appointed bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of El Paso and then in 1979 the Archbishop the of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Antonio, which was, at the time, the largest ecclesiastical province in the United States.
In 1980, Flores became a member of the Hispanic Caucus Committee, and in 1981, he founded Catholic Television of San Antonio, the first diocesan television station in the United States. In 1997, when Billy Graham headlined a religious crusade at the Alamodome, Flores taped radio spots in English and Spanish to promote the event. Graham later credited Flores for the large response from the area's largely Catholic Hispanic community.
His motto is Laborabo non mihi sed omnibus, "I work not for myself but for others".[1]
[edit] June 2000 hostage situation
On 27 June 2000, Nelson Antonio Escolero, a native of El Salvador and a legal U.S. resident, held Flores hostage for over nine hours in his office in the Catholic Chancery. Escolero had been arrested for driving with a suspended license and feared that he would be deported. Armed with a fake grenade, he also held the archbishop's secretary Myrtle Sanchez for the first two hours of the stand-off. Police hostage negotiators had been in contact with Escolero throughout the day, but were taken by surprise when he released Flores and surrendered in the evening.[2]
Throughout the crisis, which was extensively covered on live television city residents of many faiths prayed and hoped for a man held in high esteem throughout the community.
After reaching the mandatory retirement age of 75, Flores retired from his position on 29 December 2004 and became Archbishop emeritus.
[edit] Film
On October 6, 2007, A Migrant's Masterpiece an hour long documentary depicting Flores' life premiered in San Antonio. Directed by Hector Galan, it seeks to place the archbishop's life in the context of "the history of Latinos in Texas, [and] the Civil Rights Movement in Texas" according to Pat Rogers, communications director for the Archdiocese of San Antonio. The film was funded through private donations to the Archdiocese and uses rare archival film and interviews with the Flores' family. It is set to air on American public television in the future.[3]
Preceded by Sidney Matthew Metzger |
Bishop of El Paso 4 April 1978–23 August 1979 |
Succeeded by Raymundo Joseph Peña |
Preceded by Francis James Furey |
Archbishop of San Antonio 23 August 1979–29 December 2004 |
Succeeded by José Horacio Gómez |
[edit] References
- ^ Archbishop Patrick Flores. Retrieved on 2007-10-21.
- ^ Holley, Joe. "Thank God!; Archbishop freed unharmed after 9 hours", Express-News, 2000-06-29. Retrieved on 2007-10-21.
- ^ Knapp, Deborah. "Archbishop Emeritus Patrick Flores' life featured in film", KENS 5 Eyewitness News, 2007-09-28. Retrieved on 2007-10-21.
[edit] Resources
- Special section - San Antonio Express-News
- Bishop Flores at Catholic hierarchy
- Biography at jrank.org
- Biography at Answers.com