
Contents
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The Chicago Archdiocese: Ministering to Spanish-Speaking Catholics The Chicago Archdiocese: Ministering to Spanish-Speaking Catholics
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The Bishops’ Committee for the Spanish Speaking The Bishops’ Committee for the Spanish Speaking
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The Cardinal’s Committee for the Spanish Speaking The Cardinal’s Committee for the Spanish Speaking
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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2 Chicago’s Catholic Archdiocese and the Challenges of Serving a Multiethnic Latino Population
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Published:February 2022
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Abstract
In the mid-twentieth century, the Chicago Catholic archdiocese encountered multiple Spanish-speaking constituencies and had to respond to their distinct interests, concerns, and priorities, while seeking to cultivate a deeper loyalty to the church. Though some Latinos gravitated to Protestant sects, and others spurned religion altogether, with the creation of the Cardinal’s Committee for the Spanish Speaking in 1955, the see had the competing tasks of identifying “Spanish-speaking” Catholics as a pan-ethnic religious community while also attending to and respecting their cultural and national idiosyncrasies (such as their unique representations of the Virgin Mary) and their distinct economic needs. This essay follows how the church became an important influence in Latinos’ social and political formation as members of civic society just as it became a vehicle through which to practice their activism and volunteerism. It played a prominent role by responding to the labor movements, civil rights campaigns, and local issues of the day.
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