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  #1  
Old 05-10-2003, 10:11 PM
Senusret I Senusret I is offline
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Unhappy 100 Year Old Brother Has Died

Brothers,

Just wanted to post a note that our Brother, Joseph T. Durkin, S.J., will be celebrating his 100th Birthday next weekend. Fr. Durkin is a Jesuit Priest, an author, and pioneer of the American Studies Program at Georgetown.

Fr. Durking was made an Honorary Brother on the Spring 1982 Line of the Elite Mu Alpha Chapter, Georgetown University. He is also the Line Dedication (pledge class namesake) of the Spring 2000 line.

Information about the celebration of his birthday follows.

**************

Dear Georgetown alumni, family, and friends,

Brian O. McDermott, S.J., and the Jesuit Community of Georgetown invite you to celebrate the 100th Birthday of Joseph T. Durkin, S.J., on Sunday, May 18, 2003. Mass will start at 5:00 pm in Dahlgren Chapel and be followed by a reception.

Please RSVP to 202-687-4000 or ccd4@georgetown.edu by May 13.

Sincerely,
Georgetown University Alumni Association

Last edited by Senusret I; 06-02-2003 at 05:50 PM.
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  #2  
Old 05-22-2003, 07:45 AM
Senusret I Senusret I is offline
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since everyone was so interested....

Friday, May 16, 2003
Fr. Durkin To Celebrate 100th Birthday, Reflects on 29 Years of Teaching at GU
New Chapel in SW Quad Jesuit Residence To Be Named After Jesuit

By Erin Brown
Hoya Staff Writer




The Rev. Joseph Durkin, S.J., sat in a tired armchair, eyes sparkling and hands speaking along with his slow voice. The contrast glared between his experienced and weathered face and the youthful excitement in his voice. With his clapping hands and enthusiasm, it is hard to believe that Fr. Durkin will be celebrating his 100th birthday Saturday, May 17.

The Rev. Brian McDermott, S.J., Rector of the Georgetown University Jesuit Community, described Durkin’s role in the Society of Jesus as answering a call from above.

“It has oriented and organized his life,” McDermott said.

A Philadelphia native, Durkin entered the Society of Jesus at age 17 and was ordained in 1933. While in seminary, he received an undergraduate degree in theology from Woodstock College in Maryland and in 1942 he earned a Ph.D. in history from Fordham University.

In 1945, Durkin became eligible for placement by the Society of Jesus. According to McDermott, Durkin initially wanted to work for the chaplain corps in World War II. To the young priest’s disappointment, the then-provincial superior told Durkin that he would go to teach at Georgetown University.

To say the least, since 1945, Durkin has been a strong presence in both the teaching and spiritual communities at Georgetown University.

One of the first professors in the American Studies program, Durkin taught courses in American Constitutional History and American History, among others.

Reflecting on his teaching years, which lasted until 1974, Durkin noted his favorite era as the early 1950s.

“Classes were filled with veterans of World War II,” he said. The students weren’t boys then, he recalled. “They were mature men and wonderful scholars. Some of them were already married.”

As a teacher, Durkin has been remembered as a vivid and enthusiastic inspiration.

To reiterate issues in American history, Durkin would dramatize scenes or act out historic events. To emphasize important points, he would stand on chairs, jump on desks and pound the table.

“I believe that, if you’re teaching about a great person, for example John Marshall, you have to be something of an actor. I’d pretend I was John Marshall,” Durkin said.

“I must have been born something of an actor,” Durkin joked with a smile.

Outside of academics, Durkin has played many roles on campus, including the fulfillment of his original dream to be an army chaplain with Georgetown ROTC. In 2001, was honored at the Pentagon as an Honorary Chaplain Colonel.

As a religious leader, Durkin has regularly held mass at Dahlgren Chapel and, until just three years ago, attended Five-Day Ignatian Retreats in Warnersville, Penn.

Durkin has also served as an inspiration to countless students over the years, including mentoring and advising students until 1994. McDermott listed four students that Durkin has called his “brightest” — Maria Shriver (CAS ’77), a news anchor for NBC; Ted Leoncis, the Vice Chairman for America Online, Inc. (CAS ’77); former University President Leo J. O’Donovan, S.J. (CAS ’56); and Dorothy Brown (GRD ’62), former University Provost and history professor emeritus.

Recently meeting with Shriver after her commencement speech Monday, Durkin reminded the American Studies major of the exact title of her senior thesis and the topic of a term paper that even she barely remembered. University President John J. DeGioia and McDermott watched as, from his wheelchair, Durkin told Shriver how proud he was of her.

Even now, despite the fact that he cannot always hold his balance and is often fatigued, Durkin continues to follow the ideals of the Jesuit code. He goes to an Alzheimer’s home once a week as well as weekly trips to a local prison. Durkin is also working on two books, one on rhetoric and the other on Jesuit dance. These two will add to his current list of 25 publications.

McDermott emphasized that, through all of the years, Durkin’s life always goes back to his role as a Jesuit. People often ask Durkin why he became a Jesuit, and McDermott offered Durkin’s oft-repeated answer: “My answer is simple. I fell passionately in love with Jesus Christ and I stayed in love with him.”

The Jesuit Community of Georgetown has invited the university community to celebrate the 100th Birthday of Durkin on Sunday with a Mass at 5 p.m. in Dahlgren Chapel and a reception afterwards.

The new chapel in the Jesuit Residence of the Southwest Quad will be named in honor of Fr. Durkin, and funds are collected to supplement the current costs. Dianne Wicklein, Director of Development, Faith, Ethics and Service at the Office of Alumni and University Relations, said, “Fr. Durkin would like people to donate to the fund because people already want to give to him for his birthday.”

Questions and donations are handled through the Office of Alumni and University Relations. For further information on the Fr. Durkin Chapel Fund, interested parties should contact Suzanne McGowan at (202) 687-3051.
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  #3  
Old 06-02-2003, 05:50 PM
Senusret I Senusret I is offline
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Update

Fr. Durkin died in his sleep on May 31. I will post more information as it becomes available.
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  #4  
Old 06-02-2003, 06:07 PM
Eclipse Eclipse is offline
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My sympathies to you and your fraternity, dardenr. How wonderful that he was able to get his flowers while he was still alive at his 100th birthday celebration!!! I hope everything went well with the party and it was a joy to him.
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  #5  
Old 06-02-2003, 06:35 PM
Senusret I Senusret I is offline
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Thank you for your kind words, Eclipse. Here is the notice we got:

Rev. Joseph T. Durkin, S.J., professor emeritus of history at
Georgetown, died on Saturday, May 31, 2003. Fr. Durkin, who had recently celebrated his 100th birthday, was born in Philadelphia, PA, on May 17, 1903. At the age of seventeen, he entered the Society of Jesus; he was ordained a priest in 1933. Soon after completing his Ph. D. in history at Fordham University, Fr. Durkin came to Georgetown where he remained a beloved professor from 1944-1972. He was instrumental in establishing the program in American Studies. After his retirement, he continued giving tutorials and advising students until 1994.

The author of over 25 books, Fr. Durkin was working on two more books at the time of his death. In recent years his pastoral ministry included serving as honorary chaplain of Georgetown’s Army ROTC unit, visiting Alzheimer’s patients in nursing homes, and saying Mass for and hearing confessions of prisoners in detention facilities. Fr. Durkin was an institution at Georgetown, delighting in visits from former students and in attending University functions. His gracious presence and his dedication to scholarship and to his faith have been an inspiration to those he touched throughout the years.

Fr. Durkin’s wake will be in Dahlgren Chapel at Georgetown University on Thursday, June 5, from 2:00-7:00 p.m. followed by the Mass of Christian Burial at Holy Trinity Church at 7:30 p.m. The burial service will begin on Friday at 9:00 a.m. in Dahlgren Chapel with interment in the Jesuit Cemetery at Georgetown.

Please contact Charlotte Daniel, Assistant to the Rector, Jesuit
Community at Georgetown University, with any questions at (202)687-4000.
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  #6  
Old 06-02-2003, 06:37 PM
CrimsonTide4 CrimsonTide4 is offline
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What a blessing to be able to live to celebrate his 100th birthday.
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  #7  
Old 06-04-2003, 10:20 PM
~Q5~ ~Q5~ is offline
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Unhappy

Wow i had to come and see it for myself...


so anything yet at the nat'l level?
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  #8  
Old 06-04-2003, 10:58 PM
Senusret I Senusret I is offline
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crimsontide, i agree, that is a blessing, especially with a life as full as his was.

Q5, i have not heard of anything on the national level, but at the same time, i'm not on APO-L anymore.
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  #9  
Old 06-05-2003, 03:42 AM
Hyper2 Hyper2 is offline
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I'm sorry to hear the news of your dear brother. I'm happy that he was apart of the few that lived to see the old and new of the fraternity and moments of time. I hope that his celebration was one to remember!
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  #10  
Old 06-05-2003, 09:17 AM
~Q5~ ~Q5~ is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by dardenr

Q5, i have not heard of anything on the national level, but at the same time, i'm not on APO-L anymore.
i would hope they would have something to present to family or something ....

he had an awesome life 100 yrs. to many of us will never be that lucky by nature or force
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  #11  
Old 06-05-2003, 02:57 PM
Quala67 Quala67 is offline
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Just so you know, a notice was posted on APO-L and also on the Region III listserv.

Condolences to Mu Alpha on their loss.
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