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''
His Eminence'' 'Edmund Casimir
Cardinal Szoka' (born
September 14,
1927) is an
American prelate of the
Roman Catholic Church. He is currently
President Emeritus of the Pontifical Commission for Vatican City State and
President Emeritus of the Governatorate of Vatican City State, having previously served as
Bishop of Gaylord from
1971 to
1981 and
Archbishop of Detroit from 1981 to
1990. Szoka was elevated to the
cardinalate in
1988.
Biography
Edmund Casimir Szoka was born in
Grand Rapids, Michigan, to Casimir and Mary (née Wolgat) Szoka,
Polish immigrants. He has an older sister, Irene, and moved with his family in the early
1930s to
Muskegon, where he did his
primary studies at St. Michael School. Attracted to life as a
priest at an early age, Szoka attended several
seminaries in Grand Rapids, Sacred Heart Major Seminary in
Detroit for his junior and senior years, and then St. Joseph's Seminary in
Plymouth to study
theology.
On
June 5,
1954, he was
ordained to the
priesthood by
Bishop Thomas Noa in
St. Peter Cathedral. He did
pastoral work in
Manistique but soon thereafter became
secretary to Bishop Noa of Marquette, whom he accompanied to the first session of the
Second Vatican Council in
1962. During this period he also served as
chaplain at St. Mary’s Hospital and
K. I. Sawyer Air Force Base.
From
1957 to
1959, he studied
canon law at the
Pontifical Urbaniana University or the
Pontifical Lateran University in
Rome. Upon returning to the
United States, Szoka did pastoral and
curial work, including serving as an official of the matrimonial tribunal, in Marquette until
1971. He was raised to the rank of
Honorary Prelate of His Holiness on
November 14, 1963.
Szoka was appointed the first
Bishop of Gaylord on
June 11, 1971. He received his
episcopal consecration on the following
July 20 from
John Cardinal Dearden, with Bishops
Charles Salatka and Joseph McKinney serving as
co-consecrators. A year later, the Bishops of the 4th pastoral region of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops (NCCB) elected him president for the period of 1972-77. At the same time, he was treasurer and secretary of the
Episcopal Conference of Michigan. As Bishop of Gaylord, Szoka improved the annulment consideration process, drawing from his experience in the matrimonial tribunal in Marquette.
Archbishop of Detroit
On
March 21,
1981, he was promoted to the third
Metropolitan Archbishop of Detroit (eighth bishop) by
Pope John Paul II. Since 1981, he also served as president of the Administration Council of the provincial seminary of St. John in
Plymouth, Michigan and
SS. Cyril and Methodius Seminary near
Orchard Lake Village, Michigan. He was also a president of the board of directors of the Episcopal Conference of Michigan, member of the executive committee of the
Catholic University, president of the Committee for University Relations, Administrator of the National Sanctuary of the
Immaculate Conception, treasurer of the NCCB, and served on committees within the Conference for: human values, bishops, dioceses and provinces, and economic affairs. He faced challenges of finance and enforcing Church discipline, and welcomed John Paul II to Detroit in
1987 during his tenure as Archbishop. He was created
Cardinal Priest of ''
Ss. Andrea e Gregorio al Monte Celio'' by John Paul II in the
consistory of
June 28,
1988.
==Work in the
Roman Curia==
Resigning as Archbishop of Detroit on
April 28,
1990, Szoka was named President of the
Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See on
January 22,
1990 to October 14, 1997. In this position, he helped managed the Vatican's financial affairs
On
October 14,
1997, Cardinal Szoka was named President of the Governatorate of Vatican City State, and on
February 22,
2001, President of the
Pontifical Commission for Vatican City State. Within the
Roman Curia his membership includes:
Secretariat of State (second section), and
Causes of Saints,
Bishops,
Evangelization of Peoples (''Congregatio de Propaganda Fide''),
Clergy,
Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life (congregations). He submitted his resignation to John Paul II in
2002, at the Church's mandatory retirement age of 75, but was requested to continue working. During his rare spare time, Szoka enjoyed walking through the Vatican Gardens
[1].
Szoka was one of the
cardinal electors who participated in the
2005 papal conclave that selected
Pope Benedict XVI. As Governor of the Vatican, it fell to Szoka, along with
Secretary of State Angelo Sodano and
Camerlengo Eduardo Martínez Somalo, to prepare for the cardinal electors' housing at the ''
Domus Sanctae Marthae''.
Retirement
It was announced on
June 22,
2006, that his resignation had been accepted by Pope Benedict and that he would officially step down on
September 15,
2006; he will maintain all
curial memberships until age 80. On what he would do after retirement, Szoka said he was interested in
travel,
writing, studying the
Church Fathers, and continuing to provide priestly assistance to Detroit
[2].