Thursday, February 18
Scalia's New York values
The late Supreme Court judge graduated from Xavier.
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NOW ARRIVING
In
the 1950s, Xavier High School was a home for the discipline of God and
man, where military training was a compulsory part of the curriculum,
and students proved their rigor by poring over the Bible and Latin
texts.
Coming
to class with the wrong haircut could result in "jug"punishment, from
the Latin "jugum," or "burden," sometimes thought of as the abbreviation
for Justice Under God.
This Xavier experience greatly influenced Antonin Scalia, a sharp teenager from Queens who graduated in 1953.
The context of his textualism
As
the partisan debate over replacing Supreme Court Justice Scalia shows
no signs of abating, many have turned to the justice's jurist's own
strict textualism to claim that Scalia himself would have had no
patience for the argument that Article 2 of the Constitution no longer
applied to a president in his final year in office.
This
faith in original sources and love of the discipline inherent in fully
investigating them is deeply rooted in Scalia's eight years of Jesuit
education, at Xavier and later at Georgetown University.
Xavier
opened its doors as a college in 1847, and became a high school in the
early 20th century, run by members of the Jesuit order, known for their
scholasticism and military focus.
In
the pre-Vatican II 1950s, when Scalia attended the school, religious
instruction was focused on the catechismmemorizing what the church
teaches as opposed to why. This catechistic teaching was paired with an
"academic analysis" of biblical texts, remembers Philip Lacovara, who
graduated from Xavier after Scalia but met him later in Washington, D.C.
Lacovara had a distinguished career in his own right, as special
counsel to the prosecution during the Watergate trial. He successfully
argued the Supreme Court case that forced Richard Nixon to turn over the
White House tapes.
Jesuit rigor
In
their Xavier education, the focus was on what was being said and what
the author meant: students learned "to be faithful to the text that was
being studied as the operative document."
Scalia
thrived in this academic atmosphere, but years later he would say that
his fondest memories of the school came from the Regiment, the school
military unit which was compulsory for students at the time. Scalia was
the commanding officer of the Regiment's marching band, and a member of
the JV rifle team, requiring him to carry the weapon on the subway with
him from time to time, between school and home in Elmhurst, Queens.
But shifting political currents during the Vietnam era convinced Xavier
to make membership with the JROTC group optional, a decision with which
Scalia deeply and publicly disagreed.
In
a speech at the Xavier Regiment honors ceremony in 2011, Scalia
identified a biblical basis for the benefits of military service: Jesus'
"advice to [the Roman soldiers] was not 'Throw down your arms,' but be
content with your wages," admonitions that fit in the deep military
traditions of the Jesuits.
But
Jesuits from Daniel Berrigan-the counter culture priest--to Pope
Francis have tapped into their customs of questioning and probing to
pushed for peace. The "Plowshares Movement" that Berrigan was a part of
took a different textual approach, adopting the biblical admonition that
swords be beaten into farming tools.
'Faith can grow through doubt'
Xavier
and its alumni have tracked the changing fortunes of Catholics in New
York City, a route that Scalia himself outlined in his 2011 address.
When
the nativist American Protective Association proposed barring Catholics
from office or armed forces command posts in the 1890s, Xavier began
holding military masses to underscore its simultaneous commitment to
service and religionofficers at the front pews, swords unsheathed.
The
Xavier regiment became a mainstay at St. Patrick's Day parades, but
also more traditionally American events, such as the 1932 march honoring
the bicentennial of George Washington's birth. During WWII, 1,500
Xavier men served in the armed forces, that gradual assimilator.
Soon
a Catholic would become president, and the rest is history. Scalia's
ascension to the highest courtas a second-generation Italian-American
kid from Queensunderscored arrival at mainstream acceptance.
Surely
Scalia would hope his successor would approach the world as he did,
through reference to unchanging founding documents, carefully examined
and extrapolated, a technique the justice was already learning at
Xavier.
"Xavier
and Jesuit education writ large," says the school's current president,
Jack Raslowsky, "has always prided itself on teaching kids how to think,
not what to think."
"Faith can grow through doubt." Republicans in Congress, take note.
Republicans in Congress, take note.
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