Rev. Aedan McGrath, SSC, born William Aedan McGrath, was an Irish Columban missionary priest in China. McGrath was active with the Legion of Mary and became notable for his work in China as a missionary that eventually led to his imprisonment by the People's Republic of China. After leaving China, McGrath continued his work with the Legion of Mary and with missionary activity in the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, and the Philippines.
Early life and priesthood
editMcGrath was born in Drumcondra, Dublin on the 22 January 1906, to William a Barrister and Gertrude McGrath, both from County Down. He entered the Missionary Society of St. Columban (Maynooth Mission to China) and was ordained priest in 1929. In 1930, he was sent as a missionary to Tsigngiany in North China, to work on behalf of the Legion of Mary.[1] He was first stationed at a parish in T'sien Kiang, and his work led to the development of six branches of the legion. McGrath was removed by the Japanese during WWII, but in 1947 was commissioned to develop the lay apostolate through the Legion. His work was opposed by the communists who were at that time consolidating political control of the country. Over the following years, McGrath set up branches in Shanghai, Beijing, Tiensin, Canton, Kweiling, and Hongkong. He was working in Chunking when the Communists took control of that city and McGrath was prohibited from further action, although he then returned to Shanghai and continued his mission.[2]
Imprisonment
editFollowing the Communist establishment of the People's Republic of China, in 1949, the Legion of Mary became a proscribed organisation. Its founder, Frank Duff, was declared a "reactionary guardian of the interests of the ruling class."[3] Fr McGrath suffered because of his association and his activities on their behalf. In Shanghai in September 1951, he was imprisoned for two years and eight months by the regime, spending most of that time in solitary confinement and endured torture. Instead of being executed, he was expelled from China in 1954 and returned to Ireland, where he was greeted upon arrival by President Seán T. O'Kelly, Taoiseach Éamon de Valera, John A. Costello amongst others.[4]
Later life
editFr McGrath did not return China after his expulsion for fear of endangering his friends. He worked instead promoting the Legion of Mary in England for ten years, and then worked for 12 years in the US and Canada. In 1979, Fr McGrath was asked by the Columbans and Legion to start a mission based in Manila.[5]
Father Aedan McGrath returned to Ireland in 2000, and he made a TV show which aired in November and attended his last Legion of Mary council meeting in December.[6] He died on Christmas Day 2000, one month short of his 95th birthday,[7] and is buried in the Columban Dalgan Cemetery. In his obituary the Irish Times called him "one of the luminaries of the missionary Columban Fathers."[7]
Publications
edit- Father W. Aedan McGrath. Theresa Marie Moreau (ed.). Perseverance Through Faith: A Priest's Prison Story.
- Father W. Aedan McGrath, Fr. Eamonn McCarthy and Michael Walsh. From Navan to China: The Story of a "Chinese Irishman".
References
edit- ^ Fr Aedan McGrath - Biography[permanent dead link] Legion of Mary
- ^ Columban Father, Missionary To China, Will Speak Here, Great Bend Tribune (Great Bend, Kansas) April 1, 1966, page 15, accessed May 31, 2017 at https://www.newspapers.com/clip/11383547/
- ^ Mariani, Paul P (2011). Church Militant, Bishop Kung and Catholic Resistance in Communist China. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674061538.
- ^ From Navan to China the Story of a Chinese Irishman by Fr Aedan McGrath, compiled and edited by Fr Eamonn McCarthy and Michael Walsh.
- ^ Fr Aedan McGrath (1906-2000) www.ewtn.com
- ^ "Father Aedan McGrath -". thelegionofmaryri.com. 7 September 2019. Retrieved 15 December 2021.
- ^ a b Legion of Mary Missionary Dies Obituaries, Irish Times, December 27, 2000.