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Raised by the Church: Growing up New York City's Catholic Orphanages

Current price: $33.00
Raised by the Church: Growing up New York City's Catholic Orphanages
Raised by the Church: Growing up New York City's Catholic Orphanages

Barnes and Noble

Raised by the Church: Growing up New York City's Catholic Orphanages

Current price: $33.00
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Size: Hardcover

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A remarkable piece of American history that tells, through the story of one bright, mischievous orphan, the history of the Catholic orphanage system in New York in the nineteenth and twentieth century.
In 1946
Edward Rohs was left by his unwed parents at the Angel Guardian Home
to be raised by the Sisters of Mercy. The Sisters hoped that the parents would one day return for him. In time they married and had other children, but Ed's parents never came back for him. And they never signed the legal papers so he could be adopted by another family.
Raised by the Church
chronicles the extraordinary life of Ed Rohs, a bright, mischievous boy who was raised in five institutions of the Catholic orphanage system in postwar Brooklyn
, New York, from infancy in 1946 until he was discharged as an adult in 1965.
Rohs was one of thousands of children taken in by Catholic institutions during the tumultuous post-WWII years:
out-of-wedlock infants, children whose fathers had been killed in the war, and children of parents in crisis
. Ed gives a brief history of each institution before describing that world—the Sisters and Brothers who raised him, the food, his companions, and the Catholic community that provided social and emotional support.
When Ed finally leaves the institution after nineteen years he has a difficult time adjusting. He slowly assimilates into "normal" life and determinedly rises above his origins, achieving an advanced degree and career success, working for years in child welfare and as volunteer strength coach for the Fordham University basketball team. He hides his upbringing out of shame and fear of others' pity. But as he begins to reflect on his own story and to talk to the people who raised him,
Ed begins to see a larger story intertwined with his own
.
With original research based on interviews with clergymen and nuns, archival data from the New York Archdiocese, and government records,
tells the social history of an era when hundreds of thousands of baby boomers passed through the orphanage system.
Through the story of one man, this book gives us a much-needed historical perspective on an American society that understood and acknowledged the community's need for a safe haven

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