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Catholic or Conciliar. Gommar DePauw From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search Fr. Gommar A. DePauw (October 11, 1918 - May 6, 2005) was a traditionalist Catholic priest …More
Catholic or Conciliar.

Gommar DePauw
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Fr. Gommar A. DePauw (October 11, 1918 - May 6, 2005) was a traditionalist Catholic priest and founder of the Catholic Traditionalist Movement.
DePauw was born in Stekene, Belgium, the son of a newspaper editor. After graduating as a Diplomate in Classical Humanities, magna cum laude, from the College of St. Nicholas, he entered the diocesan seminary of Ghent for his philosophical and theological studies. During the Second World War he served as a combat medic with the 9th Belgian Infantry Hunters Regiment, and was taken prisoner at Dunkirk in 1940. After escaping from prison camp, he returned to his seminary studies and was ordained priest for the Diocese of Ghent in 1942. He served as a battle-field chaplain with the Belgian Underground Army and the Polish 1st Armoured Division until the end of the war.
For three years DePauw studied at the University of Leuven, where he earned a bachelor's degree in canon law and a licentiate in canon law, moral theology and church history.
In 1949 DePauw joined his family in the United States. He served as an assistant priest in two New York City parishes: St. Stephen's in Manhattan and St. Clare's in The Bronx. At the same time he pursued graduate studies at The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. In 1953 he received a doctorate in canon law with a dissertation entitled The Educational Rights of the Church.
From 1952 to 1963 DePauw taught canon law at Mount Saint Mary's Seminary in Emmitsburg, Maryland. In 1955 he requested and was granted incardination from the Diocese of Ghent to the Archdiocese of Baltimore and was named academic dean of the seminary. On May 9, 1955 he became a United States citizen. While teaching at the seminary, he contributed articles to the New Catholic Encyclopedia, the Encyclopedic Dictionary of the Bible, Homiletic and Pastoral Review, and Ephemerides Theologicae Lovanienses.
During the Second Vatican Council he was called to Rome to serve as a peritus, a theological advisor to bishops at the Council. At the request of the Secretary of State, Cardinal Amleto Cicognani, Pope Paul VI made him a domestic prelate with the title Right Reverend Monsignor.
Towards the end of the Second Vatican Council DePauw came into conflict with the Archbishop of Baltimore Cardinal Lawrence Shehan over the interpretation of the council's teachings, particularly about liturgical matters. In January 1965 DePauw incorporated an organization called the Catholic Traditionalist Movement in New York State, purportedly with the support of the Archbishop of New York, Cardinal Francis Spellman. Shehan demanded that DePauw break with the organization. In summer 1965 Shehan removed DePauw from teaching duties at Mount Saint Mary's Seminary and transferred him to a parish in a Baltimore suburb. Shortly thereafter DePauw left for Rome.
On November 15, 1965 Luigi Faveri, Bishop of Tivoli in Italy, signed a document transferring …