Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Michael Courtney
Roman Catholic titular archbishop and papal diplomat From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Michael Courtney (5 February 1945 – 29 December 2003) was an Irish prelate of the Catholic Church. He entered the diplomatic service of the Holy See in 1980 and was given the rank of archbishop and was named Apostolic Nuncio to Burundi in 2000.
He died from gunshot wounds sustained during a violent attack, believed to be unrelated to Burundi's civil war. According to his brother, Courtney was the first papal nuncio to die as a result of violence in 500 years.[1]
Remove ads
Biography
Summarize
Perspective
Michael Aidan Courtney was born in Summerhill, Nenagh, County Tipperary,[2] as the youngest of seven children of Louis and Elizabeth Courtney.[3] He attended Clongowes Wood College, Clonfert Seminary, studied for 1 year in University College Dublin before going to the Irish College in Rome.[4] He was ordained a priest in the Diocese of Clonfert on 9 March 1968.[2] Courtney worked as a curate until 1973, before becoming a chaplain at the Tynagh mines while also teaching at St Raphael's College, Loughrea. He later worked as a curate in Woodford. In 1976, he returned to Rome to earn a licentiate in canon law and a doctorate in moral theology and to prepare for a diplomat's career at the Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy.[4] In 1987, he was awarded an MA in legal philosophy at NUI, Galway.[citation needed]
He entered the diplomatic service of the Holy See on 25 March 1980, and worked in nunciatures in South Africa, Senegal, India, Yugoslavia, Cuba, and Egypt. On 30 December 1995, he was appointed the Special Envoy and Permanent Observer to the Council of Europe in Strasbourg.[2]
On 18 August 2000 Pope John Paul II appointed him Apostolic Nuncio to Burundi and Titular Archbishop of Eanach Dúin.[2] He received episcopal ordination on 12 November 2000, at St Mary of the Rosary Church in Nenagh from Cardinal Francis Arinze, Prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, with Bishops John Kirby and William Walsh as co-consecrators.[3]
Courtney played a crucial role in facilitating a peace agreement in November 2003 between the Burundian government and the main opposition Hutu group.[5] He was anticipating a new assignment as nuncio to Cuba, where he had established a warm relationship with Fidel Castro.[4][6]
Remove ads
Death and funeral
In December 2003, while returning to Bujumbura from a funeral,[6] gunmen fired at his car near Minago, 30 miles (48 km) south of the capital. He suffered gunshot wounds to the head, shoulder and leg and died from hemorrhaging during surgery at The Prince Louis Rwagasore Hospital in Bujumbura.[7] Archbishop Simon Ntamwana blamed the militant Hutu National Liberation Forces (FNL), although the FNL, which had supported the November agreement, denied any responsibility and said Ntamwana should leave the country.[8]
1,500 people attended a funeral Mass for Courtney in Burundi on 31 December.[8] On 3 January 2004, Cardinals Arinze and Connell, Archbishop Seán Brady, Archbishop Giuseppe Lazzarotto, the Nuncio to Ireland, led a concelebrated funeral Mass in Nenagh. Minister for Defence, Michael Smith, represented the Government of Ireland at the Mass and burial.[9]
Courtney was buried in Dromineer, on the shores of Lough Derg, County Tipperary, near his native Nenagh.[10][11]
Remove ads
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads