Father Rausch remembered as advocate for Appalachian people

WASHINGTON — Glenmary Father John Rausch recognized early in his time as a missionary in Appalachia that people were facing severe environmental and economic challenges and devoted his ministry to seeking solutions and calling attention to their predicament.

For 53 years, Father Rausch of Stanton, Kentucky, who died Feb. 9 at age 75, traveled around the region, speaking, writing, organizing and praying in a lifelong effort to carry out the biblical call to justice, friends and colleagues recalled.

A native of Philadelphia, Father Rausch began his work with Glenmary in the mid-1960s as an associate pastor at the order’s missions in Norton and St. Paul, Virginia. He later became pastor of St. Paul.

“He was very dedicated to justice,” Father Dan Dorsey, Glenmary’s president, told Catholic News Service Feb. 11. “Pope Francis’ encyclical, Laudato Si’, seemed to sum up his own ministry and passion as far as care of the earth. He had just an incredible love of Appalachia and its people.”

Visitors to Father Rausch in Kentucky often were treated to hearty meals and warm hospitality. “It was the ministry of the table,” Father Dorsey said.

That love led Father Rausch to the Catholic Committee of Appalachia, for which he served as director from 2005 to 2013. The organization presented him with its Bishop Sullivan Peace and Justice Award in 2016.

Michael Iafrate, the committee’s current co-coordinator, credited Father Rausch for being “a regular guy.”

“He was on the other end of clericalism, of being with people and not imposing stuff on them, and standing with them in whatever struggle they might have, a personal struggle or a political struggle,” Iafrate said.

“He also had a way of communicating what Catholic social teaching is about and reaching people who you wouldn’t think would be very receptive to it,” Iafrate added in a Feb. 11 interview with CNS.

Father Rausch, who was writing an autobiography for the University of Kentucky Press at the time of his death, had been a longtime supporter of coal miners and their families. In recent years, he spoke against efforts by mining companies to shed pension and health care liabilities for retired workers.

In his wide-ranging ministry role, Father Rausch also served with the Commission on Religion in Appalachia, the Appalachian Ministries Educational Resource Center, Christians for the Mountains and the Laudato Si’ Commission of the Diocese of Lexington, Kentucky. He joined the faculty at the Coady Institute at St. Francis Xavier University in Nova Scotia, Canada, for three summers.

A pastoral letter by the 25 bishops of the Appalachia region, “This Land Is Home to Me,” influenced Father Rausch in 1980 to devote his life to serving the Appalachian region without a traditional Church assignment. “He viewed all of Appalachia as his parish,” Father Dorsey said.

The pastoral letter marked the first effort by the bishops as a group to call attention to the dire economic hardship, rising drug abuse, environmental destruction and a decline in the culture that defines the 205,000-square-mile region that extends from southern New York to northeastern Mississippi and is home to more than 25 million people.

Father Rausch organized pilgrimages for religious leaders, journalists, elected officials and parishioners from across the country to see firsthand the resiliency of the people in the face of the hardships.

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