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    Dear Friends of Istituto Acton,

    Forgive the personal nature of this month’s letter, but I think it’s for a good reason. The following was originally meant to appear as an op-ed around the time of the April 27 canonization mass of Pope St. John Paul II, but apparently found no takers (sniff, sniff). I hope it gives you some idea of John Paul II’s great impact on my life and why so many pilgrims came to Rome to thank and praise God for this remarkable, saintly leader. (I also really liked Mark Steyn’s take on him!).

    How does a kid from Flint, Michigan who was raised by Hindu parents end up getting baptized by the Pope John Paul II and working in the Vatican?

    This is the sort of incredulous but mostly respectful question I’ve had to answer more than a few times during the past 15 years. Usually it is said with a sense of wonder and gratitude, but sometimes it’s mixed with envy – most of the people asking the question are practicing Catholics who greatly admire John Paul II. I must admit I’ve done nothing to deserve the honor of travelling such a journey.

    Even though my parents are Hindu, they had enough respect and admiration for Catholic education and especially the priests and nuns who ran the schools to start their two children at the now-closed St. Mary Queen of Angels. My first teachers were Polish Benedictine sisters who did not shy away from discipline and often used the one non-baptized student who did his religion homework as an example for the others.

    While I studied Catholicism and attended Mass on Fridays with the rest of the students, the Catholic faith was something I observed from the outside. At best, I was a “fan” of Catholicism; all my teachers and friends were Catholics but no one ever suggested converting.They simply were good examples and instruments through which God would eventually call me into the Church.

    After Catholic primary and secondary school, I attended the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor where hardly anybody paid much attention to religion, aside from the random Campus Crusade for Christ kid who would show up at my dorm room. It was the late 1980s, and, studying political science and economics as well as working for a student newspaper, I developed a strong admiration for three leaders who would eventually bring down the Berlin Wall – Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, and Pope John Paul II.

    As John O’Sullivan relates in his book The President, the Pope and the Prime Minister, these three figures came into their respective offices in the late 1970s where the likelihood of their doing so was anything but inevitable. “All three were handicapped by being too sharp, clear, and definite in an age of increasingly fluid identities and sophisticated doubts,” he wrote. “Put simply, Wojtyla was too Catholic, Thatcher too conservative, and Reagan too American.” As someone whose political and economic ideas were being formed at the time, I cannot overemphasize the influence they had on my way of thinking.

    Applied Catholicism
    Admiring John Paul II as a cold warrior is not the same thing as becoming Catholic, however. The negative reactions of those Catholics who supported Reagan and Thatcher to the U.S. Bishops Pastoral Letters on War and Peace (1983) and on the Economy (1986) made me skeptical about Catholic social teaching. But all that changed when I read Fr. Richard John Neuhaus’s book Doing Well and Doing Good: The Challenge to the Christian Capitalist (1992), a lucid commentary onJohn Paul II’s 1991 social encyclical Centesimus Annus. I remember thinking, “If this is how a Catholic should think about social issues, sign me up!”

    Of course, it wasn’t simply up to me; becoming a Catholic is as much about God’s calling you as you choosing God. It took a few more years of intellectual and spiritual inquiry, and loving guidance from faithful friends, before I entered the Catholic Church. I met my future godfather Matthew in most unlikely of settings, a graduate seminar on Friedrich Nietzsche’s Thus Spoke Zarathustra at the University of Toronto. It was he who suggested we accompany a group of university students who travel to Rome every year during Holy Week and see if there was a way to get me baptized by the pope. I didn’t believe it would really happen and tried every excuse in the book not to go, but Matthew’s persistence and prayers paid off and I finally said yes.

    Along with nine other adults, I received the sacraments of Baptism, Confirmation and Holy Communion from John Paul II at the 1996 Easter Vigil Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica.It was an amazing way to come into the Church, as we sat in front of all the cardinals, bishops, priests and lay faithful with nothing separating us from the pope but the tomb of St. Peter.By that point in his pontificate, John Paul II’s health was deteriorating and he seemed tired. But I recall how he openly wept after baptizing several East Asians who were dressed in their traditional garb.I still get goose bumps thinking about it.

    I returned to my graduate studies for a year and helped out at the university student chaplaincy to learn more about the Church’s communal and evangelical life in Toronto. It was through that chaplaincy that I received the opportunity to work for the Holy See’s Mission to the United Nations in New York. Given my political leanings and Midwestern upbringing, I was no fan of either the UN or New York, but I took the job anyway. I wanted most of all to represent John Paul II, who’d given a brilliant speech to the UN General Assembly two years prior, focusing on the need for a “moral grammar” in society. (Watch the video here.)

    All in all, it was a trying but rewarding experience. Having to defend the Church’s teachings on abortion against the “family planning” and population control crowd was quite a struggle but one I would gladly do again. It was also a great opportunity to meet polyglot diplomats, committed NGO activists, and most importantly the priests, nuns and laypeople who worked for the Holy See.

    Called to Rome
    As a result of my time at the UN, I received an offer to work for the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, which is the Vatican office responsible for promoting Catholic social teaching. Once again, the lure of working for John Paul II – this time in Rome -- proved too strong to resist and I became the staff official responsible for following disarmament and environmental issues. Not areas where I was likely to meet fellow conservatives, but so be it.

    Working in the Vatican, I had the opportunity to meet John Paul II a few times and it was always an edifying encounter. One encounter took place at the conclusion of a difficult meeting with Muslim theologians from Iran. The Iranians were experts in double-speak and veiled everything they said with all kinds of platitudes, so it was refreshing to hear the pope insist on religious freedom and the rejection of religious-inspired terrorism and violence.Alas, we are still waiting for the fruits to appear.

    I left the Vatican to become the director of the Acton Institute’s Rome office in January 2005, just a few months before John Paul II’s death in April of that year. The timing was fortuitous, as it gave me the opportunity to speak about the pope in all kinds of media settings, which I would not have been able to do as a Vatican official. I’ll never forget being able to pay my respects when the pope’s body was placed in St. Peter’s Basilica, the exact location where he received me into the Church, nine years to the day, and just before the arrival of a few former U.S presidents. The funeral mass was truly the “human event of a generation,” as the NBC correspondent called it at the time, the JPII generation of which I am a proud member.

    Representing the Acton Institute in Rome has provided me with the opportunity to continue serving John Paul II’s vision of the free society, even as the challenges facing global capitalism have evolved. His successors Pope Benedict  XVI and especially Pope Francis have taken up his call to bring forth an ethical understanding of economics that serves the poor and vulnerable.  At the same time, John Paul II knew first-hand that human freedom and the desire to better one’s condition are an irrepressible force that cannot be permanently blunted by its enemies. The struggle for freedom must be taken up anew by each generation. But we must be grateful that Pope John Paul II, like Reagan and Thatcher, fought the good fight – and won.

    Kishore Jayabalan
    Director


    Kishore Jayabalan is director of Istituto Acton, the Acton Institute's Rome office. Formerly, he worked for the Vatican's Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace as an analyst for environmental and disarmament issues and desk officer for English-speaking countries. Kishore Jayabalan earned a B.A. in political science and economics from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. In college, he was executive editor of The Michigan Review and an economic policy intern for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. He worked as an international economist for the Bureau of Labor Statistics in Washington, D.C.