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Topic: Bartholomew Augustine Santamaria


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In the News (Thu 10 Dec 09)

  
  B.A. Santamaria Summary
Bartholomew Santamaria was born in Brunswick, Victoria, on Aug. 14, 1915, the son of Italian immigrants.
Santamaria was born in Melbourne, the son of a greengrocer who was an immigrant from Sicily.
In 1936 Santamaria was one of the founders of the Catholic Worker, a newspaper influenced by the social teaching of the Roman Catholic Church, particularly the encyclical Rerum Novarum of Pope Leo XIII.
www.bookrags.com /B.A._Santamaria   (1559 words)

  
  B.A. Santamaria - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Santamaria was born in Melbourne, the son of a greengrocer who was an immigrant from Sicily.
In 1936 Santamaria was one of the founders of the Catholic Worker, a newspaper influenced by the social teaching of the Roman Catholic Church, particularly the encyclical Rerum Novarum of Pope Leo XIII.
Santamaria ran the NCC in a highly personal and (according to his critics) autocratic way, and in the mid 1980s there was a serious split in the organisation, with most of the trade unionists leaving.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/B._A._Santamaria   (1041 words)

  
 Obituary: B A Santamaria
Bartholomew Augustine Santamaria was born and raised in Brunswick, the son of devoutly Catholic Sicilian immigrants.
Santamaria undertook this work with the full endorsement of his religious and temporal mentor, Archbishop Daniel Mannix, and with the fervour and pitiless resolve which were the hallmark of his politi-cal foes.
Santamaria was upset that he was perceived as being hostile, yet carried on in precisely the same way as he had done.
www.aijac.org.au /review/1998/233/santamaria.html   (1714 words)

  
 B. A. Santamaria biography .ms   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Bartholomew Augustine ("BA" or "Bob") Santamaria (14 August, 1915 - 25 February, 1998) was an Australian journalist and an influential figure in the country's political and intellectual life, particularly in the third quarter of the 20th century.
Santamaria held conservative Catholic social values, and was a staunch anti-communist.
Santamaria was a key figure in the 1955 split of the Australian Labor Party, and was the intellectual figurehead of the breakaway DLP.
www.biography.ms /B._A._Santamaria.html   (94 words)

  
 Bartholomew Augustine Santamaria Biography (1915–98) Online Encyclopedia Article About Bartholomew Augustine ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Bartholomew Augustine Santamaria Biography (1915–98) Online Encyclopedia Article About Bartholomew Augustine Santamaria Biography (1915–98)
End of Article: Bartholomew Augustine Santamaria Biography (1915–98)
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /Cambridge/entries/065/Bartholomew-Augustine-Santamar.html   (143 words)

  
 Archbishop Pell's tribute to B.A. Santamaria
Bartholomew Augustine Santamaria was born in 1915 in the Melbourne suburb of Brunswick, the first of six children of Joe Santamaria and Maria Terzita, who had migrated here from the Aeolian island of Salina to escape poverty just before the First World War.
Bob Santamaria was part of the three-man affirmative team and he provoked uproar as he declaimed, "When the bullets of the atheists struck the statue of Christ outside the cathedral in Madrid, for some that was just lead striking brass, but for me those bullets were piercing the heart of Christ my King."
Santamaria’s cry of "Long live Christ the King," a phrase coined first in the Mexican persecution of the Christians, also drew thunderous applause.
www.ad2000.com.au /articles/1998/apr1998p10_560.html   (1755 words)

  
 Catholic World News : The Remarkable Life of B.A. (Bob) Santamaria
Bob Santamaria was exceptionally proud of his Italian ancestry, and particularly of his parents: his father, who had completed only primary education, and mother, who had attended just a year or two of elementary schooling.
Bob Santamaria frequently said that despite their lack of formal education, his parents’ wisdom and common sense had inoculated him against the illusion that education, in itself, improved a person morally or spiritually.
Santamaria, one of the three speakers on the Nationalist side, was reported as saying: "When the bullets of the atheists struck the statue of Christ outside the cathedral in Madrid, for some that was just steel striking brass.
www.cwnews.com /news/viewstory.cfm?recnum=20882   (4239 words)

  
 B. A. Santamaria - Life and Writings - the Split
Certainly it was Santamaria's strategy in the 1940s, in establishing Industrial Groups to counter a communist thrust for leadership in Australian trade unions, that led, eventually, to the disastrous ALP split in 1955.
Santamaria was labelled a fascist and a fanatic, a would-be dictator and a devious schemer.
Bartholomew Augustine (but Bob to nearly everybody) Santamaria was born in Brunswick, the eldest of a family of six children.
users.cyberone.com.au /myers/santamaria.html   (7433 words)

  
 Perspective 14 July  2005  - Brian Costar
In December of 1952 Santamaria boasted in a confidential letter to his patron Mannix, that within a few years ‘the Movement should be able to completely transform the leadership of the Labor movement’ so as to allow the implementation ‘of a Christian social program in both the state and the federal spheres’.
In two articles that appeared in the obscure Indian religious paper the Bombay Examiner in 1955, Santamaria revealed that the conversion of the ALP was to be accomplished by ‘permeating’ the party with right-thinking Catholics.
There was only limited appreciation at the time that Santamaria did not represent orthodox Catholic teaching on the separation of church and state and that many of his co-religionists strongly opposed him.
www.abc.net.au /rn/talks/perspective/stories/s1402332.htm   (790 words)

  
 WebQuest: The Petrov Affair: a nation in fear
A subpoena is a formal written order issued by a court commanding a person to appear under penalty as a witness in a trial or an inquiry such as a Royal Commission.
Santamaria, leader of the Catholic group called The Movement.
Santamaria and the Digital Revolution – Part 2, 9 October 1997.
www.oph.gov.au /petrovwebquest/content.asp?pageID=190   (288 words)

  
 Amazon.ca: Books: Santamaria: Memoirs Of a Political Outsider   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Of particular importance are his relections on the rise of Labor after the economic rationalism, and the modernization of the Catholic Church.
One of the most effective and hated political operators in Australian history, Santamaria again proves to be one of its most cadid autobiographers.
B.A. Santamaria is Director of the National Civic Council and has a regular column in the Australian.
www.amazon.ca /exec/obidos/ASIN/0195540522   (399 words)

  
 PWHCE - A History of Labor Splits (Talk by Robert Murray)
This vision was impractical in my view, on either the votes Santamaria's followers had at conference then or what it was ever likely to have.
There was not much chance of this in Australia but Santamaria's view that it was five minutes to midnight in Southeast Asia was, while I think it was extreme, not as fanciful as it might seem today.
Santamaria and the Movement and their role in the industrial groups were constantly in the news from then on.
www.pwhce.org /textmurr.html   (4421 words)

  
 Santamaria Family Crest
In continental Europe, the most ancient recorded family crest was discovered upon the monumental effigy of a Count of Wasserburg in the church of St. Emeran, at Ratisobon, Germany...
In the Santamaria coat of arms as in all coat of arms the crest is only one element of the full armorial achievement.
We encourage you to study the Santamaria genealogy to find out if you descend from someone who bore a particular family crest.
www.houseofnames.com /xq/asp.fc/qx/santamaria-family-crest.htm   (449 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Australian Labor Party   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
They were expelled from the ALP and formed the Democratic Labor Party (DLP) whose intellectual leader was B.A. Santamaria.
The DLP was heavily influenced by Catholic social teachings and had the support of the Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne, Daniel Mannix.
Jump to: navigation, search Melbourne is the capital and largest city of the state of Victoria, and the second largest city in Australia (after Sydney), with a population of 3.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Australian-Labor-Party   (10700 words)

  
 Quadrant : A short memoir of B.A. Santamaria. (Bartholomew Augustine Santamaria) @ HighBeam Research   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Start / Q / Quadrant / April 01, 1998 / A short memoir of B.A. Santamaria.
PEOPLE THINK of Bob Santamaria as a quintessentially political person, which he was, but he had such wonderful natural gifts and such a broad range of interests that one often wondered if he was ever disappointed in committing himself so totally to politics.
(Bartholomew Augustine Santamaria)' with a FREE Trial for instant access »
static.highbeam.com /q/quadrant/april011998/ashortmemoirofbasantamariabartholomewaugustinesant   (222 words)

  
 Santamaria Coat of Arms
Some of the first settlers of this name or some of its variants were: Early migrants to the New World bearing this surname mostly settled in the Caribbean and in Central America.
Among them were Francisco Santamaria and his brother Nicolas who settled in Nicaragua in 1562.
Bartholomew Augustine Santamaria (1915-) Australian social and political writer
www.houseofnames.com /xq/asp.c/qx/santamaria-coat-arms.htm   (520 words)

  
 Pictures Catalogue - Pryor, Geoff, 1944- B.A. (Bartholomew Augustine) Santamaria in heaven [picture] / - fullindex.htm ...
B.A. (Bartholomew Augustine) Santamaria in heaven [picture] / Geoff Pryor.
Santamaria, B. (Bartholomew Augustine), 1915-1998 -- Caricatures and cartoons.
If you wish to use it for any other purposes, you must complete the Request for permission form.
nla.gov.au /nla.pic-an13712565   (129 words)

  
 The Currency Lad: Movement: Confessions Of A Santamaria Socialist   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Since being outed by the erudite and notoriously cruel Jason Soon as a fully paid-up member of Bartholomew Augustine's fl cabal, I've been more inclined than before to make criticisms of economic rationalism.
He was suspicious of bank deregulation, believing the interests of primary producers, superannuants and some manufacturers would be better served by an institution based on the old Commonwealth Development Bank.
Mr Santamaria believed the abandonment by government of supervisory power and initiative would lead to the dominance of big business over small and vitiate Australia's national sovereignty.
thecurrencylad.blogspot.com /2005/03/movement-confessions-of-santamaria.html   (827 words)

  
 The Labor Split of the 1950s | Young Labor Left   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
As one Canberra journalist wrote before the split; "…[T]here are mysterious figures who stand virtually unnoticed in the wings invisible to all but a few in the audience as they cue, Svengali like, among the actors out on the stage.
Such a figure appears to be Bartholomew Augustine Michael Santamaria…of politics but not in them."14 Santamaria held that secrecy was essential for the success of the agenda of the Industrial Groups.
16 Santamaria, B.A.; 1961; 'The Movement', in Mayer, H, Catholics and the Free Society, pp82.
www.younglaborleft.org /node/215   (1822 words)

  
 REFLECTION: Clyde Cameron on Archbishop Mannix and Bob Santamaria - 30 November 2002
The Archbishop was quick to see the dangers inherent in a law that would give a Masonic or bigoted anti-Catholic Minister power to "declare" the Catholic Church to be a Communist organisation on the ground that it supported that part of the Communist Manifesto that called for every child to be given "free education".
I now turn to the part played by Bartholomew Augustine (Bob) Santamaria who became President of the National Civic Council when it was formed in 1957, a position he held until his death on 25 February 1998.
Bob Santamaria became the most significant figure in Australian politics during the second half of the 20th century.
www.newsweekly.com.au /articles/2002nov30_cc.html   (1241 words)

  
 "S" Famous People
Sainte-Beuve, Charles Augustin (1804-69) Literary critic, born in Boulogne, NW France.
Santamaria, Bartholomew Augustine (1915-98) Political writer, born in West Brunswick, Melbourne, Victoria...
Scribe, (Augustin) Eugène (1791-1861) Playwright, born in Paris, France.
www.jonathanselby.com /Sfam   (17397 words)

  
 Tom Domican   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
A Canberra journalist wrote "In the tense melodrama of politics, there are mysterious figures who stand virtually unnoticed in the wings invisible to all but a few in the audience as they cue, Svengali like, among the actors out on the stage.
Such a figure appears to be Bartholomew Augustine Michael Santamaria… of politics but not in them".
In the late sixties, the Liberal Government had imprisoned conscientious objectors to the Vietnam War and many trade unionists were castigated for their outspoken condemnation of the Government's treatment of its citizens.
www.tomdomican.com /divide.html   (4202 words)

  
 Bob Santamaria - Australian Biography
Political Activist, Born 1915, Melbourne Vic, Died 1998
Bartholomew Augustine (Bob) Santamaria was a political activist, ardent anti-Communist, committed anti-feminist and devout Catholic.
While his intelligence and leadership always inspired enormous loyalty in his followers and admirers, he was condemned by his enemies as Machiavellian, destructive, even evil.
www.australianbiography.gov.au /santamaria/index.html   (67 words)

  
 Life of Riley: Santa and me   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
When we last met, B.A. Santamaria and I were brothers in the war against communism.
For this I must thank Bartholomew Augustine Santamaria, who in harnessing my political potential cured me of the anti communism I suffered from.
In trying to answer the question of why we are in Vietnam I came to the exact opposite conclusions to B.A. Within 18 months I fused with Santa's nemesis and formally signed on as a card-carrying communist.
www.greenleft.org.au /back/1998/308/308p25b.htm   (572 words)

  
 The Dead Rock Stars Club 2003 January To June   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Mongo Santamaria (Ramon Santamaria) - Died 2-1-2003 in Miami, FL, U.S. After a stroke (Jazz) Born 4-7-1917 in Havana, Cuba - Percussionist and bandleader (He did, "Afro Blue" and a remake of, "Watermelon Man") - Worked with Tito Puente, Peréz Prado, Ray Charles and Cal Tjader.
Bernice Turner Pratcher - Died 2-26-2003 - Breast cancer (Blues) Born 1955 - Drummer and singer - She was a member and the manager of The Rising Star Fife And Drum Corps - Daughter of Otha Turner.
Rose Augustine (Rose Lewis Augustine) - Died 4-21-2003 in Manhattan, NY, U.S. (Musician) Born 2-10-1910 in the Bronx, NY, U.S. - Played piano and harpsichord - She and her husband Albert developed the nylon guitar string.
www.thedeadrockstarsclub.com /2003.html   (13389 words)

  
 Monash Biographical Dictionary Entries   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Described as the most famous Australian lay Catholic of the twentieth century, Santamaria dedicated his life to fighting communism.
The son of Italian immigrants, he was sent to Christian Brothers' schools and studied arts and law at Melbourne University before starting the Catholic Worker with the blessing of Archbishop Daniel Mannix (qv).
In 1937 Mannix, who became the dominant influence on Santamaria's life, selected him to be assistant director of the newly formed Secretariat of Catholic Action.
www.arts.monash.edu.au /ncas/multimedia/argo/biogdict/first.html   (10224 words)

  
 Our Mother of Mercy Catholic Forum   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Patriarch Bartholomew, whose homily was introduced by Pope John Paul, spoke of the progress that had been made since the embrace 40 years ago between Paul VI and Patriarch Athengoras, but added that "it has not been possible to eliminate in these 40 years the opposition that has accumulated during over 900 years.
Pope John Paul's homily centered on Christian unity and he noted that the presence of Patriarch Bartholomew at this evening's liturgy marked the 40th anniversary of "the fraternal embrace" in 1964 between Pope Paul VI and then Patriarch Athenagoras.
The Holy Father told Patriarch Bartholomew that he has "always been guided on the path to unity by the sure compass of the teaching of Vatican Council II.
www.devoteesofmary.com /devoteesofmary/discus/messages/94/214.html?1088693323   (13837 words)

  
 Malcolm Saunders | 'Jim' Toohey (1909–1992): the 'Father' of the Labor Party in South Australia | Labour History, ...
In 1981 its leader, arguably Australia's most famous Catholic layman, B.A. Santamaria, recalled that 'it was no secret that the withdrawal of the charter (for the Industrial Groups in South Australia) was due entirely to the opposition of Clyde Cameron'.
A few years later, John Warhurst — a Catholic (but by no means a sympathiser with 'the Movement'), a former South Australian, and already one of the most promising political scientists in Australia — implied that the disaffiliation of the Industrial Groups in South Australia was brought about solely 'through the efforts of Cameron'.
Like Santamaria, Warhurst seemed to think that Toohey had little to do with it.
www.historycooperative.org /journals/lab/85/saunders.html   (10488 words)

  
 Gender & Cultural Diversity
ISR postgraduate students are among those from around Australia presenting the results of their research at the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute postgraduate symposium 2005 in Melbourne on 15–17 June 2005.
In The 1955 Bob and Bert Show, a talk broadcast on ABC Radio National's Perspective, the ISR's Brian Costar discusses the two major personalities who figured in the split in the Australian Labor Party in 1955, Herbert Vere Evatt and Bartholomew Augustine Santamaria.
Financially Sustainable Community Housing Organisations is the theme of the second in a series of three Community Housing Seminars being held by the Community Housing Federation of Victoria and the Swinburne Institute for Social Research in partnership with the Office of Housing.
www.sisr.net /news/05news.htm   (1916 words)

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