Bishop Eamon Casey, who was 86 in April, lives in a nursing home in Co Clare. He is suffering from Alzheimer’s disease.
Ordained
for the diocese of Kerry in 1951, he was appointed chaplain to St
Ethelbert’s parish in Berkshire, in England, in 1960 and was involved in
helping Irish immigrants to buy their homes.
He was the first chairman
of Shelter, the housing charity set up in the UK to put pressure on the
government and local housing authorities.
He was
appointed bishop of Kerry in 1969 and in 1973 helped to found and was
the first chairman of the Catholic aid agency Trócaire.
In 1976 he
became bishop of Galway and Kilmacduagh.
A vocal critic of US foreign
policy in Central America, in 1980 he attended the funeral of Archbishop
Óscar Romero in San Salvador, during which bombings and gunfire killed
about 40 people.
In 1984 Bishop Casey refused to meet the then US
president, Ronald Reagan, when the latter visited Galway.
In May 1992 it was revealed that he
had had a son, Peter, with an American woman, Annie Murphy, and had used
diocesan funds to make payments to Murphy for their son’s upkeep and
education in the US.
This money was repaid to the diocese within days of
the revelations.
Bishop Casey fled to New York and worked for five years with the Missionary Society of St James in Ecuador.
After
that he worked at a parish in the English Catholic diocese of Arundel
and Brighton until 2006, when he returned to the small rural east Galway
parish of Shanaglish, where he remained precluded from public ministry.
He was admitted to the Co Clare nursing home two years ago this month.
Speaking
to ‘The Irish Times’ in May 2010 he said: “My memory is gone badly for a
long, long time. I got four mini strokes in my brain about eight years
ago. “They told me – they were very blunt – they said, ‘You’ve had four
mini strokes.’ I said, ‘What does that mean?’ ‘You’re on your way to
Alzheimer’s or a stroke.’ And I said, ‘What can I do?’ ‘Very little,’
they said.”