← Previous Post: | Next Post:

 

England’s Rahm Emanuel…

… is a man of the cloth. Or speaking for the cloth.

Peter Jennings, the press secretary to Archbishop Vincent Nichols, has apologised after he stunned guests by verbally abusing a 22-year-old student during the dessert course [at a university dinner], repeatedly calling him “a —-“.

He is also alleged to have called Matthew Tye, who is half-Vietnamese, “a peasant”.

The timing of the outburst threatens to embarrass Archbishop Nichols, who will be installed as the Archbishop of Westminster on Thursday. It also comes only one month after Mr Jennings called a Telegraph reporter “a total —-” for writing a story about letters sent by two English bishops complaining that Father Nichols would be a divisive choice for the job.

… The press officer has already been dismissed as a spokesman for the campaign for the beatification of Cardinal Newman, the 19th century Anglican cleric who converted to Catholicism.

The altercation unfolded at the college of Blackfriars during an event organised by the Aquinas Institute, a religious institution. Among the distinguished clergy to overhear the tirade was the British Ambassador to the Vatican, Francis Campbell, who gave a lecture on ‘faith and foreign policy’.

Mr Tye is a student previously known to Mr Jennings through a work placement with the Birmingham Oratory. In his letter to Archbishop Nichols, Mr Tye claimed he was called “a —-” by Mr Jennings more than twenty times as well as “a worthless piece of —-” and “a low-life peasant”.

Mr Jennings yesterday said he “deeply regretted the incident and any embarrassment caused” but said Mr Tye’s account was an exaggeration. “I may have called him a —- once or twice, I don’t recollect how many times…”

*************************

Jennings’ proposed Newman campaign slogan:

Only a total shit wouldn’t think he’s a saint.

Margaret Soltan, May 18, 2009 6:29AM
Posted in: kind of a little weird

Trackback URL for this post:
https://www.margaretsoltan.com/wp-trackback.php?p=13015

Comment on this Entry

Latest UD posts at IHE

Archives

Categories