Rural Justice: Difference between revisions
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'''''Rural Justice''''' was a magazine published by Father [[Arthur Terminiello]] from 1939 thru June 25, 1943 in Troy, Alabama. The publication was similar in content to [[Father Coughlin]]โs paper ''[[Social Justice]]''. Father Terminiello claimed the publication had a circulation of 15,000 readers.<ref>''The Plotters'', p. 120, by John Roy Carlson, (1946)</ref> The Church ordered him to cease publication because of magazineโs anti- | '''''Rural Justice''''' was a magazine published by Father [[Arthur Terminiello]] from 1939 thru June 25, 1943 in Troy, Alabama. The publication was similar in content to [[Father Coughlin]]โs paper ''[[Social Justice]]''. Father Terminiello claimed the publication had a circulation of 15,000 readers.<ref>''The Plotters'', p. 120, by John Roy Carlson, (1946)</ref> The Church ordered him to cease publication because of magazineโs anti-jewish content. ย | ||
A few years later Father Terminiello replaced ''Rural Justice'' with ''[[The Crusader (1946)|The Crusader]]''. The Mobile Diocese forced Father Terminiello to resign as a priest. He was later reinstated in 1949. ย | A few years later Father Terminiello replaced ''Rural Justice'' with ''[[The Crusader (1946)|The Crusader]]''. The Mobile Diocese forced Father Terminiello to resign as a priest. He was later reinstated in 1949. ย | ||
Latest revision as of 04:30, 25 February 2024
Rural Justice was a magazine published by Father Arthur Terminiello from 1939 thru June 25, 1943 in Troy, Alabama. The publication was similar in content to Father Coughlinโs paper Social Justice. Father Terminiello claimed the publication had a circulation of 15,000 readers.[1] The Church ordered him to cease publication because of magazineโs anti-jewish content.
A few years later Father Terminiello replaced Rural Justice with The Crusader. The Mobile Diocese forced Father Terminiello to resign as a priest. He was later reinstated in 1949.
See also
Notes
- โ The Plotters, p. 120, by John Roy Carlson, (1946)