The Thomas Merton Center at Bellarmine University

MERTON'S CORRESPONDENCE WITH:
Bennett, Gloria Cecelia Sylvester, 1930-2009

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Descriptive Summary

Record Group: Section A - Correspondence

Dates of materials: 1953

Volume: 9 item(s); 10 pg(s)

Scope and Content

This is a file in the correspondence of Thomas Merton under the heading: "Bennett, Gloria Cecelia Sylvester".

Biography

A student of Sr. Marialein Lorenz in Mobile, Alabama, Gloria Sylvester Bennett was part of the class who sent Merton some ordination gifts. She sends a book by her husband, Lerone Bennett, Confrontation: Black and White. (Source: The Road to Joy, p. 341.)

Usage Guidelines and Restrictions

Related Information and Links

See also one letter from Merton to Gloria Bennett and excerpts from Bennett's letter to Merton in The Road to Joy, p. 341; and see also the "Lorenz, Marialein" file.

Other Finding Aids

If the person in correspondence with Merton has full text records in the Merton Center Digital Collections, there will be a numeric link to them below.
   

Series List

This Record Sub-Group is not divided into Series and is arranged chronologically.

Container List

SeriesDateTypeTo/FromFirst LinesPubFull TextNotes
 1966/07/31 HCSto MertonPlease accept this book written by my husband  husband Lerone Bennett - <i>Confrontation: Black and White</i> / Sister Marialein, O.P., from Mobile, Alabama introduced her to Merton's writings in high school / <i>Seeds of Destruction</i> / <u>Life</u> magazine article / asks prayers for those in the Student Non-Violent Co-ordinating Committee in Alabama
 1966/08/14 (#01)TL[c]from MertonThanks very much indeed for your note and for the Silver Jubilee Gift. You take me back to the daysYes mail received after <u>Life</u> / reading and enjoying her husband's book / SNCC (Student Non-Violent Co-ordinating Committee - "snick") / direction of protests turning into violent revolution in places like France / Camus mentioned in husband's book / Merton sending his study of Camus on violence
 1966/08/14 (#02)TALS[x]from MertonThanks very much indeed for your note and for the Silver Jubilee Gift. You take me back to the daysYes mail received after <u>Life</u> / reading and enjoying her husband's book / SNCC (Student Non-Violent Co-ordinating Committee - "snick") / direction of protests turning into violent revolution in places like France / Camus mentioned in husband's book / Merton sending his study of Camus on violence
 1966/11/10 (#01)TL[c]from MertonIt occurs to me that I probably did not fulfill a promise-- or a threat-- to send you an article of  didn't send Camus article, sending now / SNCC in New York / asks for any new books by Lerone Bennett / Merton gets "the psychological fallout" from others on the situation, but would also like the facts
 1966/11/10 (#02)TLS[x]from MertonIt occurs to me that I probably did not fulfill a promise-- or a threat-- to send you an article of  didn't send Camus article, sending now / SNCC in New York / asks for any new books by Lerone Bennett / Merton gets "the psychological fallout" from others on the situation, but would also like the facts
 1967/01/07 HLSto MertonThank you so much for your wonderful letter and the essays enclosed. I have not yet had a chance to  Lerone Bennett wants to have a dialogue with Merton on Camus / sending Lerone's December speech from Boston / <u>Negro Digest</u> / Black Power evolution - getting "Negroes to learn to love themselves… most beautifully creative act of our century" / children face discrimination in Catholic school
 1967/01/19 (#01)TL[c]from MertonThanks for your warm good letter, and for Lerone's Boston talk. Starting with that, I'd say it is  Lerone's speech - "what has to be seen and admitted" and "what apparently cannot be" / dialogue with Lerone on Camus / invitation to visit Merton / discrimination against Gloria's children and Merton's own limited experiences of discrimination in France and England / "Red-neck ghettoes" / Black Power
 1967/01/19 (#02)TLS[x]from MertonThanks for your warm good letter, and for Lerone's Boston talk. Starting with that, I'd say it is  Lerone's speech - "what has to be seen and admitted" and "what apparently cannot be" / dialogue with Lerone on Camus / invitation to visit Merton / discrimination against Gloria's children and Merton's own limited experiences of discrimination in France and England / "Red-neck ghettoes" / Black Power
 undated/no/no other[x] (His first Mass) "Friday I said that Mass I had promised to Our Lady of Cobre… It was at St. Anne's  photocopy of a handwritten quote from <i>The Sign of Jonas</i>, p. 194, copyright 1953 / describes Merton's first Mass in 1949 and the amice, corporal, purificator, and finger towel which came from Gloria Bennett's Catholic High School class of black students in Mobile, Alabama
        

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