WHITE LIGHT DARK NIGHT
THE REVOLUTIONARY LIFE OF JOHN PAUL I
by
Book Details
About the Book
For twenty years as a bishop, he was a rampaging locomotive running about the courts and Parliament of Italy demanding equal rights for oppressed peoples. In 1967, faced by an orphan population of two million in His intentions concerning bastards, women, homosexuals, etc. was quite evident in his acceptance speech, “. . . we must rise up the courage within us to set aside the convictions of our forefathers and together we will muster the strength to lift those restraints that have been unfairly placed by doctrine upon the everyday lives of many innocent people . . . for God-given human life is infinitely more precious than is man-made doctrine . . .” On the evening of September 26, 1978, he called together the
About the Author
George Lucien Gregoire was born in New England and completed his undergraduate and graduate work in Massachusetts schools. A war veteran, he spent most of his professional life as an officer of corporations in the United States and Europe. For a time, he was an international figure in cooperative education and has served on the boards of universities and secondary schools. He is the founding trustee of a score of charitable organizations, some providing education to mentally and physically impaired children.
Gregoire first met John Paul in 1968 when the Pope was a little known bishop of a remote mountain province in Northern Italy. For the last fifteen years of John Paul's life the author was the closest friend of one of the Pope's closest confidants, one whose death was coincidental to the death of the 33 day Pope - the author's friend was killed by a hit-run driver outside the Vatican walls the day after the Pope's sudden and unwitnessed death.