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Edmonton's Father Bill

Cam 
TaitSeptember 7, 2004
By Cam Tait

He was sitting in the kitchen with a cigarette in his hand. He coughed, painfully, and then doubled over. In a barely audible whisper, he said: "Please, let me die."

He straightened his chair, trying to gather himself. He looked down the hallway of the duplex with eyes that had seen so much. "At least I feel home here. And that means I can die at home." A few months later he passed away. That memory of the interview I did over a decade ago is with me every day. But its echo never bounced louder than it did this past week.

The man with the cigarette and horrible cough had a name: Gary. He was HIV positive and was living with AIDS. Rather than living on the street, and possibly being ignored because of a disease the public shunned, he was living in a tastefully furnished home - with cooked meals and medical attention - all thanks to Father Bill.

Father Bill Irwin cared about people. All people. He was ordained as a priest in 1952, but he made his impact was felt more behind a desk and in the trenches, rather than standing at the pulpit. He was known, simply, as Father Bill. He started Catholic Social Services (CSS) in the 1960s. The agency grew with time and soon Father Bill had more than 100 programs and a $50 million-plus budget. Father Bill called the shots with a steadfast belief that people of all shapes, sizes, and religions found themselves in situations where they needed help. And they were going to get that help...but not without controversy.

When Father Bill announced that CSS was funding a residence for people living with HIV it drew public comment, mostly negative. In fact, he asked that the address of the duplex not be written in any publication to prevent any possible protests. When news crews arrived, so did Father Bill - dressed in his usual freshly pressed suit, pale blue shirt, and red tie - to make sure everything was done in taste and compassion.

Father Bill seemed to thrive on making statements. Catholic Social Services was a member agency of the Edmonton area United Way. In the mid-1980s the United Way decided to fund Planned Parenthood, an agency that counselled people on parenthood. Planned Parenthood said it did not promote abortion; yet, Father Bill said just the notion of abortion went against his principles. So he pulled out of the United Way, walking away from a few hundred thousand dollars annually in funding. It made front-page news in Edmonton for days.

Despite the critics, the unrest caused in the fundraising community, and the potential of losing tens of thousands of dollars - money which was a guaranteed deposit - Father Bill said he was starting up his own fundraising campaign. It would go head-to-head against the annual United Way campaign.

He was successful. The new campaign has always - including last year - raised more than its goal. Father Bill's accomplishments were recognized internationally. He was named to the Order of Canada and was the recipient of many other honours.

Yet, he was visibly uncomfortable with praise. He just worked, he said, so people would be cared for - people like Gary. Father Bill's legacy is something we can all draw from. Last Sunday, after a long but dignified struggle with Parkinson's disease, Father Bill passed away at 76.

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