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Most Reverend Fabian Wendelin Bruskewitz D.D., Bishop of Lincoln, Nebraska
Born in
Milwaukee on September 6, 1935, Bishop Fabian Bruskewitz attended St. Wenceslaus
parochial school in Milwaukee, and then attended St. Lawrence Seminary at Mount
Calvary, Wisconsin, St. Francis Seminary in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, the Pontifical
North American College and the Gregorian University in Rome.He was ordained a
priest on July 17, 1960, in Rome, at the Church of the Twelve Apostles by
Cardinal Traglia, the Vicar General of Rome. He served as an assistant pastor in
parishes near Milwaukee, and then did graduate work at the Gregorian University
in Rome, where he received a doctorate in Dogmatic Theology in 1969. He taught
for a very brief time at St. Francis Seminary, and then worked in the
Congregation for Catholic Education, a department of the Holy See, in Rome, for
eleven years. Bishop Bruskewitz was named a Monsignor in 1976 and elevated to be
a Prelate of Honor 1980. In 1980, he became the pastor of Saint Bernard Parish
in a suburb of Milwaukee, and in 1992, was named the eighth Bishop of the
Diocese of Lincoln, Nebraska. He was consecrated a bishop and installed in the
Cathedral of the Risen Christ in Lincoln, on May 13, 1992. The sponsorship of the Madonna Rehabilitation Hospital was assumed by the Diocese to preserve its local ownership and the Catholic nature of this well-known rehabilitation facility. Two new parishes have begun as well as two new Catholic elementary schools and additional building projects to keep up the parishes and schools. Paul VI Heights was built in Lincoln to provide affordable housing in the promotion of family life for those with poor or moderate incomes. A new college seminary, Saint Gregory the Great Seminary opened in the Diocese in 1998. Among other events, Bishop Bruskewitz greeted the arrival of a group of Carmelite nuns in the diocese, and in 2000, he welcomed the opening of Our Lady of Guadeloupe Seminary of the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter, as well as the arrival of a group of men religious following the Cistercian Rule. Priestly and religious vocations, Catholic education, Catholic health care, and Catholic social services are some of the many areas of diocesan life that continue to be promoted by Bishop Bruskewtiz. |
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