American priest and activist (born 1949)
Frank Morales is an Episcopal priest and activist in New York City .
Morales was born in 1949 and grew up in the Jacob Riis Houses on the Lower East Side of Manhattan .[ 1] His father was Puerto Rican and his mother was Peruvian . He first became involved in politics after the assassinations of John F. Kennedy , Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr. as a member of the Assassination Information Committee.[ 1]
Morales graduated from the General Theological Seminary in 1976, and became an assistant pastor in 1978.[ 1] In the Bronx he worked with squatters . In one interview he recalled, “I used to walk out of services with a crowbar and we’d open up abandoned buildings…”[ 1] He now volunteers at St Mark's Church in-the-Bowery .[ 2] [ 3]
In 2003, he founded the Campaign to Demilitarize the Police in NYC.[ 1] He continues to campaign on housing issues.[ 4]
He was married to journalist Nancy Jo Sales from 2004 to 2006.[ 5]
See also
References
^ a b c d e Anderson, Lincoln (December 2004). "From skelly to squats to SWAT: Radical father finds a home at St. Mark's" . The Villager . 74 (30). New York, NY : Community Media LLC. Archived from the original on 2013-09-02. Retrieved 2007-12-27 .
^ Canon John Osgood, Episcopal Diocese of New York
^ Interview with Frank Morales by Aaron Jaffe, in Clayton Patterson, ed., "Resistance: A Radical Political and Social History of the Lower East Side" (Seven Stories Press, NY, 2007) pp. 193-212.
^ Jared Malsin, "On a Tour of Former Squats, Trash Artists and Cat-Poo Painters", March 19, 2012, The New York Times
^ Sales, Nancy Jo (January 2008). "The Golden Suicides" . Vanity Fair . Retrieved 2008-12-02 .
External links