Catholics: Britain's Largest MinorityIn the course of the 20th century Britain's Catholics have made a long journey from the margins of society through gradual acceptance and respectability to positions of great influence and power in public life. Dennis Sewell charts that journey through the lives of the Catholic men and women whose voices, whether in politics, journalism, literature or the arts, have made a distinctively Catholic contribution to our national conversation. |
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A. N. Wilson abortion anti-Catholic Archbishop Auberon Waugh became become believe bishops Britain British campaign Cardinal Hume Cath Cathedral Catholic Church Catholic community Catholic faith Catholic schools Catholicism Celtic Christian Church of England Conservative conversion Council cultural David Donald Findlay ecumenical English Eric Gill Evelyn Waugh Father G. K. Chesterton Gilbey Gill Graham Greene Herald Hilaire Belloc Hinsley Hollings homosexuals House idea intellectual Ireland Irish issue James MacMillan Jews journalists Knights of Malta Knox Labour Party liberal liturgical London Lord Mass Mellish Michael Minister Mivart modern Monsignor moral Muggeridge olic Order papal parish Paul Johnson Peter Pius political politicians Press priest Protestant quoted Rangers recusant Rees-Mogg Reformation religion religious Roman Rome Ronald Knox Scotland Scottish sectarian secular sexual social society Street Sunday Telegraph theology Tony Blair tradition twentieth century Vatican Vatican II Westminster Worsthorne writing wrote