VIEW FROM ABOVE / LEGEND OF PREP INDUCTEE: 2022
Fr. Tony Azzarto, S.J. • Faculty Member, Chaplain, and/or Alumni Chaplain: 1963-present (2023)* *Includes some periods of non-Prep assignments
The following has been edited and condensed from Fr. Azzarto’s broader reflection on his years at Prep. His complete essay can be found at spprep.org/ViewFromAbove. It was June in 1963 when I joined a few fellow scholastics at midnight in the basement of the Jesuit seminary in Shrub Oak (Westchester County, New York) to place a phone call to the Brooklyn Prep Jesuits. We were anxious to find out where we would be assigned. (It would be posted the next morning at 8:00 a.m. at Shrub Oak, but we were eager to know.) I hoped to be assigned to Xavier High School, but instead I was directed to Saint Peter’s Prep. There, from 1963 to 1966, I taught Latin and English, and also moderated the Dance Committee and the Mission Drive. I was blessed with student friends—Pat Kane, ’64; Tom Leane, Joe O’Donnell, Tim Hawkes and Joe Urbanovich (from the Class of ’65); and John Milsop, ’66, to name a few. Years later they asked me to be the minister of marriage and the baptisms of their children. After ordination in 1969, I returned to Prep from 1972 to 1980, teaching English and religion. It was a time of rebellion, questioning authority, and a decline in enrollment. Lay teachers became a large part of the school, and I bonded with a new generation of Prep students—including Gary Cardiello, ’73; John Chester and Peter Colford (Class of ’74); Peter Cardiello, Ed Hartnett and Tom Oser (Class of ’78); Jack Raslowsky, ’79; and John Feeney, ’80. Father Ned Coughlin began the Emmaus retreat program, and there were no cell phones or Facebook distractions. Instead, students would hang out together on weekends. Prep was still a community of mostly Catholic students, but this was beginning to change. I spent 1980 to1985 in Nigeria, West Africa, but still kept in touch with Prep (for those who could read my writing!). Upon my return in 1985 through to 2005, I was involved with Campus Ministry as chaplain. Father John Mullin had the Emmaus program running smoothly, and then one-day retreats were introduced for seniors. At Prep, Campus Ministry expanded to include service projects to Kentucky and West Virginia. Teaching evolved from formal lectures to include films, group discussions, and small liturgies. In 2005 I returned to Nigeria for a two-year assignment, and during that time Prep made an appearance there as Fr. Jim Keenan and Jim DeAngelo, ’85 visited me in Lagos. It was great to see them, and in 2007 I returned to Prep to be a guidance counselor for freshmen and to teach a senior elective on the saints. While the number of Jesuits declined, Ignatian spirituality (Men and Women for and with Others) continued to grow. Lay men and women were a witness in their lives to the presence of God in all people and all things, and Maura Toomb showed great leadership in Campus Ministry. The motto “Prep for Life” rings true, exemplified by the alumni continuing the tradition of programs including Mass on the Road, Theology on Tap, the Bereavement Committee, and great support of the Gala and other initiatives that support our scholarships and financial aid programs. I have been blessed to be part of Saint Peter’s Prep since 1963...truly a sacrament of God’s presence. God was at work in 1963 in missioning me to Jersey City. I am now physically in the Bronx, but my heart is—and will always be—at 144 Grand with all Prep’s Pride and Glory. 224