Fr. William Dempflin, OP
The friar who would come to be known as Padre Blanco was born in the southwest
German kingdom of Württemberg on November 18th, 1838. Wilhelm Eugen Germanus
Dempflin was baptized at his home in Wiblingen, today part of the city of Ulm, on November
25th by the pastor of his parish church, St. Martin, a famous Baroque basilica of the
former Benedictine abbey there. William was the sixth and youngest child of Karl
Leopold Dempflin (born 1793 at Munderkingen), a notary of the royal judiciary
(königlicher Gerichtsnotar), and his wife, Amalia nee Buchholz (born 1806 at Weingarten).
They had married at Weingarten in 1830, and the witnesses at their wedding (a
countess and the brides father, a forestry official who would also be one of
Williams godparents), the various godparents to their children, together with the
occupations of their own parents and grandparents suggest that the young Dempflins were a
family of some means and education. In 1846, just before Williams 8th
birthday, the family moved some 20 miles to Laupheim.
William
immigrated to Guatemala at 18 years of age and worked there some 10 years as a
miner. In 1866 he entered the Dominicans there, but, when the government suppressed
all religious orders, he came with six confreres to Alta California. In 1875 William
made solemn profession and was ordained a priest in California. In 1886 he became a
U.S. citizen. For almost 20 years, Fr. William worked in Alta and a bit in Baja
California among the native Americans: a ministry that otherwise was often
neglected. He organized his horseback travels up and down the central valleys of
California so that he could visit each small Indian group at about the same time each
year. Large enough in stature to be noticed in any case, Fr. William would don his
white habit before entering the village whence the name, Padre Blanco. His
dedication to securing the rights of the Indians led to serious threats against his own
life. In 1894 he set off for Latin America again amid great fanfare. The
General Vicar here, Pius Murphy, had assigned him to the Province of Mexico on March 6,
1894. William received faculties from the Archdiocese of Guatemala at the end of
May, 1894; he seems to have been working in Tacana as late as March of 1895.
Sometime toward mid-1895 William visited his home region in a now
unified Germany, and in September he conferred in Vienna with the Master General, Andreas
Frühwirth, about the state of the Order in the Americas. William returned to San
Francisco in November of that year, hoping to establish in Alta California a novitiate for
Guatemala and Mexico. When this plan did not work out, William returned to
Guatemala, where he worked until 1908, the last three years in a parish at the port of
Livingston. In spring of 1908, William moved to El Salvador. In October 1908
William was assigned the administration of the parish at Verapaz. In 1909 and again
in November, 1910, the Dominican had his faculties renewed for the diocese of San
Salvador. As late as May of 1912 the bishop there was counting on Dempflins
help.
At some point in 1912, William was forced to journey to New York City
with a view towards attaining medical help. He was admitted to a hospital there,
where our fr. Bill Lewis, who enthusiastically had served Fr. William in San Francisco as
an altar boy, was now able to visit him before he died on December 3, 1912.
Williams remains were buried at the Dominican cemetery in Kentucky. Among the
Dominicans, Fr. William is remembered as a determined pioneer of Hispanic and native
American ministry. Among many groups of California Indians, Padre Blanco was
venerated for generations as one of the founders of their religious and cultural identity.
-- Richard Schenk, OP |