Bruce Kent
Bruce Kent
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Bruce Kent

David Bruce Kent (22 June 1929 – 8 June 2022) was an English former Roman Catholic priest who became a political activist in the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND), holding various leadership positions in the organisation.

Born on 22 June 1929 in Blackheath, Southeast London, Kent was the son of Molly (Marion) and Kenneth Kent. His parents were Canadian, with his father Presbyterian and his mother Catholic. He was educated in Canada at Lower Canada College, to escape The Blitz of the Second World War. He returned to England and attended Stonyhurst College.

After completing his schooling, he was called up for National Service; this was a period of his life that he "he enjoyed and never tried to disown". He served in the Royal Tank Regiment, British Army from 1947 to 1949. After officer training, he was commissioned in the Royal Armoured Corps as a second lieutenant on 20 August 1948.

During a period of leave from the army, he attended the Easter 1949 retreat at Stonyhurst College, his old school, and first felt the call to the priesthood. His Presbyterian father disapproved and negotiated that he would first attend university before making a decision. As such, after finishing his military service, he went on to read Jurisprudence at Brasenose College, Oxford, from 1949 to 1952. In 1952, his mind made up, he began a six-year course studying for the priesthood at St Edmund's seminary in Ware, Hertfordshire.

In 1958, Kent was ordained as a Catholic priest for the Diocese of Westminster. He served his curacy at Our Lady of Victories, Kensington and then at St Pius X Parish Church, North Kensington. From 1963 to 1966, he served as secretary to Cardinal John Heenan. Kent was made a Monsignor at only 35 years old. Between 1966 and 1974, he was the Catholic chaplain to the University of London. From 1974 to 1976, he was chaplain to Pax Christi and chairman of the charity War on Want. In 1977, he returned to parish ministry, having been appointed as parish priest of St Aloysius Church, Somers Town, near Euston railway station. Having been granted permission by Cardinal Basil Hume, he accepted the appointment as general secretary of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament in January 1980, and was moved to become an assistant priest at St John the Evangelist Church, Islington.

In February 1987, Kent retired from the priesthood. Contrary to some reports, he claimed to have never requested laicization and to have remained a priest. However, his canonically illicit marriage 14 months after his retirement incurred automatic laicization.

In 1992, he was a candidate for the Labour Party in the constituency of Oxford West and Abingdon, where he came third. Had he been elected, he would at the time have been prevented, as an ordained priest, from taking his seat in the House of Commons. Sitting Member of Parliament and Conservative minister John Patten, also a Catholic, retained his seat.

In 1958, Kent joined Pax Christi, having been invited to become a chaplain to the Catholic peace movement. He had chaired a talk in Kensington by Thomas Roberts, a Jesuit bishop: Roberts convinced Kent that a nuclear deterrence was "wicked" and that although the Church taught just war theory, it did not support the direct targeting of non-combatants.

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