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Ivan Illich, 76, Philosopher Who Challenged Status Quo, Is Dead

December 4, 2002
By DOUGLAS MARTIN






Ivan Illich, a onetime Roman Catholic priest who, through a
steady flow of books and articles preached counterintuitive
sociology to a disquieted baby-boom generation, died on
Monday at his home in Bremen, Germany. He was 76.

Celia Samerski, a student of his at the University of
Bremen, said the specific cause of death was not known. She
said he also had a home in Cuernavaca, Mexico.

Mr. Illich was perhaps best known for his 1971 book,
"De-Schooling Society," which protested mandatory public
education and the institutionalization of learning. Along
with works like Paul Goodman's, "Growing Up Absurd:
Problems of Youth in the Organized Society," published in
1960, it provided grist for a society's growing ambivalence
about educational institutions and much else.

Mr. Illich was a priest who thought there were too many
priests, a lifelong educator who argued for the end of
schools and an intellectual sniper from a perch with a wide
view. He argued that hospitals cause more sickness than
health, that people would save time if transportation were
limited to bicycles and that historians who rely on
previously published material perpetuate falsehoods.

His intellectual ordnance of anarchist panache, hatred of
bureaucracy, Jesuitic argumentation, deep reverence for the
past and watered-down Marxism, was applied to many targets,
including relations between the sexes. More often than not,
his conclusions were startling: he thought life was better
for women in pre-modern times.

Critics often picked holes in his complex, verbose
arguments, but not a few hailed them as illuminating
critiques of large problems. Anatole Broyard, writing in
The New York Times in 1971, said that his nitpicks were
"like criticizing the grammar of someone who has just
delivered a speech that gave us goose pimples."

But after his 1970's heyday, interest in Mr. Illich's ideas
appeared to wane. Speaking invitations declined, and even
some that still came dripped with nostalgia: Mayor Jerry
Brown of Oakland, who was called Governor Moonbeam when he
was governor of California and consorted with
out-of-the-box thinkers like R. Buckminster Fuller and Mr.
Illich, invited him to a conference in 2000.

By 1989, Mr. Broyard wrote in an article about winnowing
books from his library that he would "especially" discard
Mr. Illich's works.

Mr. Illich was born on Sept. 4, 1926, in Vienna. He is
survived by two brothers, Micha, of Manhattan. and Sascha,
of Nantucket, Mass.

His father, a civil engineer, descended from Dalmatian
royalty. His mother was a Sephardic Jew, and Ivan was
expelled from a school in Vienna in 1941 because of her
background. He went on to study in Florence and Rome and in
Salzburg, where he wrote his doctoral dissertation on the
historian Arnold Toynbee.

Mr. Illich came to the Washington Heights neighborhood of
Manhattan in 1952 after being ordained as a priest in Rome.
He particularly attended to the needs of Puerto Ricans,
helping establish an employment agency among other things.
In an interview with The New Yorker magazine in 1970, the
Rev. John Connolly, one of his colleagues, called him
"their Babe Ruth."

The article said that early in his career as a priest,
Father Illich began to criticize the church for "its
smugness, its bureaucracy and its chauvinism." But his
energy and intellect propelled him to the position of vice
rector of the Catholic University of Ponce in Puerto Rico.
He was forced out in 1960 for opposing the local bishop's
forbidding of Catholics to vote for a governor who
advocated state-sponsored birth control.

After being recalled briefly to New York, he was assigned
to Cuernavaca, a small city 50 miles west of Mexico City
where he established the Intercultural Center for
Documentation to teach priests and laymen who wanted to
become Latin American volunteers.

Mr. Illich's criticisms of church doctrine ranged beyond
his advocacy of birth control, and in 1969 he was branded
"politically immoral" by the Vatican and left the
priesthood.

Among other things, he disagreed with the church policy of
increasing the number of priests in Latin America. He
believed that the church could be revived only by lay
people, a populist view that he later applied first to
education and then to other institutions.

"Illich is not against schools or hospitals as such, but
once a certain threshold of institutionalization is
reached, schools make people more stupid, while hospitals
make them sick," wrote Matthias Finger and Jose Manuel
Asu'n in "Adult Education at the Crossroads: Learning Our
Way Out" (Zed Books, 2001).

"And more generally, beyond a certain threshold of
institutionalized expertise, more experts are
counterproductive - they produce the counter effect of what
they set out to achieve," they continued.

Mr. Illich's sweeping conclusions struck some readers as
too sweeping, and others as plain wrong. Peter Sparkman in
The New York Times Book Review in 1971 criticized
"De-Schooling Society" as not only "a mind-bending litany
of abstraction" but as a distraction from schools' all too
real problems. He called it "an exceedingly bad book
written by an exceedingly good man."

But Mr. Illich relished surprise, and his ideas almost
always did. "We must have a sarcastic readiness for all
surprises," he said in The New Yorker interview, "including
the ultimate surprise of death."

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/04/obituaries/04ILLI.html?ex=1040007818&ei=1&en=cc6d65a262dc54bc



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