Can you briefly introduce yourself?
My name is Brendan Gottschall. I’m a Jesuit scholastic of the current Maryland province of the Society of Jesus, soon to be the East Coast Province of the US Jesuits. I am currently a graduate student of Philosophy at Fordham University working on a master’s degree as part of my first studies. I entered the Society in 2014 and took vows in 2016.
Where did you go for college?
I went to Georgetown University for my undergraduate and studied economics and minored in government and Chinese. So I took 4 years of Chinese in my undergraduate but I graduated in 2012, but I haven’t really used Chinese since then, until now.
You mentioned you were studying Economics as an undergrad, but you switched to Philosophy as a graduate student. What made you decide on the change?
Well in order to become a Jesuit priest you have to study philosophy. So immediately after taking vows I was missioned to study philosophy.
Then what made you decide that you wanted to be a Jesuit?
I grew up Catholic, so I saw priests in my home parish as role models and so when I was really little, when people asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up I would say that I wanted to be a priest. Then when I was in high school, those feelings and desires were still there but I felt like I needed to experience the world so I kind of ignored them through college. During college I sort of reconnected with my faith in a deeper way and then also with this call to become a priest. At that time I met Jesuits who lived a different way of priesthood. They weren’t just parish priests that said Mass and heard confessions and all the regular parish stuff, they were also professionals — teachers, professors, lawyers, doctors. So that really attracted me to the Jesuits, but when I graduated college I still wasn’t ready yet. So I actually worked for two years in an economic consulting firm in Chicago, doing the professional thing before I finally decided to answer the call.
As a member of the Society of Jesus how did you come to be interested in China?
My interest [in China] really came from my undergraduate studies in Chinese. I had not had the opportunity to use my Chinese in any substantial way for the two years that I was working, nor in the two years in the novitiate. But, in talking with my provincial superior, I mentioned that I had this background and asked him, you know, is it something that I should keep alive, and he said yes definitely. He said “Go to China this summer.” So that’s why I’m here! Really to explore how my interest in Chinese can be a part of my vocation as a Jesuit.
What have you been doing while you’ve been here?
I’ve been on a study tour, visiting Macau, Hong Kong, Xi’an, Hebei and now I am here in Beijing. Since I’ve been here in Beijing, TBC has arranged for me to take some language classes 3 hours a day Monday through Friday, trying to revitalize and rehabilitate my Chinese skills. Also through TBC I’ve been able to go on some trips to explore the sites here in Beijing and get to know the culture here a little more.