Monaghan is a
Roman Catholic with a particular interest in
pro-life causes. He announced his retirement in 1998 after 38 years with Domino's Pizza, Inc. Monaghan sold 93 percent of the company to
Bain Capital for around $1 billion, ceased being involved in day-to-day operations of the company, and subsequently dedicated his time and considerable fortune to Catholic causes. A supporter of Catholic teachings "to combat the nation's 'moral crisis, Monaghan has spent hundreds of millions of dollars promoting them. by composer Stephen Edwards, was commissioned by Monaghan "to express in music the spiritual commitment behind the founding of Ave Maria College and Ave Maria School of Law". This mass, recorded and released on CD in 2002, was dedicated by the composer to the victims of the
September 11, 2001 attacks. Monaghan publicly promotes daily attendance at
Mass, daily recitation of the
rosary and frequent sacramental
confession. He has also committed to spending what remains of his $1 billion fortune on philanthropic endeavors. Though Monaghan has denied ever being a member of the
Word of God community, in 1989 a coalition of seven groups (including the National Organization for Women, the Latin American Solidarity Committee, and the Ann Arbor Commission to Defend Abortion Rights) protested an alleged connection between Monaghan and Word of God.
Catholic organizations In 1983, he established the Mater Christi Foundation, today known as the
Ave Maria Foundation, to focus on Catholic education, media, community projects and other charities. Monaghan is founder and CEO of Legatus International, an organization of business Executives, Presidents, CEOs, and their spouses who are committed to studying, living and spreading the Catholic faith. Founded in 1987, Legatus empowers their 5,000+ members to boldly live their Catholic identity as "Ambassadors for Christ in the Marketplace". In 1988, Pope John Paul II addressed members of Legatus and encouraged them, “The world needs genuine witnesses to Christian ethics in the field of business and the Church asks you to fulfill this role publicly with courage and perseverance.” In 1997, he recruited former
Evangelical pastor
Al Kresta to lead Ave Maria Communications, which became the first Catholic radio apostolate in America with the popularly known
Ave Maria Radio. He also established the
Ave Maria List anti-abortion political action committee, and the
Thomas More Law Center, a public interest law firm dedicated to promoting social conservative issues such as opposition to
abortion,
same sex marriage, and
secularism. In addition, his foundation established the Spiritus Sanctus Academies. These elementary schools are administered by the
Dominican Sisters of Mary, Mother of the Eucharist. The Ave Maria Foundation has subsequently fine-tuned its focus to higher education, and has established both
a university and
a law school. Along with that change in focus, many of the other non-profit entities that the Ave Maria Foundation established have become independent or are in the process of being weaned from Ave Maria Foundation grants. Monaghan is reputed to be a member of
Opus Dei and has been aligned with a number of other conservative Catholic organizations and causes. He is a knight of magistral grace in the
Sovereign Military Order of Malta.
Ave Maria School of Law The
Ave Maria School of Law, previously located in
Ann Arbor, Michigan, opened its doors in 2000 and received full accreditation from the
American Bar Association in 2005. The school was a dream of several professors from the Catholic
University of Detroit Mercy, who publicly left that institution when it allowed several
pro-choice members of the Michigan Supreme Court to appear at the school's annual "Red Mass." Professors Stephen Safranek, Mollie Murphy, Richard Myers and Joseph Falvey, setting out to form a new orthodox Catholic law school, presented their idea to Monaghan (who had previously been a strong supporter of opening a new law school at
Franciscan University) to provide significant funding through his Ave Maria Foundation. Together they enlisted Bernard Dobranski, Dean at
The Catholic University of America's law school and former Dean of Detroit Mercy's Law School, to lead up the new school as dean. Monaghan served as president of the school's Board of Governors. Faculty members have included conservative legal scholar and Supreme Court nominee Judge
Robert Bork. Supreme Court Justice
Antonin Scalia assisted in developing the school's curriculum, and the school's first annual Ave Maria Lecture was presented by Supreme Court Justice
Clarence Thomas in 1999. The school's stated goal is to educate competent moral attorneys who will influence all aspects of the legal profession and advance
natural law theory. The Ave Maria Law School graduated its last Michigan class in the spring of 2009 before relocating to
Naples, Florida. in
Ypsilanti, Michigan. In various attempts to accelerate accreditation, Monaghan acquired
St. Mary's College of Orchard Lake and a campus in
Nicaragua, renamed
Ave Maria College of the Americas. Due to lack of funding, the college, against faculty and student protests, closed in 2007. Alternative funding was not secured to prevent the school's closure. St. Mary's College was sold and is now under the auspices of nearby
Madonna University.
Ave Maria University, Florida In early 2002, Monaghan sought to establish the
Ave Maria University in Ann Arbor, at Domino's Farms, the large corporate office park that he owned and leased to Domino's Pizza. The plans included a 250-foot
crucifix, taller than the
Statue of Liberty. A joint venture, in which Monaghan is a 50% partner with developer Barron Collier, controls all non-university real estate in the town, and plans to build 11,000 homes and several business districts. Pulte Homes has been signed up to build most of the private homes. Monaghan said in 2005 that any town retailers would not be allowed to sell
contraceptives or
pornography, a statement that drew legal criticism from the
American Civil Liberties Union. Threatened with lawsuits, Monaghan and the developers went on a national
public relations campaign in March 2007 to retract the notion that Catholic doctrine could ever be enforced as law.
Defenders of Wildlife also challenged the development, stating it is destroying habitat of the endangered
Florida panther.
Ave Maria Mutual Funds Monaghan helped to establish the
Ave Maria Mutual Funds by asking friend George P. Schwartz of Schwartz Investment Counsel, Inc. to launch the Ave Maria Catholic Values Fund in May 2001. There are now five Ave Maria Mutual Funds. They are described as targeted at investors seeking to place their money in companies whose operations are in keeping with the core teachings of the Catholic Church. The fund calls their shareholders "morally responsible investors". The funds are open to individual investors with a $1,000 minimum investment. Monaghan is a member of the Catholic Advisory Board. The board sets the religious criteria that screen companies before the funds will invest in them. Involvement with contraception, non-marital partner employee benefits, pornography, and abortion are some issues that disqualify a company from the fund.
Lou Holtz,
Larry Kudlow, Michael Novak, Phyllis Schlafly and Paul Roney are the other members of the Funds' Catholic Advisory Board. Cardinal
Adam Maida (of the
Archdiocese of Detroit) is the board's ecclesiastic advisor. == Personal ==