Julian, Adrian Riester, Buffalo-Born Twin Friars, Die On Same Day At Age 92

Friars

CAROLYN THOMPSON   06/ 3/11 09:39 PM ET   AP

BUFFALO, N.Y. — Identical twins Julian and Adrian Riester were born seconds apart 92 years ago. They died hours apart this week. The Buffalo-born brothers were also brothers in the Roman Catholic Order of Friars Minor. Professed friars for 65 years, they spent much of that time working together at St. Bonaventure University, doing carpentry work, gardening and driving visitors to and from the airport and around town.

"It was fun to see them, just quiet, gentle souls," Yvonne Peace, who worked at the St. Bonaventure Friary for nearly 21 years, said Friday.

They died Wednesday at St. Anthony Hospital in St. Petersburg, Fla., Brother Julian in the morning and Brother Adrian in the evening.

Both died of heart failure, said Father James Toal, guardian of St. Anthony Friary in St. Petersburg, where the inseparable twins lived since moving from western New York in 2008.

"It really is almost a poetic ending to the remarkable story of their lives," St. Bonaventure spokesman Tom Missel said. "Stunning when you hear it, but hardly surprising given that they did almost everything together."

Julian and Adrian Riester were born Jerome and Irving on March 27, 1919, to a couple who already had five daughters. They took the names of saints upon their ordination in the Catholic church.

"Dad was a doctor and he said a prayer for a boy," Adrian once said, according to St. Bonaventure. "The Lord fooled him and sent two."

After attending St. Joseph's Collegiate Institute, the brothers were turned away by the military because of their eyesight, the university said. One had a bad left eye, the other a bad right eye.

Eventually they joined the friars of Holy Name Province in New York City. They received separate assignments before reuniting at the seminary at St. Bonaventure from 1951 to 1956. After serving parishes in Buffalo for 17 years, they returned to St. Bonaventure in 1973 and spent the next 35 years there.

They had separate rooms in the friary but one telephone extension that rang into both, Peace recalled. It was usually the more talkative Adrian who answered, though Julian possessed a quiet authority. They never said who was born first.

"Brother Julian was like the big brother. Brother Adrian would defer to him," Peace said. "They picked up one of our friars at the airport one time and the friar said, `Can I take you to dinner?'

"Brother Adrian looked at Brother Julian and said, `We aren't going to dinner?' `No, we'll go home,'" Peace said. "So that was it. No discussion, no contradicting. `No, we aren't going today.'"

Funeral services are scheduled for Monday at St. Mary Our Lady of Grace Church in St. Petersburg. Afterward, the brothers' bodies will be flown to Buffalo and buried Wednesday at St. Bonaventure Cemetery, across the street from the university.

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BUFFALO, N.Y. — Identical twins Julian and Adrian Riester were born seconds apart 92 years ago. They died hours apart this week. The Buffalo-born brothers were also brothers in the Roman Catholi...
BUFFALO, N.Y. — Identical twins Julian and Adrian Riester were born seconds apart 92 years ago. They died hours apart this week. The Buffalo-born brothers were also brothers in the Roman Catholi...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kvolovesart
07:57 AM on 06/09/2011
Wow...no coincidence in that...
07:34 PM on 06/06/2011
These were two brothers for whom the Franciscan greeting "Pax et Bonum" was more than a slogan. Would that the world had more people like them, and fewer of the folks who exemplify exactly the opposite attitude toward life and their fellow human beings.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sandra Stipp
04:16 PM on 06/06/2011
A really amazing story about 2 amazing brothers. It would have been very hard I imagine if one lived and the other didn't. I guess God wanted them to be together eternally.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Seaniebhoy
11:12 AM on 06/06/2011
Wonderful story to some I suppose...to me dead is dead....it's sad - not heart warming.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
robert horwitz
06:32 PM on 06/05/2011
A very sad ending to an incredible story but if you ever doubted that there is poetry in life doubt no more.
01:22 PM on 06/05/2011
Maybe slightly off-topic, but I just can't get used to reading or hearing "exact same," as the front-page headline reads. It's a pleonasm, or a redundancy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carlene Sorrells
Penny for your thoughts!
12:20 PM on 06/05/2011
As a twin, I would hate to live on w/o my sister. We are not identical but we share a lot of traits both physically and emotionally Both of our parents along with one of our brothers is gone and going on without her would be devastating. I don't want to be the surviving "twin" but that would mean she would be and that is no comfort either. I wonder if the one brother was told of his brother's death and just gave up.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
unclecrackre
I think, therefore, I think I am
10:39 AM on 06/05/2011
They served God during their lives, even practicing carpentry, which God's Son Jesus did. Their work here is done and they are reaping the rewards of well lived lives. Do not weep for them, yet celebrate the fact that they are in a far better place.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Susan Osterhout Troiano
When getting into an argument, attack the issue, n
09:21 AM on 06/05/2011
My condolence to the family. I too, thought of this being so poetic yet not surprised that twins sharing the same DNA could die the same day.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bentwillowcreek
08:56 AM on 06/05/2011
A little off subject, but close. They were born on the same day,died on the same day, My step Mother was born on the 23rd day of the month of Her birth, and died on the 23rd day of Her death. The artical just made me think of it, sorry.
05:10 PM on 06/05/2011
WHAT???!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MPatrick Dahlke
environmental essayist
08:41 AM on 06/05/2011
What a wonderful story!

Two brothers who walked the earth in what appears to be a perpetual state of grace turning every instance into the simplicity of carpentry.

I had an aunt and uncle who were much like these two gentle men.

She was a psychiatrist. He was a liquor salesmen,

Regarless of who came into their lives, the simple joy of accepting others unconditionally enabled all a nonjudgemental visit into their lives.

When aunt Jean died, Leo wandered aimlessly for nine months until the day, I am sure his heart told him to join her - leaving all who shared their lives quite happily sad.
09:02 AM on 06/05/2011
"Essayists" should write coherently and grammatically. What a mess!
10:47 AM on 06/05/2011
Posters need to be polite. Lets honor these two gentle men by behaving and swallowing our own instinct to be rude.
07:59 AM on 06/05/2011
This is intriguing. Is there a gene that determines how long we'll live naturally? Ummm...
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billnbstn
Love that Dirty Wadah...
07:15 AM on 06/05/2011
I'm a 60 year old Recovering Catholic. Throughout my life of Catholic education, for both my kids and myself, I have encounter immeasurable numbers of wonderful Priests, Nuns and Brothers in the church.
However, there has been a dark side. And it is this dark side why I have left the church.
Until Bernard Law is sent back to Boston, from the safe haven of The Vatican, to face a trial for his participation in the constant transfer of known child abusers, I will not support the church.
08:28 AM on 06/05/2011
And you do great disservice to the immeasurable numbers of wonderful Priests and Nuns by blaming the acts of a few on the entire church. I too know Priests and Nuns who are some of the most wonderful caring compassionate people in the world, and I would never disavow my faith because of a few people and decisions.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ascension
08:32 AM on 06/05/2011
This article is about the death of two friars. Your comment is off topic and rude to the memory of these brothers. Further, if a family member or friend reads this article and scrolls down to your comment, he/she would likely be offended.
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billnbstn
Love that Dirty Wadah...
01:55 PM on 06/07/2011
You could be right about the family being offended, I don't care. But to comment on the dreadful condition of the church that the two Brothers gave their lives is exactly on topic.
And as, I assume by the asension, you're still buying everything that the church is selling, you'll may never see.
06:20 AM on 06/05/2011
Unfortunately, it appears that it takes QUITE a LONG time (HOURS) for the HuffPost arbitrators to do-whatever-it-is-that-they-do to check the STERILITY of posts.
One step forward, two steps back as democracy moves "forward", apparently.
"P.C." is a fine thing if not routed to ridiculous absurdity (excruciating minutia), as it usually is.
The Internet is is relegated to the likes of "snail mail", it appears.
That's just my opinion on one small point. I believe that the folks that check the posts are doing what they can to make the discussion civil. And that is good. Just why so long?
Z-Z-Z-Z-Z-Z-Z-Z--Z-Z-Z-Z-Z-Z-Z-Z-Z-Z.............
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rajb1037
Fortis Fortuna Adiuvat
04:19 AM on 06/05/2011
They have the same DNA - their hearts were almost identical. They lived very, very similar lives, placing similar stressors on said hearts.

Makes sense that they would fail at about the same time.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Susan Osterhout Troiano
When getting into an argument, attack the issue, n
09:19 AM on 06/05/2011
This is what I was thinking as I read the article. My mother is a twin, and I was thinking this could happen to her as well since they have the same DNA.
10:45 AM on 06/05/2011
My dad is a twin also, but I don't expect he will die at the same time as his sister. These two were identical twins and it sounds like they did virtually everything inlife the same regarding diet and activity. Mirror image I suspect, as their eye problems were in opposite eyes. It is an interesting concept.