Dec. 5, 2021, ET Catholic, B section

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NEWS FROM THE DIOCESE OF KNOXVILLE

B section

Annual Christmas donations bring joy to families St. Albert the Great Parish ministry serves kids from Appalachia through Crazy Quilt

COURTESY OF ED BRYANT

size, but then the kids are asked what their favorite hobbies or activities are and what gifts they would most like to receive. “We want there to be as much choice as possible, but we have limitations in what we can provide also,” said Erin Wessell, a St. Albert parishioner who currently serves as chair of the CWOM committee. “This year we had kids choose whether they wanted a hoodie or a jacket or a coat.” The past several programs have served around 60 children and 26 families. “St. Albert kind of adopted those kids,” Mr. Bryant said. “They have been great, they have been good to us.” The children participating in this program are not from St. Albert the Great, but to Mrs. Wessell that makes it more special. “Most people in the St. Albert community don’t actually see any of the people in the Crazy Quilt community,” she said. “It’s just kind of nice helping create community even when people don’t necessarily individually meet each other, but just that bond there.” “[Ed is] wonderful and he just really has a heart for the community up there and any way he can help,”

Crazy Quilt Christmas party Crazy Quilt program coordinator Ed Bryant plays Santa at a Christmas party. With him is Santa’s helper (Mr. Bryant’s wife, Pat).

COURTESY OF ST. ALBERT THE GREAT PARISH

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or some children living in East Tennessee, the only Christmas presents they’ll receive each year are the ones gifted to them by charities and churches. And for St. Albert the Great Parish in North Knoxville, this reality is something that fuels its Corporal Works of Mercy (CWOM) ministry to give year after year. For Christmas, Easter, and backto-school programs each year, this ministry assists the Mountain Arts Program led by Crazy Quilt, a food pantry and emergency-assistance program under Catholic Charities of East Tennessee. The Mountain Arts Program is a creative learning outlet for children ages 5 to 15, and according to Crazy Quilt’s website, “the four-day program includes a nutritious lunch each day, and each participant receives needed shoes, clothing, and classroom supplies for the coming school year.” With each new summer session, program coordinator Ed Bryant sends his list of participant names to the CWOM committee, and this list is used to identify how many children are in need of the Christmas donations for that year. The lists include information such as name, age, grade, and clothing

By Gabrielle Nolan

‘St. Albert kind of adopted those kids’ Young people helped by the Mountain Arts Program pose for a photo at Crazy Quilt. Mrs. Wessell said. The St. Albert CWOM ministry began in 2007 after the founding of the parish and is run by a committee of around 35 regular volunteers. Father Chris Michelson, the founding pastor of St. Albert, attends the meetings and oversees any finances related to the ministry. “We have a wonderful committee, they take care of everything,” Father Michelson said. “It really, from day one, has cost the parish in terms of the gifts for the kids, nothing. That is all tags that are put out and people purchasing gifts and bringing them back, and that’s how we fund that.” According to Maria Armento, the ministries coordinator at St. Albert the Great, these three projects have average total donations of around $20,000 each fiscal year. “For the past several years we have benefited from matching funds of $3,000 from the Pope Francis Charitable Trust Fund from the diocese to help us continue to expand our help for these programs,” Ms. Armento said. “Because of this extra

money, we were able to provide hoodies to all our children along with paper products and other cleaning supplies in our food baskets last Christmas.” Depending on the donations and availability of funds each year, the committee may be able to buy extra goodies, such as games or candy, for each child’s Christmas basket. Each family also receives a box full of food, which normally includes items for a Christmas dinner, such as a ham, bag of potatoes, canned goods, and cake mix with icing. Long-lasting nonperishables like canned soups and peanut butter also are included. The food baskets have household items like laundry detergent, paper goods, and cleaning supplies, too. “If you can take a little burden off of a family and say, ‘Hey, this month you don’t have to buy these things so you have a little extra to, you know, [buy] a Christmas treat for yourselves,’ well good,” Mrs. Wessell said. “Crazy Quilt is a great project, CWOM ministry continued on page B2

A priestly vocation takes a worldwide journey

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he word “catholic” means “universal,” and one priest who exemplifies this universal faith is Father Valentin Iurochkin, IVE, the current parochial vicar at the Basilica of Sts. Peter and Paul in Chattanooga. Father Iurochkin, 29, is a Russian citizen by birth who came to the United States as a priest after years of traveling and studying around the world. “I’ve been to almost [all of] Europe. I’ve been to America. . . . I’ve been to South America . . . Argentina, Paraguay, Brazil,” he said. “Going to Asia, I’ve been to Russia, Japan, China, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan. . . . I’ve been to the Philippines and Taiwan . . . yeah lots of countries. I’ve been to Africa also, but actually I was in the airport.” From living and studying in multiple countries, Father Iurochkin is now fluent in five different languages: Russian, English, Italian, Spanish, and Mandarin. But such a transitory lifestyle requires a certain detachment from the world, which Father Iurochkin learned at the young age of 6 when his parents left Russia for the United States, and he remained behind with his grandparents to raise him. Today, his parents reside in Detroit.

“It wasn’t a challenge for me to go to a different country, to learn a new language,” he said. “Maybe because I wasn’t that attached to my family, that’s why it helped me to be . . . just, OK, I have to go to study.” In 2010, an opportunity arose for him to join his family in the United States on a green card, but Father Iurochkin turned it down to focus on his faith and instead he joined a religious community called the Institute of the Incarnate Word. “I did prioritize my faith over my personal sentiments or feelings,” he said. “I said to myself, I will be going to the seminary and finish it; I’ll serve God and afterwards maybe, if He wants, I’ll go to America, you never know. Here I am.” “I went to visit my family several times during the past 10 years, but, yeah, I never had this struggle to not be with my family,” Father Iurochkin said. “It helps me to be more detached maybe, which doesn’t mean that I don’t love them. I love them a lot, but it helps me to also feel free to go away at any time.” Father Iurochkin was not born into a Catholic family but discovered the faith as a young teenager searching for the truth. “Our schools had told us all the Father Iurochkin continued on page B6

GABRIELLE NOLAN

Russia native Father Valentin Iurochkin learns diocesan life in East Tennessee

Father Valentin Iurochkin, IVE

By Gabrielle Nolan


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