December 6
| 2020
VOL 30 NO 2
IN THIS ISSUE DOING HIS JOB A8 A6 JUST Officer Kyle Botica saluted for his lifesaving heroics
IN FOCUS College missionaries evangelizing in a COVID world
B1
END OF AN ERA Last Sisters of Mercy of the Americas retire from East Tennessee
He dwells among us ......................... A3 Parish news ....................................... B4 Diocesan calendar ............................ B5 Columns ..........................................B8-9 Catholic schools .......................... B3,10 La Cosecha ............................Section C
Letters of Hope connect seniors to pen pals Knoxville Catholic High School students turn COVID outreach idea into global group
By Emily Booker
COURTESY OF PAM RHOADES/KNOXVILLE CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL
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he pandemic has kept many people apart and homebound for much of the year. For seniors it can be an incredibly lonely time as family and friends can’t visit in order to keep them safe and healthy. But a group of high school students is making sure the senior citizens in their commuBe a pen pal nity know they are not forgotten. If you’d like to Knoxville Catholic take part in Letters High School seniors of Hope, you can Marisa McMichael, Fatifollow the project ma Arias-Santiago, and on Twitter @letterAn Doan found a way sofhope2 and on to bring hope and joy Instagram @knox. to those feeling isolated lettersofhope. and alone. You can also sign “We were in the same up to be a pen pal religion class last year, or volunteer by eand we were brainstorming before the mailing the group pandemic some ideas at knox.lettersofon how to help our comhope@gmail.com. munity,” Marisa said. “Then, when COVID-19 happened, we wanted to do something with that, and elderly residents came to mind.” They reached out to several Knoxville-area assisted-living and dementia-care facilities and began writing letters to the senior residents. Thus began Letters of Hope, a program that started with three students and has now grown to participants all over the world. They became pen pals with the senior residents, writing about life as a young person and asking about their lives as seniors. They also encouraged the elderly through a very lonely time of lockdown.
Pen pals Letters of Hope participants from Knoxville Catholic High School include (front row) Molly Brinkmann, Teresa Cao, Emma Kollie, Minh Cao, Gracie Guess, and (back row) Andy Moyer, Matthew Phan, Cyrah Weddle, Marisa McMichael, An Doan, Fatima Arias-Santiago, Lisé Badeaux, Karina Dale, and Ilse Dale. “I also told them that they were not alone. I always tried to let them know that I was here for them even though I didn’t know them,” Fatima said. The goal of every interaction is to spread a bit of positivity and connection while the pandemic keeps people apart. And do that while following coronavirus protocols like social distancing and wearing masks. “Initially it was just us trying to help the community, but it seemed like a lot of our friends
wanted to do it, too, which expanded it,” An said. “We started with writing letters in March and April,” Fatima said. “We decided letters would be the best possible way to help them not feel isolated because we couldn’t see them in person or anything like that during the pandemic.” “Then we started making Google forms for people to sign up. People started signing up, and we started sending out names. It was surprising Letters continued on page A12
St. Mary Parish breaks ground on parish life center Gatlinburg church will have more room for CCD classes, other youth and adult programs
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Site preparation Bishop Richard F. Stika on Oct. 19 blessed the site with holy water where St. Mary Church in Gatlinburg is building a parish life center. St. Mary has seen its parish activities grow significantly, prompting the need for more space. Accompanying Bishop Stika is St. Mary pastor Father Antony Punnackal, CMI. The project is expected to be completed by late 2021.
DAN MCWILLIAMS
t. Mary Church in Gatlinburg is bursting at the seams, and the 85-year-old community just recently broke ground on a new parish life center that will help provide space for a growing number of CCD students and for parish meetings, office space, and other needs. Bishop Richard F. Stika presided Oct. 19 at the groundbreaking and blessings of the site and cornerstone for the new facility. St. Mary pastor Father Antony Punnackal, CMI, was present, as were diocesan chancellor Deacon Sean Smith, Gatlinburg mayor Mike Werner, city manager Cindy Ogle, and many parishioners. The parish’s CCD (Confraternity of Christian Doctrine) program was dormant, with some youth receiving instruction in other parishes, until Father Punnackal and director of religious education Stacy Champagne restarted it in recent years. Two small basement classrooms and the daily chapel are currently being used for meeting space, with the St. Mary’s Grotto outdoors as a warm-weather meeting site. “We’re a unique place up here. There are not a lot of local people living up here, so the majority of our parishioners are tourists,” said parish council chair Steve Champagne. “But we realized that there was a need for CCD programs and Catholic faith formation and different classes for our youth. Under Father Antony’s lead
By Dan McWilliams
along with my wife, Stacy, they started the CCD program back up. They went from having 20 kids the first year to having over 90 the next year. With that kind of explosive growth, we had nowhere to put these kids. We were using wall dividers to put them on one side of the church or the other. “The CCD program is thriving. It’s doing very well, even in spite of COVID,” he added. That situation helped lead to 2016
conversations within the parish as to what to do, Mr. Champagne said. The parish rolls had grown to 125 permanent families, with tremendous growth in Hispanic family numbers, for a Catholic community that welcomes hundreds of tourists every spring and summer. The parish office is currently housed in the rectory, which is not a suitable location. “Our CCD program was growing rapidly. Through the success of many
volunteers, Father Antony did a great job of really pushing the youth in our programs,” Mr. Champagne said. “We realized we were running out of space. We needed a parish office. We needed a larger gathering space for church functions. It was decided by the parish council way back in 2016 to explore available options for the parish to obtain the additional space that was needed. After looking at posSt. Mary continued on page A10