Diocese of Fall River, Mass.
F riday , January 23, 2015
Catholic Schools foster faith development and academic success By Dr. Michael S. Griffin Diocesan Superintendent of Schools
FALL RIVER — A recent research report from the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University began with the question: “Do Catholic schools matter?” As we begin the celebration of Catholic Schools Week across the United States January 25-31, it is an excellent time to consider the contributions of Catholic Schools, and in particular, the difference Catholic schools are making for the future of our Church. CARA conducted national surveys of adult Catholics and examined the responses of those in different age groups regarding Mass attendance. The results demonstrated higher rates of Mass attendance among Catholic school graduates than the population in general. While this applied to all age groups, the difference
was especially noteworthy in the responses of young adults (age 32 and below), among whom Catholic school attendance appeared to have a particularly strong impact. The trend continued in other areas of the survey in relation to reception of the Sacrament of Confirmation, consideration of priesthood or the religious life, and lay participation in ecclesial ministry. In each case, a positive Catholic school effect was noted, particularly among the younger adults. The study concluded, “In the broadest view, the long-term benefits of Catholic schools in making Mass attendance more likely and helping ensure young Catholics are confirmed (and remain Catholic as adults), along with the importance these institutions play in fostering Catholic leaders likely outweigh many of the Turn to page 11
College professor helps others find God amidst suffering By Becky Aubut Anchor Staff
WESTON — If it bleeds, it leads; the mantra of many a news station or newspaper that inundates the world with a seemingly never-ending list of tragedies and loss of life. As people see these senseless sorrows unfold on a daily basis, one cannot help but question: where is God in the midst of all this suffering and evil? Dr. Ernie Collamati is currently a professor of religious studies at Regis College in Weston, and his choice in studies
stemmed from his interest in trying to decipher some of life’s most often-asked questions: “I became more and more fascinated by what I later called, ‘the questions that never go away,’” said Collamati. “Those deep and abiding questions for human beings: where are we from? Where are we going? Does life make sense? Is there a God?” Those questions led him through a few majors at Providence College until he selected humanities with a focus on the history of philosophy, then went to Turn to page 16
The sixth-graders at Holy Name School in Fall River recently created books to explain how to tell time in Spanish. During Catholic Schools Week, they will use these books to teach their second-grade prayer partners how to tell time.
Anonymous alum inspires matching donation drive By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff
NORTH ATTLEBORO — While most Catholic school teachers and administrators may never know what impact or effect they’ve had on the students who have filtered through their classrooms, Denise Peixoto, principal of St. Mary-Sacred Heart School in North Attleboro, received confirmation via an unexpected and muchappreciated pledge of support from an alum. Upon learning about the school’s recent addition of four modular classrooms to accommodate students in grades six, seven and eight, the former St. Mary-Sacred Heart School grad — who wished to re-
main anonymous — pledged to match, dollar-for-dollar, any and all donations up to $100,000 to offset the costs of the project. “I guess he had heard that some of the project had run over-budget and we were working at trying to add to our growth fund to help defray some of those costs,” Peixoto told The Anchor. “He approached Susan McConville, our development coordinator, and he told her he felt this was a way he could help give back to the school. He came here as well as all of his sisters and brothers and he really felt the school helped to form him into the person he is today, because he’s a very successful businessperson.” Turn to page 22
Local Catholics react to martyrdom of Archbishop Oscar Romero By Christine M. Williams Anchor Correspondent
NEW BEDFORD — Local Catholics originally from El Salvador celebrated the news that Vatican theologians declared Archbishop Oscar Romero a martyr on January 7. They said his steadfast dedication to the poor and outspoken opposition to government tyranny, which lead to his assassination in 1980, show that he was a dedicated Servant of God who was killed for the faith. He was shot through the heart while celebrating Mass. Berta Carranza, parishioner at Our Lady of Guadalupe at St. James Parish in New Bedford, said that Romero
spoke up for the voiceless: “He was a very good guy who really, really followed the message of Jesus. He did what Jesus did for us.” She called the declaration of martyrdom “very special” — to her and El Salvadorian people. “Everybody in my country, they want him to be a saint,” she said. “We are very proud.” When Karla Guzman, from the same New Bedford parish, was a little girl, there were many times that her grandmother took her to the cathedral in San Salvador where Romero is buried. There she attended celebrations on his birthday. She said she expected him to be declared a martyr.
“He was always on the poor people’s side,” she said. “He fought for them until the day he died.” In one of his homilies, Romero said, “The transcendence that the Church preaches is not alienation; it is not going to Heaven to think about eternal life and forget about the problems on earth. It’s a transcendence from the human heart. It is entering into the reality of a child, of the poor, of those wearing rags, of the sick, of a hovel, of a shack. It is going to share with them. And from the very heart of misery, of this situation, to transcend it, to elevate it, to promote it and to say to them, ‘You aren’t trash. You aren’t marginalized.’ It Turn to page 13
Archbishop Oscar Romero receives a sack of beans from parishioners following Mass outside of the church in San Antonio Los Ranchos in Chalatenango, El Salvador, in 1979. (CNS photo/Octavio Duran)