The Anchor Diocese of Fall River
F riday , February 1, 2013
Support for Life Marches On
Assembly marks tragic anniversary
By Christine M. Williams Anchor Correspondent
Diocesan pilgrims join record march
BOSTON — The six, 54foot glass towers stand to remember the six million Jewish people who perished in the Holocaust’s death camps. They are graced with the words of survivors, including author Elie Wiesel, who said the towers evoke “an era in history when civilization lost its humanity and humanity its soul.” Less than a quarter of a mile from Boston’s New England Holocaust Memorial on January 27, International Holocaust Remembrance Day, more than 350 Massachusetts residents gathered to mark a different slaughter of innocents. They came to Faneuil Hall for Massachusetts Citizens for Life’s annual Assembly for Life, held this year days after the 40th anniversary of Roe v. Wade. Jaymie Stewart Wolfe — a music minister, children’s book editor and columnist for The Pilot, the Archdiocese of Boston’s newspaper — served as the assembly’s emcee and en-
By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Pilgrims from across the Fall River Diocese filled nine buses to make the trek to the nation’s capital last week for the annual March for Life. This year’s event saw a record number of attendees — the majority of them students and young Catholics — who expressed a profound need to voice their support for the more than 50 million innocent unborn babies who have been killed since forty years on — Some of the more than 500,000 people, above, who participated in this passage of the Supreme Court deciyear’s historic March for Life as they made their way up Constitution Avenue in Washington, sion legalizing abortion. D.C. towards the steps of the Supreme Court on January 25. Below, a row of 40 tiny crosses The March for Life — now in its were displayed on the front lawn of St. Bernard’s Church in Assonet on January 22, marking 40th year — marks the anniversary the 40th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court ruling that legalized abortion in the of the landmark decision in Roe United States. (Top photo by Kenneth J. Souza, bottom photo by Paul Levesque) v. Wade, which legalized abortion throughout the country. While the annual march is usually held on January 22, marking the date of the 1973 ruling, it was moved this year to January 25 due to the presidential inauguration held on January 21. “It was incredible, the largest march I have ever attended,” said Marian Desrosiers, director of the Diocesan Pro-Life Apostolate. “Hundreds of thousands of young people, from all over the country,
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Families are the focus in upcoming Family Rosary Lenten Retreat By Dave Jolivet, Editor
NORTH DARTMOUTH — While he always had his faith, David Calvillo admittedly thought he was “too cool to pray the Rosary.” Today, the husband and father of seven, and attorney and CPA is a nationally-known author and founder of Real Men Pray the Rosary, a web-based ministry promoting prayer, family and community. Calvillo will be bringing his message and humor to the Family Rosary Lenten Retreat, sponsored by Family Rosary of Holy Cross Family Ministries in Easton. The retreat will take place March 10 from 1:30 to 5 p.m. at Bishop
Stang High School in North Dartmouth. “My mother always wanted me to pray the Rosary,” Calvillo told The Anchor, “but I was a knucklehead and thought it was only for old ladies and funerals.” Calvillo said he was touched by the Holy Spirit and realized the Rosary was a valuable and powerful tool for Catholics. “I was fortunate that God gave me the grace to be able to pray the Rosary with my mother before she passed away. I am very grateful for that.” What prompted Calvillo to begin the Real Men Pray the Rosary ministry was seeing someone out-
side his parish church. “I saw this real rough-looking guy, a biker dude, who had a Rosary wrapped around his big fist and was praying it,” he said. “I thought to myself, ‘This is a real man, and he’s not afraid to pray the Rosary.’” It made a great impression on Calvillo, and he was “guided by the Holy Spirit to reach out to the other knuckleheads like myself and redirect them. We all have someone to pray for us, and we too can pray for someone else.” “Many Christians and even Catholics don’t know the Rosary,” he continued. “Blessed John Paul II asked that we utilize it. In Real Men Pray the Rosary, we
promote the Rosary within the context and in unity with the Liturgy and our daily lives.” The realmenpraytherosary.org website, provides instructions on how to pray the Rosary, daily reflections, news, and other valuable tools and information to help men be good husbands, fathers, sons, and Christians. “We have a Facebook page with more than 23,000 ‘likes,’ said Calvillo. “I go on everyday and post a reflection, and then watch people respond. Half the ‘likes’ are from the United States, but the other half are from all over the world. It’s interesting, Turn to page 15
family time — David Calvillo, shown with two of his sons, is one of the keynote speakers at Family Rosary Lenten Retreat at Bishop Stang High School on March 10.