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Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly • $14 Per Year

FALL RIVER, MASS.

VOL. SO, NO.8· Friday, February 24, 2006

Where souls are fed: St. Anthony's Food Pantry·

Boston's Archbishop O'Malley appointed a cardinal by pope

By DEACON JAMES N. DUNBAR NEW BEDFORD - "I need to have the food and some soup to make things OK," the 60-year-old woman with a thin smile said, leaning back against the wall in the basement ofSt Anthony's Church on Acushnet Avenue. It was a stark reminder that the " ...and I shall be healed." Catholics pray in unison before receiving holy Communion, refers to the whole person, soul, mind, heart - and body too. It was also a reminder that St. Anthony'S Parish's team of volunteers, led by Paula Briden, were indeed catering to the whole person at its Food Pantry, where, every Thursday, approximately 80 people line up to eat a hearty soup and take home a bag of needed groceries. 'This place makes a difference in my life and for the kids," an unmarried 22-year-old mother said. She and her 26-yearold boyfriend colint on his occasional "day-laborer" pay to feed them and their three-year-old and one-year-old children. What little they had was lost when a recent fIre badly damaged their apartment - where they still continue to live despite its lack of ordinary utilities. Without a car and any assistance compensation run out, they ''feel trapped." Tum to page 13 - Pantry

By DEACON JAMES N.

DUNBAR AND eNS NEWS REPORTS

RULES FOR LENT Wednesday. March 1, is Ash Wednesday. The Church's regulations for the Lenten season follow: - abstinence from meat on Ash Wednesday, all Fridays during Lent and Good Friday for those aged 14 and older; . - Ash Wednesday and Good Friday are to be observed as days of fasting for those aged 18 to

59. Fasting is defined as eating only one full meal and two light meals during the day. Eating between meals is not permitted; liquids, however, are permitted.

REGISTERED NURSE Paula Briden takes the blood pressure of Margharita Cruz at St. Anthony's Food Pantry in New Bedford on food distribution day. Briden is executive director of the parish-run pantry which also offers lunch to the needy every Thursday. (Anchor Photo)

FALL RIVER - Wednesday's announcement that Boston Archbispop Sean P. O'Malley, OFM Cap., former Bishop of Fall River, had been named a cardinal by Pope Benedict I . XVI, brought resounding cheers and applause across the diocese. . As The I!Anchor went to press, a statement was still awaited from Bishop George W. Coleman, who succeeded the Cardin~l-designateas bishop of Fall River in July 2003. Bishop Coleman is traveling in Guaimaca, Honduras, visiting two missionary sister parishes and clergy the diocese sponsors there. Msgr. Stephen J. Avila, who had been Cardinal-designate O'Malley's secretary for six of the former bishop's 10year tenure in the Fall River diocese, said, "It's certainly wonderful and I'm overjoyed. It's a confmnation for me ... that the Lord knows what he is doing. "Knowing Cardinal-designate Sean as well as I do, having been with him in public and behind the scenes, I think he humbly accepts the honor as a true servant of the Church. He certainly never looked for any recognition such as this. But the Ch\lrch - and many people - over the years have come to recognize the blessing he is, not just his service and fidelity, but his loyalty to the mandate of the Gospel and living it out every day." The pastor of St. John Neumann Parish in East Freetown. Msgr. Avila said, "I know that the cardinal-designate never imagined anticipated that anything like this would happen to him; that as a young friar studying and teaching in Washington, he thought that's where he would always be: there, or in the missions." But much like St. Francis of Assisi, the itinerant founder of the Franciscans himself, the calls by the Church for his ministry ~nd talents have taken Cardinal-designate 1)' Malley far from the life of a missionary priest he imagined. His timely summonses to go and heal not one, but two dioceses-and an archdiocese troubled with clergy sexual abuse scandals, is mysteriously but effectively reflected by his episcopal motto emblazoned on his coat of arms: "Qupdcumque Dixerit Facite" ("Do whatever He asks of you"). .

or

eYo's rich history continues throughout diocese >

Thousands of young people are participating in eya basketball leagues By MIKE GORDON ANCHOR STAFF

EAST TAUNTON - The Fall River diocesan CYO has a rich history and thanks to many dedicated people more pages are being added to it each year. Thousands of young people have benefited from the CYO sPorts programs and the current basketball league is no exception; according to diocesan CYO Director Father Jay T. Maddock. 'The CYO has been a great source ofjoy for myself and all who have participated in its programs," he said. ''Part of it is from my own experience as a child in Mansfield working with FatherJim Kelly. He encouraged us in CYO basketball and when I became a priest I saw the program as a great way to help young people, It's a way that the Church can provide good things for children and minister to them." Currently the CYO, partially funded by Catholic Charities, offers a basketball program for boys and girls which runs from October to April. Each year it also sponsors local golf tourna-

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ments whose champions participate in a diocesan tournament. The basketball program, which has teams in. the Fall River, New Bedford and Taunton deaneries, has nearly 2,000 participants. They range from fourth-grade to age 21. At the close of the season, the leagues hold banquets where trophies and awards are presented. A keynote speaker, often times a prominent sports coach or figure, also giv~s an address. ''We had a CYO program at each parish I was assigned to and I always thought it was very important," Father Maddock said. "It's part of the life of the Church and its children." , Father Maddockbecame the Fall River CYO director in 1982 and diocesan director in 1994. He has dedicated many years of serVice to diocesan youth and is among a distinguished group ofpriests who have made an impact through the y e a r s . . . Fathers Paul F.·McCarrick and Walter A. Sullivan, for whom the Fall River CYO is now dedicated, are names Turri to page three - CYO 0

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GIRLS FROM the undefeated St. Anne's Cya team take a br~ak before their basketball game at the Sullivan-McCarrick Cya Center in Fall River. They and hundreds ibf boys and girls participate in Cya programs thr<~ughout the diocese. (AnchodGordon photo)


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