03.02.07

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Back from Rome, two diocesan priests assume wdrk in parishes By DEACON JAMES N. DUNBAR

trator at St. Anthony's Parish in New Bedford on FALL RIVER - From all the smiles it seems two. March 1, will be his first full-time parish assignment. diocesan priests just returned from Rome - and 'Tin happy and looking forward to filling in for Father Roger J. pressed into immediate service in the i Landry as he takes

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SHARING KNOWLEDGE - Father George E. Harrison, seated with cap, pastor of Holy Name Parish, Fall River, and Donna Canuel, from the Diocese of Fall River, led an oral hygiene clinic during a recent visit to the diocesan mission in Guaimaca, Honduras. (Photo courtesy of Mary Mitchell Hodkinson, RN)

Guaimaca Mission inspires volunteers By MARY MITCHELL HODKINSON, RN, SPECIAL TO THE ANCHOR

GUAIMACA, Honduras - In the dusty town of Guaimaca in central Honduras, a six-year old boy and his mother stepped into our clinic on a January morning. They had walked down from a distant mountain village to seek treatment for the mother. Since the little boy was exceptionally dirty from his trip, I washed his face and hands. The little brown-eyed boy looked up with gratitude and tried to say something. But only a guttural "uh, uh, uh" came out. I asked the mother why he couldn't speak. She said that he was born deaf. "He's trying to say thank you," she said. That "thank you" was compensation enough for my I0 days of volunteering as a nurse at the diocesan mission in Guaimaca. I was not alone. Fourteen others had come down from the Fall River Diocese to staff for a short while this needy little village 2,000 miles from Fall River. Father George E. Harrison, pas-

tor of Holy Name Parish in Fall River, was among our group. Father Craig A. Pregana, also a priest from the Fall River Diocese, is the resident priest in the area. Our small band of volunteers had arrived nine days earlier, having traveled from Boston to Houston to Tegucigalpa International Airport where we were met by· some altar boys from Santa Rosa de Lima Parish, Sister Maria, Father Pregana and an America volunteer named Mika. The altar boys gave us our first Spanish lessons. We wondered why they laughed at our attempts to pronounce "hola," Spanish for "hello." Then we were off in an old yellow school bus on a bumpy trip over mountain roads to Guaimaca. Off the main road tiny concrete block houses dotted nameless dirt roads. Windows were open to the elements, attracting dust from the roads and respiratory problems for the families within. The old school bus pulled up to a one-story building, which was Tum to page 20 - Mission

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back ... and into pastoral ministry," said Msgr. Gerard O'Connor, who in late January winded up a six-year assignment in the Eternal City following his July 22, MSGR. GERARD O'CONNOR 2000 ordination that included studies for a licentiate in Sacred Liturgy from the Pontifical Liturgical Institute at St. Anselm's University as well as full-time service with the Congregation for the Clergy. "It does feel good being back home," added Father Karl C. Bissinger, a Fall River native, and former member of St. Joseph's Parish, who returned February 15 following completion of studies for a licentiate in Biblical Theology at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome that began in the fall of 2005. For Msgr. O'Connor, outside of summer ministries in three parishes en route to the priesthood and two months helping out at Martha's Vineyard parishes after ordination, becoming parochial adminis-

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for some of his duties too at The Anchor where he is the executive editor," 41-year-old Msgr. O'Connor, a British native, said. Father Landry is FAT~ER KARL C. BISSINGER heading to St. John's Seminary in Boston for a few months to complete his license in moral theology for the John Paul IT Institute in Rome. Msgr. O'Connor's winding road to New Bedford via th~ Vatican and as English-speaking staffer to Cardinal iOario Castrillon-Hoyos, began in Kingston Upon:: Hull, East Yorkshire, England. Following bachelor's and master's degrees in business administration from Kingston University in London, he worked there as head of marketing for a computer services and software firm and transferred to Boston in 1992. . "So it's been 11 years since I've lived in New England and I've forgotten how snowy and cold it can Tum to page 18 - Priests i'

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Faithful citizens By GAIL BESSE ANCHOR CORRESPONDENT

Looking for a Lenten action that's grounded in Scripture? Becoming a little more politically active is one response to Christ's call to be "salt ofthe earth" and "light of the world" (Mt 5:13-14). It's a response that Catholics of all ages are feeling the Holy Spirit prompt them toward as the disconnect widens between religion and public life. Take 30-year-oldVictor Pap and his 26-year-old wife Mary, for example. Concern about the world that their infant daughter will face led this Weymouth couple to sacrifice some time working with VoteOnMarriage, the coalition of faith-based groups backing the Protection of Marriage Amendment. On the other hand, Jane Wilcox ofAssonet found she had more time to read up on issues since she retired from teaching. "I realized there's a need for Catholics in the pews like me - who never did a thing - to

say my vote counts, too," she said. Wilcox now volunteers with the lay-run Catholic Citizenship as a legislative liaison. She lets parishes in her district know what their Beacon Hill lawmakers are doing on issues

like cloning, stem-cell rdearch and education. "People need to understand how politics affects our kids and grandchildren," she said. "I ~asn't that comfortable with this at "first, but I felt like it was a moral bbligation. And it's really not that hard to simply say: this is my opinion."

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Likewise, Patricia Stebbins of East Sandwich found that as she spoke out on Pro-Life issues, other Catholics found their voices. Now she and people from 14 churchesthe Cape Cod Family Life Alliance - meet monthly to pursue activities in the public arena on behalf of Church teachings. "We're regarded by Bishop George W. Coleman as 'the strong right arm of Catholic Citizenship on the Cape,'" she said. "We promote education, arrange for speakers, tape cable shows. Our meetings don't go into politics, but of course we're involved as individuals." Stebbins said similar cells could easily ~ultiply statewide. Politicians who do support Judeo-Christian values urgently need support, as recent news reports reveal. The Boston gay advocacy newspaper In Newsweekly Jan. 25 detailed a well organized strategy to lobby Bay State legislators. And a March article in Atlantic Tum to page 18 - Citizens


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03.02.07 by The Anchor - Issuu