Diocese of Fall River, Mass.
F riday , April 10, 2015
Third-grade students at Holy Family-Holy Name School in New Bedford recently performed the “Dance of the Butterfly” during the Easter Experience. Pictured with the girls are, back, from left: Father Michael Racine, Father Robert Powell and Father Craig Pregana. The Easter Experience was facilitated by Sister Muriel Ann Lebeau, SS.CC.
One man plus 25 shows has equaled success at HFHN By Becky Aubut Anchor Staff
NEW BEDFORD — When Cecilia Felix first met Maurice Ouellette, she wasn’t even principal of Holy Family-Holy Name School in New Bedford yet, but their friendship bore fruit not just personally but professionally when she called upon him to help create a performance art program at HFHN. “I think the arts have a very important part in our community and with kids. I wanted to reach out to the community; there’s a lot of talent in the city. I thought
it would be good to bring good, wholesome entertainment here and this would become the center for it,” said Felix. “Cecilia said that it would be great to do a community outreach through theatre, and I said sure,” said Ouellette. “I’ve been involved in theatre all my life, from high school throughout college in one capacity or another, in acting or directing or doing costume design.” Twenty-five years later, the Laurel Tree Players (www.LaurelTreePlayers.org) has not only raised almost half-a-million dolTurn to page 15
The Catholic movement Communion and Liberation sponsored its annual Way of the Cross beginning at St. Joseph-St. Therese Church on Acushnet Avenue and processing through Brooklawn Park in New Bedford on Good Friday. The group, accompanied by Father Luca Brancolini, F.S.C.B., stopped at designated “stations” along the way to meditate on Christ’s Passion and to recite prayers, readings and hymns. After traveling through the park and along Ashley Boulevard, the Way of the Cross concluded at St. Mary’s Church on Tarkiln Hill Road. (Photo by Kenneth J. Souza)
Transformed by Holy Week: Personal reflections of our new shepherd By Linda Andrade Rodrigues Anchor Correspondent
The 2014 performance of “The 39 Steps” by the Laurel Tree Players saw Maurice Ouellette, left, and four other cast members play every role in the comedic production.
FALL RIVER — During Holy Week at the Cathedral of St. Mary of the Assumption, we were in the midst of more than a hundred priests, deacons
and seminarians at the Chrism Mass; we were disciples at the Last Supper; we were there when they crucified Our Lord; and we saw the empty tomb and believed. Turn to page 12
Brother to discuss Taizé prayer at Freetown parish By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff
EAST FREETOWN — For more than a year now, parishioners at St. John Neumann Parish in East Freetown have been actively studying and hosting regular Taizé services, based on an increasingly popu-
lar form of prayer that is equal parts meditation, chanting and silently connecting with God. According to parishioner and choir member Karen Howard, it was her pastor, Father Gregory A. Mathias, V.G., who first introduced her to Taizé.
“I didn’t really know anything about it,” Howard said. “He said it was based on meditation and chanting and he suggested maybe the choir might be interested in taking it up, so that’s how it started.” With Father Mathias’ guidance and blessing, St. John
Neumann hosted its first Taizé service on Palm Sunday as a way to kick off Holy Week last year. “I have always thought that this Taizé form of prayer could possibly be the perfect remedy for the sorts of lives we live in this country,” Father Mathias
wrote in a bulletin introduction at the time. “Faith is fed by contemplation and prayer, but modern life compels us to move too fast for either of these disciplines. The aesthetics of Taizé prayer immerse participants in a mystical-Spiritual Turn to page 18