04 17 15

Page 1

Diocese of Fall River, Mass.

F riday , April 17, 2015

It’s about team on and off the field for JPII student By Becky Aubut Anchor Staff

HYANNIS — Each year on Holy Saturday during the Easter vigil, thousands of people are baptized into the Catholic Church across the United States. Each individual has his or her own backstory and reason regarding their decision to join the Catholic Church, but for Ryan Barabe, it was more than just being a student at St. John Paul II High School in Hyannis; it was a personal journey for a young man who had no strong religious upbringing who transferred to the school as a freshman, and by his senior

year had found his calling to the Catholic faith. “You’ll see kids becoming confirmed with their class,” said the school’s principal, Christopher Keavy, “but Ryan really sought out the Christian life from the beginning.” Barabe transferred to St. John Paul II High School for its academics, and was already friends with a few of its students. Soon after his arrival, Barabe began to make waves as the school’s quarterback, becoming noticed by a few colleges and ultimately committing to Nassau Community College in Turn to page 14

Providence College students Keith Lee, Doylestown, Pa.; Kate Burnett, Prosser, Wash.; and Sara Davis, Duxbury, make the 1,000th furniture delivery out of My Brother’s Keeper in Dartmouth to a family in Fall River with staff member Rachel Smith on March 31. (Photo by Josh Smith)

My Brother’s Keeper makes milestone 1,000th delivery

By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff

Ryan Barabe, left, a student-athlete at St. John Paul II High School in Hyannis, stands with his sponsor, Scott Jordan, the basketball coach at the school, following Barabe’s becoming a member of the Catholic Church through the RCIA program.

DARTMOUTH — My Brother’s Keeper, the Christian charity that provides furniture free of charge to local families in need, just completed its 1,000th delivery since opening its second location in Dartmouth in the fall of 2013. According to Josh Smith, director of the Dartmouth facility, the 1,000th delivery happened a full year ahead of schedule. Their initial forecasts called for the milestone delivery to be completed in early 2016. “We projected we’d receive so much furniture and so many donations to be delivered to so many families and under our projections we didn’t think we’d be making our 1,000th delivery until next spring,” Smith told The Anchor. “So we were pleasantly surprised and there’s a lot of credit to go around.”

Noting that the Dartmouth facility — centrally located between Fall River and New Bedford — has not only been ideal to meet the needs of struggling families in two of the largest cities in the diocese, Smith said it has also provided a bevy of student volunteers from nearby schools like Bishop Stang High School and Bishop Connolly High School. “Our student volunteers here have been so supportive,” he said. “The numbers have been just incredible. I’d say we have more than 600 students who come here and help out every week. That is why we’re so far ahead of schedule. Our model is such that we have a very small staff — there are just three paid staff workers at this location — and so we really depend on having volunteers walk through our doors and that’s exactly what has happened.” In addition to the two Catholic high schools, Turn to page 18

Locals voice religious freedom concerns By Christine M. Williams Anchor Correspondent

DARTMOUTH — Laws protecting religious freedom are nothing new, but the opposition to such laws seems to be gaining strength. Recent laws passed in Indiana and Arkansas faced such a backlash that politicians watered them down. The federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which applies only to federal law, passed in 1993. Twenty-one states have laws at the local level. Additionally, Massachusetts and 10 other

states have similar provisions under case law. All of these religious freedom measures allow people who believe their religious convictions have been violated to seek exemption through the court system. To prevail in the suit, the government must show a “compelling interest” in enforcing the law Opponents of the laws and many media outlets labeled the Indiana and Arkansas laws “discriminatory,” claiming that they allow people with religious convictions to deny service to ho-

mosexuals. They say such laws interfere with local anti-discrimination laws. Dwight Duncan, professor at the University of Massachusetts School of Law Dartmouth and an Anchor columnist, said RFRAs do not authorize discrimination against people on the basis of sexual orientation. While such laws could conceivably be used by bakers or florists who do not want to participate in same-sex ceremonies, they have not been. RFRAs and antidiscrimination laws seek to ac-

complish two separate tasks and can coexist. “I do not understand why we are being forced to choose between these things. I think that it is quite possible, indeed preferable, to be in favor of religious freedom and anti-discrimination law,” he said. Andrew Beckwith, president of the Massachusetts Family Institute, called the hoopla over the new state RFRAs a “massive propaganda campaign.” Business owners who believe that Marriage is a union between one

man and one woman should not be forced to provide services for same-sex ceremonies against their sincerely-held religious beliefs. “This isn’t about serving someone at the lunch counter. It’s about participating in a wedding ceremony, and that’s really the distinction that needs to be made. You’d have a hard time proving in court that your religious freedom is substantially burdened by having to serve someone at a lunch counter or Turn to page 14


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
04 17 15 by The Anchor - Issuu