The Anchor Diocese of Fall River
F riday , May 1, 2009
Stonehill College to host Family Rosary Fest ‘The family that prays together, stays together’ ~ Servant of God Father Patrick Peyton, C.S.C. By Dave Jolivet, Editor
NORTH EASTON — If all goes according to plan, 590 teens will form a living Mission Rosary on the field of W. B. Mason Stadium on the campus of Stonehill College, as part of Holy Cross Family Ministries’ Family Rosary Fest on June 6. Ten teens will form one bead of each of the five decades of the rosary. The Mission Rosary was the creation of the late Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, who introduced it on his weekly television show. Each decade represents one of the five continents, with a different color for each — red, green, white, blue, and yellow. “Our plan is to have the teens dressed in graduation gowns in each of the five colors to make up the living Mission Rosary,” said Congregation of Holy Cross Father John Phalen, president of Holy Cross Family Ministries. “If all goes well, 590 teens will make up the beads of the rosary. “In the Mission Rosary, each bead represents a specific country on that continent, and the first half of the Hail Mary will be recited in that language, and the
response will be in English,” he told The Anchor in a recent interview. “The rosary will be recited in 59 different languages.” Father Phalen said Archbishop Sheen wanted people to pray not just for themselves but for the world. And he teamed with another giant in the mission of worldwide evangelization through the rosary, Father Patrick Peyton, the famed “Rosary Priest.” “Bishop Sheen asked Father Peyton to produce the Mission Rosaries from the headquarters of Family Rosary in Albany, N.Y., and Father Peyton was happy to oblige.”
The unique praying of the rosary at Stonehill is only part of the planned events for the day, which will run from 1 to 4 p.m. The Family Rosary Fest is free and open to the public as Holy Cross Family Ministries continues to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the birth of its founder Servant of God Father Peyton, whose sainthood cause is ongoing. The day will include praise, worship, music, inspiring talks in Brazilian, Portuguese, Haitian Creole, Spanish and English according to Father Phalen.
Bishop of Fall River George W. Coleman will deliver the keynote address at the event’s conclusion, speaking on “Returning to the Rosary.” Other diocesan speakers include Father George E. Harrison, pastor of Holy Name Parish in Fall River who will speak on “Eucharistic Devotion and the Rosary,” and Silveria Furtado from Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Parish in New Bedford, whose topic will be “Witnessing to the Power of the Rosary.” Furtado is the leader of her parish’s prayer group, a member of the parish council and an extraordinary minister of holy Communion. Father Phalen will deliver an address on “The Family and the Rosary.” Bishop of Gonaive, Haiti, Yves-Marie Pean, also a priest of the Congregation of Holy Cross will speak on “The Rosary as Prayer for Peace.” Gerrie Stadelmann, a survivor of a terrorist attack in Mumbai in India last November will speak on “The Rosary in Time of Crisis.” Stadelmann holed up in her hotel room at the time of the attack, all the while praying the rosary that she Turn to page 18
Four diocesan priests celebrate 50th anniversary of ordination
By Deacon James N. Dunbar
HEARING AN ECHO — Candidates on a recent ECHO retreat weekend listen to a witness talk. (Photo courtesy of Mary Fuller)
Retreats inspire participants throughout the diocese By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff
FALL RIVER — Although participation in various retreat programs throughout the Fall River Diocese has waned of late, those actively involved in programs like Emmaus, ECHO and YES! remain confident their efforts are not in vain. Frank Medeiros, director of the Emmaus retreats based at Cathedral Camp in East Freetown, said they’ve been consistently running four retreats a year since the pro-
gram’s inception in 1974, with participation ranging from at least a dozen to 30 candidates per session. “Emmaus is similar in format to a Cursillo for young adults,” Medeiros said. “Men and women ages 35 and up came to us and said they wished there was something for their 20-year-old sons and daughters. Because the Cursillo program — at least in the Fall River Diocese — has pretty much fallen by the wayside, people looking for a Cursillo experience can participate Turn to page 18
ing in my garden,” the 78-year-old their anniversaries, Father Roger J. FALL RIVER — Two groups former pastor of Holy Redeemer Levesque and Msgr. John J. Smith totaling 10 young men approached Parish in Chatham where he still were among seven ordained later in 1959, on April 25, also by Bishop the altar in St. Mary’s Cathedral on helps out, said. “After studies at Boston College Connolly in the cathedral. different dates a half century ago “So on January 6 of this year this year to be ordained priests for and St. John’s Seminary in BrighI celebrated the Fall River Mass in my Diocese. last parish … in The four Holy Redeemclergymen er Church, and remaining of spent the rest of those groups the day quietly, took time last prayerfully but week to talk without fanto The Anchor fare,” said Faand reflect on ther Buckley. how the years “After the death have taken of my mother I them many haven’t marked miles apart as the ordination they celebrate date with much the 50th anniFather Roger J. Levesque Msgr. John J. Smith goings-on,” he versary of their added. priesthood. However, later in January, as a “My 15 years since retirement ton, I was among three ordained in February 2001 have been very on Jan. 6, 1959 by Bishop James former Maryknoll seminarian in good,” reported Father James F. L. Connolly in the cathedral in Fall Glen Ellen, Ill., and Maryknoll, Buckley, currently a resident of River, and I was alongside Father N.Y., he joined with some of his Francis Kirby,” noted Father Buck- former classmates on a trip to CenYarmouth on Cape Cod. tral America where they visited El “No, I don’t play golf … but I ley, a native of Somerville. The two others celebrating Turn to page 12 enjoy kayaking, skiing, and work-