05.10.13

Page 1

The Anchor Diocese of Fall River

F riday , May 10, 2013

New assistant superintendent for diocesan school system named

fall river — A longtime hiring of principals and teacheducator currently serving as ers; evaluation processes; health principal at a parish elementary and safety policies; and advising school in Fall River has been principals on matters relating to named to a key administrative legal issues, student discipline and parental concerns. position for Catholic “Mrs. Kane brings schools in the Fall River a wealth of experience Diocese. from her years as prinLouise P. Kane, now cipal in Catholic and principal at Espirito public schools,” said Santo School, will beDiocesan Superintencome assistant superdent of Schools Dr. Miintendent for personnel chael Griffin. for Fall River Dioc“She is highly comesan schools, effective L ouise P. Kane mitted to the academic July 1, Bishop George and spiritual mission W. Coleman has anof Catholic schools and will be nounced. She will succeed Katha great source of leadership and leen A. Simpson, who is retiring support for the 25 schools of the at the end of June. diocese.” Kane will focus on a range Turn to page 18 of responsibilities including the

Video highlights small parish with a big heart

By Dave Jolivet, Editor

FALL RIVER — It’s a modern-day version of the children’s classic, “The Little Engine That Could,” and it’s the living out of Mark’s Gospel story of the widow’s offering to the temple treasury, who “out of her poverty, put in everything — all she had to live on.” Sacred Heart Parish in Fall River is tucked away in the center of the city, not easily seen beyond the surrounding neighborhoods of three-deckers and mills. Yet, despite its lack of exposure, the parishioners are some of the hardest-working and most dedicated members for which any Catholic parish community could hope.

The church itself on Seabury Street is a beautiful house of worship that’s been a part of Fall River since 1872. Like many older inner-city parishes in the Fall River Diocese and beyond, its parishioners and pastor, Father Raymond Cambra, worry about the future. The “demographics” buzzword has many Catholics on edge, but as Christ said in Mt. 6:34, “Do not worry about tomorrow; for tomorrow will care for itself,” the pastor and his flock joyfully operate one of the most successful and utilized soup kitchens and food pantries in Massachusetts. Hundreds of men, women and children enter through the door Turn to page 18

feeding the hungry — A screen-capture of a young child eating at the Sacred Heart Soup Kitchen in Fall River, is part of a recently-produced parish video, “Sacred Heart Parish: A Church and Its Mission,” to highlight the poor parish’s good works and rich history.

another step on the journey — Eric Queenan and Chris Peschel, seminarians for the Diocese of Fall River, recently received the ministry of Acolyte, the last of the minor orders prior to being ordained a deacon. The ceremony was held April 28 at St. John’s Seminary in Brighton. The Mass was celebrated by Bishop George W. Coleman. From left: Father Karl C. Bissinger, diocesan Vocation Director and the bishop’s secretary; Peschel; Bishop Coleman; Queenan; and Father David Pignato, a Fall River priest on faculty at St. John’s Seminary.

Newtown parish sends its thanks in wake of tragedy

By Becky Aubut Anchor Staff

NEWTOWN, Conn. — The idyllic community of Newtown, Conn. was shattered on Dec. 14, 2012 when Adam Lanza, after shooting and killing his mother, forced his way into Sandy Hook Elementary School during morning announcements and opened fire on the students and staff. Msgr. Robert Weiss was in his rectory at St. Rose of Lima Parish in Newtown when the parish received a phone call that all the town’s schools had been placed on lockdown due to a “random shooting in the town,” recalled Msgr. Weiss. “Very shortly after that I received a phone call from a parishioner who works at Sandy Hook School [saying] you’d better get down here. I got down there and realized it was much more than a random shooting.” Msgr. Weiss went immediately to the town’s fire station after hearing some of the students had gathered there. He recognized many of the children from his parish, with some running up to him upon his arrival. Msgr. Weiss began to help orga-

nize the children, getting them to line up so that names could be taken. “It was very chaotic,” he said. “We were told that some of the children had run into the woods, had run to the police station, some had been taken to the hospital; so there was a lot of confusion. It was pretty much everybody on cell phones trying to get in touch with anybody to see if they could find their child. There was a lot of heavy anxiety going on, a lot of emotion.” As parents came to collect their children, the number of students began to dwindle and the parents left standing became a living testament to an unthinkable horror. “You looked and saw the faces of those parents whose children’s names weren’t called,” said Msgr. Weiss. “As time went on and more families members started gathering, and then the announcement was finally made, it was just — just a seabed of emotion. We went from confusion to chaos to hope — everybody was very hopeful that their child was hiding in a closet — but when it was

announced, there was so much emotion.” Twenty students — only six or seven years old — and six adult staff members at Sandy Hook were dead. “At the end of the day, there was nothing to say because it was so overwhelming,” said Msgr. Weiss. “We just tried to be there for each other. There was a great deal of compassion among those parents for each other. One would calm down and then another would start, and they would just go to that one and surround them and hug them.” The outpouring of support was immediate. The town filled with people, with residents coming home from work early; every parish in the community opened its doors to offer comfort with many having a prayer service. “I know we had a service at 7:30 and the church was just packed,” said Msgr. Weiss. “There were about 1,000 people on the property; people were just looking for places to go and be with others.” 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.