06.12.92

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t ean ·I. ~". VOL. 36, NO. 24

FALL RIVER DIOCESAN NEWSPAPER FOR SOUTHEAST MASSACHUSETTS CAPE COD & THE ISLANDS

Friday, June 12, 1992

F ALL RIVER, MASS.

CABINDA, Angola (CNS) Pope John Paul II traveled to a volatile northern enclave of Angola and pleaded for a peaceful resol\Jtion of the region's stuggle for independence. Local aspirations must be recognized, the pope said, but without forgetting the "interests of the whole country." He spoke at an airport Mass June 8 in Cabinda, an oil-rich territorial pocket on the Atlantic. Citing Angola's recent devastation by civil war, he said it was all the more important to "resolve. Cabinda's problems without violence, but with peace and dialog." The pope's words received mild applause from a crowd of about 10,000. The sentiment in Cabinda is almost unanimously for independence, according to local church workers. "Everyone here wants independence, not autonomy. We want a free Cabinda, free of corruption," said Brazilian Mercedian Sister Maria Luisa Lafuente, who has worked in the enclave for 18 years. Separated from the rest of Angola by a small strip of Zairean territory, Cabinda has long supplied about two-thirds of Angola's income through oil sales. With the end of the Angolan civil war last year, the territory is poised for an economic breakthrough.

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Pope asks for peace, dialog

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In Cabinda, Angola

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Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly

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FATHER PATRICK Peyton takes his own advice and prays the rosary in this 1984 photo taken in front of his Family Theater building on Hollywood's Sunset Boulevard. (CNS photo)

Two separatist guerilla movements have continued to wage small-scale warfare near the Zairean border, with the latest shootings coming only two days before the pope's arrival, according to U.N. observers who attended the papal Mass. Security at the airport was unusually heavy. "It was a little disappointing that he did not kiss the ground here," said Father Jean-Marie Tetika, a Zairean priest who traveled to Cabinda for the Mass. The pope normally kisses the ground upon his arrival in a new country. Father Tetika said there were thousands of Cabinda refugees in his diocese, waiting for independence to go home. "Without independence, there will be no peace," he said. Cabinda's heavily Catholic population was reportedly divided about the papal visit. While some believed the pope's coming would legitimize Angolan control, others thought the pope might say something in favor of self-determination, Father Tetika said.

The pope's sermon, however, avoided direct mention of independence. While praising Cabindans for their "enterprising spirit," he reminded them that their rich resources were, after all, a result of "divine generosity." When the pope arrived at the Mass site, riot police quickly moved in to stop hundreds of people who raced to occupy an empty area behind the altar. Later, Vatican security agents took down a plywood altar backing so the crowd could see the pope, and a great cheer arose. Pope John Paul was greeted by a traditional ceremony in which natives in costumes made ofleaves danced in welcome. Later, the pope flew to M'Banza Congo in the Congo River basin, where the first Catholic missionaries in Angola arrived 500 years ago. There, at a prayer service in front of the ruins of a 16th-century cathedral, he asked the international community to keep up support in resettling Angola's estiTurn to Page II

At Earth Summit

Vatican concerned with many issues

WASHINGTON (CNS) - Although media attention has cen" tered on the Vatican's views on population, Vatican delegates at Brazil's Earth Summit have monitored all the major issues, said Camden, N.J., Bishop James T. ary Cr~sade, Family Theater ProMcHugh, a member of the Vatiductions and their simple message, - can delegation. "The family that prays together In telephone interviews, Bishop stays together." McHugh said he and other Holy At age 19 he and his older See delegates had attended combrother, Thomas, emigrated to the mittee meetings and met with United States, where both entered representatives of other delegathe Holy Cross community. As a tions. seminarian, young Patrick con"Much of our intervention was tracted tuberculosis, from which in New York" at preparatory comhe recovered after seeking Mary's mittee meetings, he said. intercession; and both he and his For instance, Maryknoll Sister brother were ordained June IS, Roberta Salvador was monitoring 1941. Seven months later, Father discussions on forest protection, Patrick founded the Family Rosary but the' bishop said he did not Crusade by way of thanksgiving think she had made any statements for his recovery. as of June 9. But in 1945,· frustrated at the The bishop said Msgr. Diarmuid slow rate at which he was spreading his message, he asked officials Martin, assistant head ofthe Vatiof the Mutual Broadcasting Com- can delegation, spoke June 6 in a pany for a free half-hour of net- session outlining strict guidelines work radio time, during which he for disposing of toxic materials. Some of those voting wanted to proposed to recite the rosary. exempt the military from the guide"Everybody told him the rosary lines, but Msgr. Martin maintained Turn to Page Two Turn to Page 11

"Rosary priest" dies; burial at Stonehill Holy Cross Father Patrick Peyton, world-famous "rosary priest," died June 3 at Little Sisters of the Poor retirement home in San Pedro, Calif. He was 83. A vigil service was held for him .last Sunday at the Chapel of Mary at Stonehill College, North Easton. A funeral Mass followed Monday, June 8, and he was buried in the Holy Cross community cemetery on the Stonehill grounds. The college is run by the Congregation of Holy Cross. Other memorial services are planned at various locations in the nation. Father Peyton, a native of Carracastle, County Mayo, Ireland, was born Jan. 9, 1909, in a three room thatched cabin. He was one of nine children of John and Mary Peyton. His parents prayed the rosary daily, beginning on their wedding day, and their son promoted the devotion throughout the world through his Family Ros-

A FRANCISCAN FRIAR says goodbye to well-wishers after the last Mass at Our Lady's Chapel, New Bedford, which closed June 7 after 36 years of service to the city. (Hickey photo)


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06.12.92 by The Anchor - Issuu