t eanc 0 VOL. 38, NO. 29
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Friday, July 29,1994
FALL RIVER DIOCESAN NEWSPAPER FOR SOUTHEAST MASSACHUSETTS CAPE COD & THE ISLANDS
F ALL RIVER, MASS.
Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly
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$11 Per Year
Agencies struggle to aid Rwandan disaster victims
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JOSEPH AND SILVANA PAVAO
50 years together
A heartwarming love story When Laurie Pavao, known to thousands of WPRO·Radio listeners as Laurie Johnson, the station's 4 a.m. to noon news anchor, sent a letter to this Anchor about the 50th wedding anniversary of her parents-in-law, she thought a reporter might visit their Dighton home to write a story about them. But her own description of their life together was so moving, no outside comment was needed. It follows. [This month] my husband's mother and father, Silvana and Joseph Pavao of Dighton, are celebrating their 50th wedding' anniversary. It's a milestone for our family certainly, but there is a beautiful story behind their love and their raising of seven children through often tough times. Two of the children, twins, are handicapped. All seven have married and become successful, productive citizens. There are a dozen grandchildren around the tree at Christmas time. Even so, the COli pIe, whose home bears the sign "Receive all Guests as Christ," continues to spin an ever-widening cocoon of love encircling all who know them. Silvana is a woman with the rare quality of humility. She's also a woman offew words. To all who know her, she is a shining example of feminine warmth and strength. Joe is a character. At age 76, he works sometimes 10 hours a day in his 10 acre garden. He's helping renovate the new church hall at St. Peter's in Dighton. He always wears a smile, offers a kind word, and prides himself on having ajoke ready for any occasion. He never holds a grudge and never sends folks out of his garden empty-handed. His devotion to St. Peter's parish earned him the Marian Medal. Together Joe and Sil have instilled in their children a love for each other and a commitment to dedication and family, the likes of which we don't often hear about today. At harvest time, sons, daughters, and second sons and daughters gather to pick, wash and pack vegetables tQ sell. In the fall there's firewood to be stacked. A birthday is never forgotten. A long distance phone call from daughter Joan or son Jim means minutes ahead to be savored. In 1955, the birth of Joe and Sil's third son, John, necessitated a move from Fall River to Dighton. A blind child, they thought, needed safe play areas with less traffic. John's twin, Jane, would be hospitalized for dozens of operations in the years ahead. She walks on crutches today. John [Laurie's husband]. is a computer scientist for the Navy. There's the story about the twins' tandom bike made by Joe. The Fall River Herald News took pictures of it 30 years ago. They are prou<ily displayed in the family album. Imagine two bikes welded side by side with a blind brother pedaling for a twin sister who' could only steer. Then there were baseball games Joe and Sil couldn't make. She didn't drive and he was working threejobs to make ends meet. These are folks who look at the Somerset reservoir and remember the land underneath it when it was the bustling Pavao family farm in the 1930s. When the reservoir is low, we can still see the property marker sticking up. My special in-laws just returned from an Alaskan cruise which they describe as the trip of a lifetime. I am so grateful to have these folks as my second "mom" and "dad." The celebration of the Panos' 50 years together was attended by over 100 family members and friends and 'was highlighted by their renewal of wedding vows at a ceremony conducted by Father Francis Allen, SMM, pastor of St. Peter's parish.
WASHINGTON (CNS) - The distress of more than I million Rwandan refugees massed around the town of Goma and other sites in Zaire was compounded by runaway cholera which was killing thousands and had overwhelmed the resources of aid organizations. At one point, it. was estimated refugees were dying at a rate of one per minute. The epidemic, triggered by contaminated water brought on by the sanitation crisis which accompanied the sudden flood of refugees, had killed thousands by July 25. Pope John Paul II pleaded with international organizations and political leaders to mount a massive rescue operation. The United States has mobilized military units to assist in transporting medicine, food and equipment for providing clean water. Meanwhile, a less publicized, but nearly as massive refugee crisis was developing in the southern Rwandan town of Gikongoro where some 880,000 undernourished and exhausted displaced Rwandans were gathered. Catholic Relief Services was running a 30D-ton-per-week emergency feeding program in Gikongoro which provided part of the nutritional needs of about 100,000 refugees. But on July 25, the spread of disease was declared beyond the capacity of humanitarian resources in Goma. "It is out of control," said Peter Hansen, U. N. undersecretary general for humanitarian affairs and head of U.N. emergency relief coordination. Aid workers sought a new site for mass graves as thousands of bodies piled up in camps and by the roadside. They estimated that the death toll had risen to about 11,000. Comm~)J1 graves covering an area the size of a football field had already been filled. Between the town of Goma and Katale camp, about 40 miles north, several thousand bodies awaited collection. Corpses were so densely packed along the roadsides that some bore the marks of tires from passing vehicles. Little bundles of children bound in cloth or reed mats lay next to the bigger forms that had been their parents.
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A RWANDAN mother's face mirrors despair as she holds her dying baby and waits for aid at a medical station in Goma, Zaire. eNS / Reuters photo)
r-----,.In This I s s u e - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , New Look at Vowed Life Page 2
60 Years for Fall River Brother Page 3
Planting Tonight on the Mall Page 7
This Deacon Has Racetrack Ministry Page 16