The Anchor Diocese of Fall River
F riday , August 17, 2012
Easton student’s three-letter project speaks volumes By Dave Jolivet, Editor
EASTON — Most of us have seen them on area highways, byways and streets — those white and black oval stickers with initials designating destinations from Nantucket (ACK) and Martha’s Vineyard (MV), to the Mars rover, and back. But Easton resident Thomas Healey, a student at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, has changed the play-
ing field a bit. Healey has produced the familiar oval with a message that touches home no matter where one lives — GbA, God bless America. The small sticker with a huge message has caught on very well in Healey’s hometown and in a couple of Cape Cod locations, South Yarmouth and the Falmouth Turn to page 18
a celebration of welcome — Cardinal Óscar Andrés Rodríguez Maradiaga of the Archdiocese of Tegucigalpa, left, processes into St. Rose of Lima Church in Guaimaca, Honduras, with outgoing pastor Father Craig A. Pregana, center, and new pastor Father Jonathan Funez during a recent Mass.
Diocese’s Guaimacan mission presence changes, but future is bright as faith abounds By Dave Jolivet, Editor
message of hope — Thomas Healey, a parishioner of St. Mary’s Parish in Mansfield and a student at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, displays the God bless America oval sticker he developed.
Donly retires after helming Development Office for 15 years By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff
FALL RIVER — Looking back over his last 15 years as director of the Development Office for the Fall River Diocese, Mike Donly said his experience has been “very rewarding.” “I don’t often get to meet the people we’re helping, but every once in a while I’ll get a picture of one of the kids that’s being assisted
so I can put a face to the form or application,” he said. Donly’s affection for the job is apparent in the fact that even though he officially retired at the end of June, he’s still working part-time as a consultant until his replacement is appointed. “I’m not really in reFortier photo tirement mode yet, because I’m still here doing consulting work,” he said. “I Turn to page 14
NEW BEDFORD — Like a parent watching a child “leave the nest,” on July 14, Father Craig A. Pregana, pastor of the Diocese of Fall River’s mission in Guaimaca, Honduras for the past eight years, handed over the parish to his successor, Honduran native Father Jonathan Funez. “The Mass was a ceremonial ‘taking possession of the parish,’” Father Pregana told The Anchor. “Cardinal Óscar Andrés Rodríguez Maradiaga of the Archdiocese of Tegucigalpa was there, so too were the parish delegates of the Word, many of the young parishioners, and St. Rose of Lima Church was filled. It was a day of mixed emotions.” When the first mission team from the Diocese of Fall River arrived in Guaimaca, Honduras 12 years ago, the goal was twofold: to assist some of the poorest people on earth with their temporal needs; and to fan the flames of the Catholic faith in an area where anti-Catholic churches are common. Now, a dozen years later, the parish is back in the hands of Honduran people who are filled with an excitement and pride in their Catholic faith. Father Pregana has now returned to the Fall River Diocese as pastor of Our Lady of Guadalupe Parish at St. James Church in New Bedford, and is also the new diocesan director of the Hispanic Apostolate.
“I’m truly going to miss the people there,” he said. “Especially the young people, who are so very active in the parish life. There are so many more young people doing things for the parish than when I first arrived. The whole parish is more lively in the faith. I hope we priests can get more young people to be involved in their parishes in the Diocese of Fall River, like their Guaimacan peers.” Father Pregana also said the family ministry in Guaimaca is very strong. “Marriages weren’t very Turn to page 18
familiar face — Father Craig A. Pregana holds a piñata in his likeness, a going away gift from the St. Rose of Lima Family Ministry.
Spreading the message to those who need it most
By Becky Aubut Anchor Staff
NEW BEDFORD — To those who volunteer their time as part of the prison ministry of the Fall River Diocese, the Bristol County House of Corrections in North Dartmouth doesn’t house lost souls, they are just souls waiting to be saved.
As the pastor of Our Lady of Purgatory Parish in New Bedford, it took a serendipitous phone call by the sheriff’s department to bring Father Jack Morrison to its doors. A fire department chaplain at his former parish in North Carolina, Father Morrison received a call asking to give the invocation to
welcome new officers into the sheriff’s department. After giving the blessing, he was asked if he would consider being a permanent part of the ministry. Five years later, Father Morrison not only celebrates Mass every Friday morning but also hears Confessions every ThursTurn to page 16