08.20.93

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t eanc 0 VOL. 37, NO. 32

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Friday, August 20,1993

FALL RIVER, MASS.

FALL RIVER DIOCESAN NEWSPAPER FOR SOUT~IEAST MASSACHUSETTS CAPE COD ,& THE ISLANDS Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly

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$11 Per Year

Cindy Wooden sees the pope up close and personal By Cindy Wooden

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MARIAN DESROSIERS

Diocese gains new pro-life voice By Marcie Hickey If her face and message are not already familiar to you, Marian Desrosiers hopes they soon will be. Named to the new position of Diocesan Pro-Life Apostolate assistant, the Sandwich wife and mother of four hopes to reach all corners of the Fall River diocese as a pro-life speaker and resource person. Her focus in the apostolate. directed by Father Stephen A. Fernandes. will be on educating youth and guiding catechists and Catholic school teachers in better integrating pro-life lessons into their curriculum. Other projects are to include speaking to parish groups and other organizations and coordinating diocesan participation in Respect Life Month activities each Oc':ober, including the annual Respect Life Walk in Boston. Mrs. Desrosiers will also organize arrangements for those attending the annual March for Life in Washington, DC, marking the anniversary of the Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion. The ambitious agenda means that the apostolatl:. funded by the Catholic Charities Appeal, will be able to increase involvement in pro-life work, offer more educational resources a.nd further disseminate its message in defense of society's most vulnerable members. "We are deeply grateful to Bishop O'Malley and to Catholic Charities Appeal donors for making all this possible," Father Fernandes said. The bottom line, Mrs. Desrosiers summed up, is that lives will be saved. ''I'm thrilled with everything we are doing so far," she said." When it comes to defending life, we have to put our money where our mouth

is, though it requires a great deal of time and sacrifice." Mrs. Desrosiers became committed to pro-life work several years ago after newborn son Marc Edward died of a birth defect and she later had a stillbom daughter, Mary Elizabeth. The experience, she said, solidified the pro-life convictions of the whole family: husband Jospeh, sons Joseph, 18; Lee, 10; and Stephen, 3; and daughter ,Kara, 16. "Losing two children of my own," she explained, "led me to cultivate an attitude of compassion and understanding and love for everyone on both sides of the issue. My heart goes out to those who have suffered because of abortion, and I would like to find a way to bring healing to them, There is great pain involved in losing any child. and you can't h;de from it forever." She began her involvement as a volunteer for Birthright, a crisis pregnancy counseling service. then established and directed a pro-life group at her Sandwich parish, Corpus Christi. She was Cape Cod deanery representative to the Diocesan Pro-Life Committee before being appointed assistant at the Pro-Life Apostolate in July. In the course of these positions, she had numerous speaking'engagements, including at the 1992 Catholic Charities Appeal kickoff and the diocesan Catholic Teachers' Convention. Currently she and her ~au~hter Kara have a pro-life proJect 111 the works with local access cable TV on the Cape. She looks forward to the educational aspect of her new position with t!:le conviction that the primary obstacle to pro-life sentiment is lack of information about the humanity of the unborn child. Turn to Page 13

DENVER (CNS) - A lot of people wanted to see Pope John Paul II up close and personal during World Youth Day '93 - but only a few got there. Those few lucky souls who got a personal greeting from the pope in Denver included the more than 300 bishops present and some 350 International Youth Forum delegates attending Mass Aug. 14. But that still left hundreds of thousands of young people and some 3,000 reporters in the outfield. I was one of the lucky ones. My presence with the papal entourage Aug. 14 started with an after-lunch reintroduction to Pope John Paul-I had been ajournalist on several papal fligh~s - and lasted until a limousine dropped me at the: press hotel shortly before midnight. When I arrived at the cathedral rectory, where the pope was staying, he was finishing a 20-minute., rest and drinking a cup of coffeesomething eight hours later I was to wish I had done. I walked next to the pope, professionally eavesdropping, as he greeted about two dozen people who had a hand in making the trip successful. The first to be introduced were Ralph Basham, head of the Secret Service detail assigned to the pope, with his wife, Judy, and other members of his family. The pope and Basham were pleased at how things were going. At the end of the receiving line was Yak King, who was involved Turn to Page 13

Flood response In response to a special collection taken up the weekend of July 24 and 25, diocesan Catholics have donated over $185,000 to aid flood victims in eight Midwestern states. The chancery office has announced that the funds will be transmitted directly to Catholic Charities offices in the affected dioceses. Bishop Sean O'Malley expressed profound thanks to contributors "for their extraordinary generosity in responding to their brothers and sisters i,n need." Noting the prayerful support of Popdohn Paul II, expressed last week in Denver, for those affected by flooding,. officials said: "The response ofthe faithful to the needs of their brothers and sisters is but one more sign ofthe Church's continued commitment to those in need and to support of the God-given dignity of every human person."

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POPE JOHN PAUL II, entering Mile High Stadium in the popemobile, waves to thl~ crowd of 90,000 gathered for a ceremony welcomin~ him to Denver. Aug. 12 (Hickey photo)

World Youth Day 1993

Descending on Denveir By Marcie Hickey With CNS reports They were pilgrims traveling to see a pilgrim pope. When nearly 150 diocesan youth and young adults going to Denver began meeting in the spring to prepare for their journey to World Youth Day 1993, they answered an important question. "Why do you want to go tei World Youth Day?" they wen: asked by Christopher Tanguay, associate director of diocesan youth ministry, who organized the pil.. grimage. The youths replied that they wanted to meet people of differem cultures, to gain a sense ofa global church. More expectations were added: to bring diocesans closer together; to share our faith. deepen our spirituality. experience sim.. plicity and sacrifice; to experience the power of God. And, of course, to see the pope. When the weary pilgrims arrived home, some by plane in the earlv hours of Aug. 16 and others b;, train Aug. 17, they had not bee;. disappointed. In the course of the Aug. II to 15 international convocation of youth. likened by one of the teen; to a "giant retreat," the dioces'an contingent claimed a piece of history when they joined thousand:; from around the world in welcoming Pope John Paul II to Denve-

Aug. 12 at Mile High Stadiufl. They attended an Aug. 14 pray:r vigil with the pope and a series 1)1' lively catechetical sessions. They shared sleeping space on the floor of Annunciation parish school wil h groups from the U.S, Virgin 1;lands; Walla Walla, Washingto 1; Manassas, Virginia; and Lewisto 1, Idaho; and they traded souveni's with young people from all corne's of the world. They sang. loudly and ofte 1. and they prayed each evening wi! h Bishop Sean O'Malley. It was at once exhausting ar d exhilarating. "Everyone keeps asking if I would do it again," said Nan,:y Fernandes of Our Lady of tile Angels parish. Fall River. "Of course I would. Definitely yes! I got so much out of it-a sense )f the whole world uniting as one." Some had simple expectatio lS fr(lm the experience, like tile LaSalette Shrine youth group, member who declared on rhe fil st day, "Hey, Ijust spoke to someO'le in Portuguese--I'm happy!" But most of the young people hoped to meet Pope John Paul II personally, a privilege that was n the end reserved for a lucky few Not one member of the diocesl n contingent, which included I' 7 pilgrims from the diocesan vou' h ministry office and 28 from tIle Turn to Page Eight


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