Diocese of Fall River
The Anchor
F riday , August 28, 2009
Taunton’s Hispanic community looks back on a 50-year legacy
By Deacon James N. Dunbar
TAUNTON — In September, when members of the Hispanic community in Taunton dedicate the Hispanic Apostolate Office at the Dolan Center in memory of Apolinario Aponte and Luz Maria Burgos, it will mark another milestone in the 50th an-
niversary celebrations of the rapidly growing community. Aponte, known as Don Polo, and Burgos, known as Dona Lin, “were most instrumental in forwarding the Hispanic Apostolate in our community of faith, and they are very much remembered,” said Jose Torres,
who, for 15 years, has directed communications for the Apostolate. “Don Polo and Dona Lin were active servants in our community by helping the needy, the homeless, praying the rosary at home and welcoming new Turn to page 18
FAR AWAY FRIENDS — Sacred Hearts Fathers Martinus Pariyanto, left and John Yamada, provincial of the newly-formed Japan-Philippine Province, will be in Wareham and Fairhaven to help the Congregation celebrate the 60th anniversary of the founding of the mission in Japan.
Sacred Hearts Fathers 1949 mission to Japan recalled By Deacon James N. Dunbar
FAIRHAVEN — When Japanese priests of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary celebrate Masses locally this weekend marking the 60th anniversary of the congregation’s province in Japan, they will be recalling the American missionaries that founded it. The missionary congregation in Fairhaven had its start in 1905 when three priests and a Brother arrived from Belgium in answer to Bishop William Stang’s invitation. The bishop had met Sacred Hearts’ priests when he studied at the seminary in Louvain, and knew they spoke several languages. They were just what were needed in the newly-founded Fall River Diocese, where Bishop Stang had personally encountered linguistic problems earlier when he was a priest from the territorial Providence Diocese ministering to German immigrants at St. Boniface’s Parish in New Bedford. The missionaries were given a house in Fairhaven. They were
placed in care of St. Boniface’s; St. Joseph’s in Fairhaven, whose parishioners included French and Portuguese Catholics; and Our Lady of the Assumption in New Bedford, which had a dominant Cape Verdean congregation. The Fathers also began to celebrate Mass in Mattapoisett, where a former chapel became the first St. Anthony’s Church in 1908. It wasn’t until February 1947 that the region of the Congregation in the United States was raised to the level of a province, and became independent of its mother province in Belgium. Following installation in Rome of Father Columban Moran as the first U.S. provincial, the new province was assigned to work as missionaries to Japan. “Father Moran was a native of Ireland, but like the other Sacred Hearts Fathers who left for the Japan mission, had been ministering in parishes in the Fall River Diocese and was well known to the people,” reported Father William Petrie, the current local provinTurn to page 17
GRATEFUL RECOGNITION — Receiving awards for outstanding service to the Taunton Hispanic Community are, from left, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Torres, Maria Torres, Carmen Morales, Juanita Correa, and Ramon Cotto. Not in the picture is Jose Torres, communications director for the Hispanic Apostolate. (Photo courtesy of Jose Torres)
Finance committees helping pastors respond to tough economy By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff
FALL RIVER — As the challenges presented by tougher economic times have increased, pastors throughout the diocese are depending more on the counsel of their parish finance committees. According to the Code of Canon Law No. 537: “Each parish is to have a finance council which is regulated by universal law as well as by norms issued by the diocesan bishop; in this council the Christian faithful, selected according to the same norms, aid the
pastor in the administration of parish goods with due regard for the prescription of Canon No. 532.” James Brady, chairman of the finance committee at Corpus Christi Parish in East Sandwich, said he thinks the role of the finance committee is crucial to a parish. “I think it’s good for the pastor to have a sounding board to bounce his thoughts and ideas off of as a group that hopefully has some background in financial matters,” Brady said. “It also helps the parish to Turn to page 13
‘Hate crime’ legislation could allow government to judge other’s motives By Gail Besse Anchor Correspondent
BOSTON — The chilling effect that federal and state hate crimes legislation will have on American freedoms was ignored by mainstream television news this July as commentators served up froth about what brand of beer the parties
drank at a much-publicized White House “reconciliation” meeting. That meeting was meant to put to rest the awkward saga that evolved when President Barack Obama judged the motives behind the arrest of Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates, whom CamTurn to page 18