e FALL RIVER, MMK
VOL. 45, NO. 33 • Friday, August 31, 2001
s-tIIrast.e.. Massachusetts' Largest Weekly • $14 Per Yar
Thousands attend Holy Spirit feast By
MIKE GORDON ANCHOR STAFF
FALL RIVER - The 16th annual Great Feast of the Holy Ghost of New England or Grandes Festas do Divino Espirito Santo de Nova Inglaterra as it's known in Portuguese, was held in Kennedy Park over the weekend offering attendees a wealth of activities including many spiritual ones honoring the Holy Ghost. First held in 1986 in Fall River, the gathering has been called the largest feast for the Holy Spirit around the world and brought more than 300,000 people together:'€>ver the weekend. Some came from Canada and C.alifornia and as far away ,as Portugal and the -Azores. ',' . ~t's something that's' very special according to Bishop 'Sean P.O'Malley·OFM ·Cap. Tum to page 13 - Feast
St. Mary's Cathedral marks i1s consecration ~
BISHOP SEAN P. O'Malley, OFM Cap., stands with Jose Rocha, president of the organizing committee for the Great Feast of the Holy Ghost of New England, and Archbishop Manuel Monteiro de Castro of Spain at a closing dinner at White's of Westport. (AnchortGordon photo).
Catholics urged to attend MCL abortion workshop BOSTON - Maria Parker, associate director for Public Policy ofthe Massachusetts Catholic Conference, urges Catholics interested in lobbying their state legislators to pass a bill giving women the right to full informed consent on abortion to attend a Septeinber 14 workshop sponsored by the Massachusetts Citizens for Life. ''This workshop will provide important background information,about the pro-woman, Pro-Life measure now before Tum to page 13 - Workshop
centennial of soIerm rites held .. 1901 will be observed on SepIerdJer 7.
UI09 and the city later to,be identified as FallRiwi IoggaI . in iIs first Catholics SOnle~e in 1822. A dDlD~iaits1retchof die-'parish. offered Andtorby FALL RIVER - A c:eIeIr.nJn of the ICDh:aonm:r- f3berlkaIey, sets a fiim:d3!eofSept. 8, 1852astllelayiog sary of the solemn COIIStUabon of The CaIbr:cDI or SainI: of the comer stone of the church on Second Street. Mary of the AssumpIioo. tile F.dl Rm cioa':se"s IIIIJIbcr . .Tum to page eight- Cathedral church, will be held Sepember 7 when Bishop Sean P. O'Malley, OFM Cap., celebrates aMass 31.6 p.m. Joining in the ceIebr*oo Will be membersofthediocesaocbgy as well as invited gues1s and aJ['rent and fonner parisbioners. said Father EdwanI F. Healey, RCkI of the Cathedral. Following the Mass abe cdebration will continue with a reservations-only buffet mcepIioo aI the Abbey GriII on Rod: Stm:t. Dr. Philip Silvia, a pd"essu otmstory who has done mochleseadJ . into the area's histoIy. wiD. make a presentation during abe reception. 'I'he history of SL MaIy"s Cathedral Pdrish actually dales bact. to July of 1838 wbm sa:raliellllaJ fEW LIFE -WeI-IcncMri baptismal font once adjacent to the sancrecords tell of a bapIism Jereby a tuary in St. Mary'S CaIhEd'aI graces its enhancing new and prominent priestfromBostoo. Butevmpior to that, traditionldlsus....CaIbo- siIe near lie fmnl er"ance.. It is one of many outstanding changes as lies lived in tile area as eady as 1hec:ahDalbeginsl1e new nilennium years. (PhotobyVICtOrNobrega)
nJe