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Diocese of Fall River, Mass.

F riday , September 5, 2014

Bishop Coleman reflects on 50 years of diocesan ministry By Dave Jolivet Anchor Editor

FALL RIVER — FALL RIVER — “I have too many unread books,” Bishop George W. Coleman told The Anchor during his final interview with the publication before his retirement begins on September 24. “In retirement I want to continue my pastoral work ... but with the absence of administrative duties.” Bishop Coleman will become officially retired when Bishop Edgar M. da Cunha is installed as the Diocese of Fall River’s eighth bishop on September 24 at St. Mary’s Cathedral. Bishop Coleman has served as bishop of the diocese for the past 11 years, and this year he celebrates 50 years as a priest. A Mass of Thanksgiving was celebrated by Bishop Coleman at a filled cathedral on August 26, joined by hundreds of priests, deacons, religious and invited guests. The Mass was followed by a very well-attended reception at White’s of Westport, at which he remained to greet well-wishers until 8 p.m.,

more than five hours after he arrived at the cathedral for the Mass. “What was wonderful about that day was that I saw people from every phase of my life as priest and bishop,” he said. “It brought back such good memories. I even met up

with a friend with whom I was an altar server at St. Patrick’s Parish in Somerset. “The day helped me to recognize the joy that is mine because of all the wonderful gifts God has given me through the years.”

Bishop George W. Coleman enjoyed the company of scores of well-wishers at a reception recently held at White’s of Westport, following a Mass of Thanksgiving at St. Mary’s Cathedral celebrating 50 years of priesthood and his upcoming retirement. (Photo by Kenneth J. Souza)

Throughout the interview, Bishop Coleman referenced and stressed the importance of his family and his parish life as prime influences on the priest and bishop he became. “The parish was the center of our family life and that of our neighbors,” the bishop said. “I was a third-grader when I became an altar server, and I very much enjoyed it, and being with other friends who also served. “I can recall accompanying my mother to daily Mass during the season of Lent, and attending the Stations of the Cross on First Fridays was always very special to me. And at the end of a long work week my father would come home, get washed up, and we would attend a Holy Hour at the church as a family on First Fridays. That was very significant for me.” He continued, saying Sundays were reserved for Mass first of all, then spending time as a family. “Some still do that,” he said, “but we need more to do that. It’s the primary way the faith is transmitted.” Turn to page 19

Bereavement ministry blossoms in the diocese

By Becky Aubut Anchor Staff

Father Bernard Baris, M.S., poses at the exact spot where Our Lady appeared to Maximin Giraud and Melanie Calvat in the tiny hamlet of La Salette in the French Alps on Sept. 19, 1846. Father Baris will become the first full-time American director of the international shrine at that location in January.

Longtime Cape pastor to head La Salette apparition site in France By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff

BREWSTER — As a seminarian at La Salette Seminary in East Brewster, Father Bernard Baris, M.S., remembered singing in the choir for the first official Mass cel-

ebrated at Our Lady of the Cape Parish on Christmas Eve in 1962. “Father Joseph A. Nolin, who was the founder of the parish, didn’t have a choir … so he asked some of the seminarians to Turn to page 10

FALL RIVER — “Grief doesn’t pick you by race, color or creed. Grief is universal, there’s one language spoken and that’s pain and hurt,” said Rose Mary Saraiva, who launched a bereavement support group in the Fall River Diocese by 2012, and now has seen the ministry grow in leaps and bounds. Saraiva can relate to those suffering from loss; her 23-year old daughter passed away in a car accident in 2006, and by 2010, Saraiva was looking for a way to channel her grief into something positive. After earning a certificate from Bristol Community College in thanatology (the study on how loss affects physical, psychological and social well-being), Saraiva used her parish as a place for group meetings. Now more than two years later, Saraiva has a formal list on the Office of Faith Formation’s website of additional bereavement support groups that meet outside of the Fall River/New Bedford area. “I have a folder of contacts of people calling me, asking who can come to this

group,” said Saraiva, pulling out the folder from her desk in her office at the Office of Faith Formation, where she works not just in the bereavement ministry, but also as events coordinator and in the Marriage ministry. What began as messages in parish bulletins has grown through word-of-mouth into multiple agencies calling her, from local hospitals to private and public schools; a Google search for bereavement support groups in the Fall River area will result in the Office of Faith Formation at the top of the list. Even the website “The Grief Toolbox” has picked up Saraiva’s efforts and posted her group as a resource. All of this attention and seeing the bereavement ministry grow showcases a need that is finally being met, said Saraiva. “They’re hurting. I was there. I know exactly what it feels like, and you feel so isolated,” she said. “That’s one of the things that resonated over the past couple of years — I’ll ask, what have been the hardest things during the grieving? And they’ll talk about the loneliness.” What helps those suffering during Turn to page 14


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