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Diocese of Fall River, Mass.

F riday , September 12, 2014

Unbound ministry brings its message to local parishes By Becky Aubut Anchor Staff

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — ­ Formerly called Christian Foundation for Children and Aging, Unbound was founded by lay Catholics in 1981 and works with more than 300,000 children, youth and elderly of all faiths in more than 20 countries, including Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean. When Father William Martin retired more than 17 years ago as an Air Force chaplain, he was looking to work on a project that embraced the mission of the

Church. He had witnessed representatives from Unbound visit air bases where he had been stationed and liked what Unbound stood for as a charity. “I liked the fact that it does something directly and quickly and efficiently,” said Father Martin. “It’s the real mission of the Church, the concern for the poor and social justice; Unbound does it very well.” Traveling almost every weekend from where he lives in Vermont to parishes and other organizations to look for new Turn to page 15

The Anchor recently visited Bishop Edgar M. da Cunha, S.D.V., at his home in Newark, N.J., to talk about his vocation and his upcoming installation as the eighth bishop of the Diocese of Fall River, that will take place September 24 at St. Mary’s Cathedral in Fall River. (Photo by Dave Jolivet)

Road to Fall River was led by spirit of faith, devotion, and adventure By Dave Jolivet Anchor Editor

This small, little shanty-type home in Huaycán, Peru, and others like it, dot the hillsides of the poor areas of some countries and are where many families with no money to buy a house or rent an apartment live and raise children. With no running water, even going to the bathroom requires a hike to an area where it’s safe to use a latrine.

Our Lady’s ‘Silver Rose’ to make second trek through diocese By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff

FALL RIVER — The Massachusetts Knights of Columbus will be participating in a North American relay of sorts to pay special tribute to Our Lady of Guadalupe, patroness of the Americas, through its Silver Rose program. Sometimes referred to as the “Running of the Rose,” it involves devotion to one of six silver roses — symbolic of the roses that miraculously materialized on Our Lady’s tilma (robe) when she first appeared to St. Juan Diego in December 1531 — that stop at different locations en route to the Shrine of Our

Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico for her December 12 feast day. Last year was the first time the Silver Rose in honor of Our Lady of Guadalupe was displayed in Massachusetts. In nine days it is estimated that the single Silver Rose traveled 518 miles and was viewed by nearly 3,000 people. This year, members of the Massachusetts K of C will once again be traveling with and displaying the New England Silver Rose at various locations within the Fall River Diocese from October 11 through October 19. “This is the sixth rose this year,” exTurn to page 18

NEWARK, N.J. — In a recent interview in the humble home of Bishop Edgar M. da Cunha, S.D.V. in Newark N.J., the man soon to become bishop of the Diocese of Fall River told The Anchor, “I always had an adventurous spirit.” It was that spirit of adventure combined with a deep faith and devotion to Jesus Christ and His Church that led him from a simple village, Riachão do Jacuípe, Bahia, Brazil, where he was born in 1953, to the Diocese of Fall River where he will be installed as the diocese’s eighth bishop at St. Mary’s Cathedral on September 24. The foundation of faith for Bishop da Cunha was first laid in that Brazilian village by his family. “I come from a large family,” he said. “I have 13 brothers and sisters. My family was very supportive. “Where we lived, we didn’t live close by to a church, so we didn’t have Mass every Sunday. We had it when the priest came. But we had a strong faith life in the family and in the neighborhood. We prayed together and God was so important in the lives of the people in my home town. It was very traditional values and faith that we received from our parents and grandparents that continues living on. “The day the priest came everything stopped. Everyone went to church. It was a whole-day thing. It was so important to us when those days came, feasts, processions and the

feast of the patron of the town.” Bishop da Cunha said that today many people are in a rush to get to church, and there are many churches available and Masses available and many don’t even make the effort to go. “I look back and I treasure those days,” the bishop continued. “I don’t feel like, ‘Too bad we didn’t have this and we didn’t have that.’ I say thank God for what we had because they were simple things. We didn’t have all the comforts and luxuries that we have today. We had other very important values and I thank God for that. The influence of the faith and support of my family was so important in my development.” Another great influence in Bishop da Cunha’s life was the presence of the Vocationist Fathers. “I was baptized by the Vocationist Fathers,” he said. “In fact, the priest who baptized me came to my ordination as auxiliary bishop in Newark 11 years ago. “I grew up under the influence and Spirit of the Vocationists, whose primary mission is to promote vocations. The pastor of my parish built a vocationary (minor seminary) there. So I saw other young men join the seminary and heard them talking about the Vocationists promoting vocations. I kept becoming more and more interested in the joy of the seminary. “It’s funny because even before I joined the seminary, even before I told my pastor, he pulled me aside and said, ‘I think you’re going to be Turn to page 14


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