Diocese of Fall River, Mass.
F riday , September 19, 2014
Cancer support group flourishes on island of Martha’s Vineyard By Becky Aubut Anchor Staff
EDGARTOWN — For most of us, Martha’s Vineyard conjures up images of beautiful beaches, quaint shops and the potential sightings of famous actors or even the President of the United States. It’s known as a summer haven whose population swells to more than 100,000 during peak season, but there are more than 16,000 residents who call the island their home year-round. AnneMarie Donahue is one of those who appreciate the benefits of living year-round on the island, but her picturesque island life was shattered 26 years ago, when she was diagnosed with breast cancer. “When you’re diagnosed with cancer, it’s a very, very frightening thing,” said the Edgartown resident, who was 33 years old at the time. “I didn’t know if I was going to live to see my 40th birthday. I didn’t know what was going to happen.” A friend of Donahue’s had already been diagnosed with cancer and had been looking for a support group. After seeing an ad in the local paper spoofing
the “Got milk?” ad with an ad asking, “Got cancer?” Donahue’s friend called the number listed. “I think she put her name and phone number, and a dear friend of mine saw that, and she had been recently diagnosed with breast cancer, and the two of them officially connected. They started reaching out to more people, one of whom was me,” recalled Donahue. “At the time it was not a formal group; it was just a group of women meeting very informally at each other’s homes to share their worries and hope, and from that it just evolved.” As the group expanded to include new people, the group began to meet once a week in the doctors’ library at the Martha’s Vineyard Hospital, “then it really started to grow,” said Donahue. “It wasn’t just women, it was men as well, and all different types of cancer.” Most of those coming to those early meetings were newly-diagnosed “and so in need of talking to other people who totally understood what they were going through, and looking for information,” said Donahue. “If one of the women was Turn to page 15
Bishop Connolly High School (Fall River) principal Christopher Myron, second from left, stands with his son, host student, and his family at Wangfujing Catholic Church in Beijing, China, on Easter morning during a trip to China and Vietnam. From left: Jingcheng Wu, Myron, John Myron, Yufeng (Lucas) Wu (a student at Connolly) and Yannan Wu.
Father Rodrigo Miranda, IVE, third from left, pastor of the cathedral parish in Aleppo, Syria, meets with Pope Francis during a general audience at the Vatican in May. (Photo courtesy of Father Rodrigo Miranda, IVE)
Priest from Syria discusses dire situation, needs in Middle East By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff
NEW BEDFORD — After speaking to parishioners and students in the Religious Education program at Our Lady of Guadalupe at St. James Parish last weekend about the dire situation in Syria, Father Rodrigo Miranda, IVE,
was impressed that one of the first to respond was a 13-year-old girl. “She came up to me and immediately asked: ‘What can we do to help?’” Father Miranda said. As the current pastor at the cathedral in Aleppo, Syria, Father Miranda is Turn to page 18
Christopher Keavy, second from right, principal at Pope John Paul II High School in Hyannis, stands in front of the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Guangzhou, China on Easter Sunday, with agency staff, translators, and leaders from two other American Catholic schools during a spring trip to the country.
Diocesan principals travel the globe to make the world a bit smaller Chris Myron finds faith alive in China,Vietnam By Dave Jolivet Anchor Editor
FALL RIVER — Admittedly nervous before his very first trip to China and Vietnam this past spring, Bishop Connolly principal Christopher Myron told the agency that invited him, EduBoston, “The only way I’ll go is if I can go to church to attend Mass on Easter
Sunday,” since the Asian trek was to begin on Good Friday. Myron said the agency said that wouldn’t be a problem, and off he went on what he called, “a very Spiritual experience,” in a region not noted for its tolerance of the Catholic religion. While the Connolly principal spent Turn to page 15
Chris Keavy bridges gap from Cape Cod to China By Dave Jolivet Anchor Editor
HYANNIS — “We always felt that when Pope John Paul II High School was ready, and by that I mean having a strong school culture and stable enrollment, welcoming international students would bring benefits to our domestic students as well as improving an excel-
lent experience for our international students,” Christopher Keavy, principal of JPII High School and Head of School for the combined JPII and St. Francis Xavier Preparatory School in Hyannis, told The Anchor. “Now that the high school is in its eighth year, we know that the time is right.” Turn to page 17