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FALL RIVER, MASS.
VOL. 44, NO.41 • Friday, October 27, 2000
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Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly • $14 Per Year
Christ the .King Parish hosts Jubilee Year Mass Editor's Note: This is the ninth in a to-part series on the pilgrimage churches in the Fall River diocese. This series runs once a month in The Anchor to assist diocesan Catholics in making their pilgrimages to these sites. According to guidelines published by the diocese, those who travel to St. Mary's Cathedral or any of the designated pilgrim churches and fulfill the simple conditions of the indulgences, will receive for themselves, or for a soul in Purgatory, the same indulgence as if they have traveled to Rome or the Holy Land for the Jubilee Year.
cated. Although the roots of Christ the King Parish were nourished by all the early parishes on Cape Cod, they trace most directly to St. Peter's erected in 1830 in Sandwich (later to become Corpus Christi there), which cared for the spiritual needs of Irish laborers who came down from Boston to work in the Sandwich Glass Works. During the remainder of the century, parishes were successively established as the migrant tide rolled in, in Provincetown, Hyannis, West Harwich, Woods Hole and Yarmouthport. Christ the King can also trace its beginning to St. Joseph's ~ The Mashpee parish will host pilgrims at a in Woods Hole. As the tree grew and blossomed, St. Francis Mass Nov. 5 at 11 :30 a.m., celebrated by Xavier Church was dedicated in Hyannis as the new DioBishop Sean R O'Malley, OFM Cap. cese of Fall River was established by Rome in 1904. ,,)' The following year saw Our Lady of the AsMASHPEE - Christ the King Parish was founded on Nov. '~~: sumption Parish established as a mission of 25, 1984 by Bishop Daniel A. Cronin and he appointed FaFrancis Xavier. In 1928 Assumption Parish bether Ronald A. Tosti, now a monsignor - and currently back came a parish all its own and Mashpee became again as pastor, as its first shepherd. a mission of Corpus Christi in 1953 and then of Located on a knoll overlooking the center of Mashpee Assumption in 1960. Commons, the nearly eight-acre tract has a graceful Greek St. Jude's Chapel had already been conRevival styJe church as its .centerpiece. structed in Santldit in the fall of 1939, and The accompanying buildings include a day chapel, forOur Lady, Queen of All Saints, became the merly St. Jude's Chapel located on Route 28 in Cotuit; a parfinal ornament on the tree in 1968. ish hall, a religious education center, a parish office and parThe star of Christ the King was now alish residence. most ready to be placed on top of the tree. The entire complex is 38,000 square feet of buildings toAll of this had tested the mettle and the tally interconnected and set in a beautifully landscaped park stamina of two generations of men and with private and public .'> "~" ~ women, one history of the parish said; gardens and parking fa. ..:~"'? . ''<', still, as ~e Cunard Lines slogan goes: cilities for 275 cars. .,.,J.,:'.;P':7L!!' . . ')': ~>. "Gettmg there \was) half the fun." The entire .';/ . :/ :. ",~, Msgr. TostI arrIved on the Cape project is situ" ~':"".~.:: .. , " =.~_.".~ .. ~_ .., "', Cod scene from Taunton in ated on the Common of . •., . at Mashpee . ·;M! . i . 1 h;~' . , . ' . . ' . " It was after a 16Commons, the I ,.. i ~ '~ .. ~~ . ..1" .~ . ,. •fe' year absence that he first Catholic '""'Ji_.•,._Il::_ . ..... ~. . ~~ __ ... _~-~._~, Church in Turn to page 13 New England Jubilee to be so 10>
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FALL RIVER - A memorial service to mark the horrific, World War II genocide unleashed by Nazis against Jews in the Nov. 9, 1938 kristalltiacht or "Night of Broken Glass," will draw Catholics and Jews to S1. Stanislaus Church on Nov. 5 at 7 p.m. . . The service, to include prayers, Scriptural readings, songs, awre~th lay~ ing, the Jewish Kaddish or prayer Of, mourning, and blowing 6f the 'shOfar or ram's horn,was written jointly bya Christian and a J e w . . . . . It will find Bishop SeariP. O'Malley, '. OFM Cap., who will offer a reflection, and Father Marc H. Bergeron.:ecumeni-
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Message addresses abortion and physician-assisted suicide.
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Catholics, Jews planning interfaith'memorial service By JAMES N. DUNBAR'
Bishop O'Malley issues pastoral on life issues
cal officer for the Fall River diocese, joining with Rabbi William' Kaufman and Cantor Richard Wolberg of Temple Beth El in this city. Others from both faith communities will also participate. . The service commemorates the evening when the German government' initiated a pogr~m against the Jews of :Germany, burning down synagogues :and ~ri1ashing the glass fronts of Jewish' shops in Berlin. '.' The pogrom was allegedly in retali-· ation for the assassination of a German diplomat: at the German Embassy in Paris. The Nazis coined the phrase
Reichskristallnacht or Night of Broken Glass, during which 91 Jews were killed, and 30,000 sent to Dachau, Buchenwald and SachsenhausenOranienburg concentration camps. More than 5,000 Jewish shops were looted, 191 synagogues attacked and bonfires made of Torah scrolls, prayer books and volumes of Jewish history, philosophy and poetry. . .from kristallnacht on, the momentum of the Holocaust gathered force and led to the wholesale persecution and the killing of six million Jews including 1.5 million children. Bishop O'Malley, recalled Turn to page 12 - Service
By
JAMES
N.
DUNBAR
FALL RIVER - "For the Love of Life," a pastoral by Bishop Sean P. O'Malley, OFM Cap., that keys on birth and death issues was issued today and is printed in its entirety by The Anchor. "It is an attempt on my part to help our Catholics have a deeper understanding of the Church's teaching on the life issues and the centrality of these issues for believers," Bishop O'Malley said in a recent interview. "The pastoral will address particularly abortion and euthanasia - physician-assisted suicide - because life is most threatened in our society during these vulnerable periods surrounding birth and death," the bishop added. He said that just as he has addressed racism and is preparing to address antiSemitism, he wanted to take advantage of the Pro-Life month and the gathering of teachers and Pro-Life coordinators gathering tomorrow at Bishop Stang High School and St. Julie Billiart Parish in North Dartmouth "to reflect on this very important aspect of our ministry." The gathering is the diocese's Pro-Life Convention and Bishop O'Malley said he will speak about the issues in the pastoral when he addresses the participants. Copies of the pastoral will be available to those at the convention and copies will also be sent to Catholic high schools and Turn to page 13 - Life