The Anchor Diocese of Fall River
F riday , November 16, 2012
Author, journalist knows the value of Catholic education
By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff
SACRED GATHERING — Fifteen parishioners, mainly from St. Mary’s Parish and St. Joseph’s Parish in Fairhaven, gather at St. Joseph’s Parish in Kamalo, Hawaii as part of their pilgrimage to Moloka’i to visit where St. Damien ministered to those suffering from leprosy. Of the churches that St. Damien built, St. Joseph’s Church remains in the most original condition. The group said the trip was a truly faith-filled experience that created strong bonds of friendship.
Parishioners make pilgrimage to Moloka’i
By Becky Aubut Anchor Staff
FAIRHAVEN — While most people travel to Hawaii to walk on one of its pristine beaches, last month, 15 local parishioners, ranging in age from 12 to 85, chose to make a pilgrimage to Hawaii and walk in the footsteps of St. Damien of Moloka’i. “Father Pat [Killilea], who has such a fondness for St. Damien,
suggested that the first pilgrimage for St. Mary’s should be to the Hawaiian Islands,” explained Charlie Murphy, parishioner of St. Mary’s Parish in Fairhaven. Initially planned for August, the schedule was bumped to a later date when ironically Father Killilea — who was originally going to take part in the pilgrimage — was reassigned from St. Turn to page 14
WESTPORT — Although he admits he wasn’t “the greatest student,” Mike Leonard truly appreciates the opportunity he had to attend Catholic elementary and high schools in suburban Chicago where he grew up, and later Providence College, where he earned a degree in economics. “My Catholic education informed me in a lot of ways,” Leonard told The Anchor during a phone interview from his home in Winnetka, Ill. “Within that context, there was always a sense of order — we knew what was right and wrong. I had great nuns in school who were really, really tough. They were demanding, but it didn’t bother me. You learned what was right and what was wrong and sometimes you would just try to break the law to break the law.” Leonard, a longtime feature correspondent for the NBC “Today” show and a best-selling author, will share some of those firsthand experiences as keynote speaker for the 18th annual St. Mary’s Education Fund Fall Dinner to be held November 27
at White’s of Westport beginning with a 5:30 p.m. reception. Proceeds from the event benefit the St. Mary’s Education Fund, which provides need-
Mike Leonard
based financial scholarships to students at Catholic elementary and middle schools throughout the Fall River Diocese. “We had a sense of community in the Catholic schools that my friends in public schools didn’t have,” Leonard said. “We’d have
things like pancake breakfasts and CYO Sunday basketball events and other fund-raisers. There was a sense of that parish being your community and your home. Even though we bristled sometimes under the discipline, all those demands were what made you better in life.” For Leonard, it wasn’t only that close-knit sense of community from his Catholic upbringing that informed him later in life, but also a sense of creativity and humor. “I think Catholics are very creative in their humor and creative in their fun, because we always had all this structure around us,” he said. “It was comforting, and it was also at times frustrating, but in the end I think it made us who we are.” Despite having earned a degree in economics, Leonard embarked on a successful career as a filmmaker and TV journalist in 1980 when he was first hired as a feature correspondent for NBC News. “I was working in Phoenix as a sportscaster, and I had only been in TV for a short time,” Turn to page 18
2012 Marian Medal recipients — page 12
Sister Catholic paper in NYC rises above Sandy’s flood waters By Dave Jolivet, Editor
FALL RIVER — Catholic New York, the country’s largest Catholic newspaper, servicing the Archdiocese of New York, and The Anchor have shared a camaraderie for several years now. Matt Schiller, the New York publication’s advertising and business manager has been an Anchor friend since the 1980s when he was then employed by The Tablet, the Diocese of Brooklyn’s newspaper. Schiller was skilled with servicing the Wang computer system, a precursor to today’s state-of-the art desktop publishing systems. The Anchor was one of a few local Catholic papers to which he would lend his expertise. He made numerous trips to the Fall River office to get The Anchor up and running. It was during those times that I first met him. Eventually Schiller moved on to the Catholic New York, and the Wang system moved on to retirement. But through the years, Schiller and I would meet at CNS
conventions and we occasionally converse on Facebook. When Hurricane Sandy took aim on New York City and New Jersey, I sent Schiller a Facebook message wishing him and his family the best. In the perfect storm’s aftermath, and the ensuing nor’easter one week later, I tried to contact Schiller to find out how he fared, his neighbors and the Catholic New York. Not surprisingly, it took several days before I heard from him. In an interview with Schiller and John Woods, the Catholic New York’s editor-in-chief, The Anchor got a first-hand account of how its sister paper and some of its staff in the Big Apple fared. Schiller lives in northern New Jersey, very close to the New York State border. “We received some wind damage and we lost power from that Monday until Saturday,” he told The Anchor. “But we were spared the damage of the massive storm surge that caused widespread damage in Turn to page 15
much work to do — A statue of St. Francis of Assisi overlooks workers cleaning up outside St. Margaret Mary Church in New York’s Staten Island. The church was badly damaged by Hurricane Sandy. (CNS photo/Bob Roller)