11.21.08

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Diocese of Fall River

The Anchor

F riday , November 21, 2008

Push for radical sex ed in schools re-emerges By Gail Besse Anchor Correspondent

St. Theresa’s Chapel, Sagamore

Beloved Sagamore chapel to close permanently Sunday By Dave Jolivet, Editor

SAGAMORE — Bishop Daniel F. Feehan formally opened and dedicated St. Theresa of the Child Jesus Church, a mission of the more-than-a-century-old Corpus Christi Parish, on June 6, 1926. Over the past 82 years, the quaint house of worship on Route 6A was the scene of hundreds of Turn to page 14

BOSTON — The coalition pushing to impose a radical sex education program on every Massachusetts public school child is on the move again. According to its Website, CARE forYouth, a coalition managed by the Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts, plans to refile legislation that Catholics and others have opposed for the past three years. The coalition is asking people to contact their legislators and write letters to the editor supporting its proposed Health Education Bill. Activists in religious and pro-family groups say parents need to wake up to the danger and stridently object to this bill’s reappearance in the 2009 legislative session. The bill would require that the Massachusetts Comprehensive Health Curriculum Frameworks, which is now optional, be used by every school district K-12. “It will mandate that public schools teach kids that abortion, premarital sex, birth control and homosexual behavior are OK,” said Linda Thayer, who wrote an extensive analysis of the curriculum for Massachusetts Citizens for Life (MCFL.) “This violates our freedom of religion and conscience. It’s a train wreck coming down the pike because it will force us to surrender our rights Turn to page 15

St. Patrick’s Church, Somerset

Somerset parish kicks off 125th anniversary year By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff

SOMERSET — St. Patrick’s Parish in Somerset will celebrate its 125th anniversary tomorrow with a 4 p.m. Mass with Bishop George W. Coleman. The bishop is the first and only priest ordained from the parish. Father Marek TuptynsTurn to page 19

WWII chaplain’s grave marker finally set in place; dedicated By Deacon James N. Dunbar

FALL RIVER — After 64 years, the official Veterans Administration marker identifying the grave of a war veteran finally rests near the headstone of World War II Army captain and chaplain, Father Arthur C. Lenaghan, in an older section of St. Patrick’s Cemetery. Father Lenaghan, a priest of the Fall River Diocese, died Jan. 8, 1944, just 10 days before his 36th birthday, from wounds received from an incoming German artillery round while ministering to and serving Allied soldiers in Italy. On November 13, Msgr. Thomas J. Harrington, a retired priest of the Fall River Diocese who still responds as a chaplain to area fire and police departments, blessed the shiny new, bronze marker to the decorated chaplain that peaks through the autumn leaves. The dedication is timely because the month of November — and its All Souls and All Saints days solemnities and the Veterans Day observance — remind us to pray for and remember and honor the war dead as well as all those who have died and those who are

in heaven. The VA marker was set in place by workers at St. Patrick’s Cemetery on October 15. “Although there usually is a fee, it was waived in

AT LONG LAST — Msgr. Thomas J. Harrington blesses the newly installed Veterans Administration marker for Father Arthur C. Lenaghan in St. Patrick’s Cemetery in Fall River. (Photo by Dave Jolivet)

this instance,” reported Mrs. Lisa Furtado, an assistant in the cemetery office. The marker offers something of closure to the story, a reminder to a yesteryear in America — and the American Church’s history — of the love a priest can have for his God, his fellow man, and his country. “I’m very pleased we were able to receive this marker,” said Manuel DaPonte, in his third month as Veterans Agent for the City of Fall River. “This was long overdue, and somewhere the lines of communication broke down since last year when the story (November 16, 2007 in The Anchor) brought to light that Father Lenaghan’s grave was without the government marker,” said DaPonte, himself a 32-year career soldier, former paratrooper and sergeant major. That story kicked off the effort, said DaPonte, who also noted there were others “very” instrumental in obtaining the marker. He recalled receiving notice approximately three months ago that the local application to Thomas Kelly, Massachusetts Secretary of Veterans Affairs, had been forwarded and approved by the VA in Washington, D.C. Turn to page 18

Father Albert Ryan marks jubilee

B y Deacon James N. Dunbar

FALL RIVER – When Father Albert J. Ryan celebrates the feast of Christ the King on November 23, it will be something of a double observance. “On that day I’ll also be marking the 50th anniversary of my ordination to the priest-

hood at Mass in St. Francis of Assisi Parish in New Bedford where I was pastor from 1994 until I retired in 2002,” the 76-year-old priest told The Anchor during a chat at the Cardinal Medeiros Residence, where he lives. Turn to page 14

Father Albert J. Ryan


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