VOL. 49, NO. 45 • Friday, November 25, 2005
FALL RIVER, MASS.
Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly • $14 Per Year
Let there be LIGO=DTt Annual festival begins at La Salette By MIKE GORDON
til January 1, 2006. Illuminations of the more than 250,000 lights are from 5-9 p.m. daily and Christmas ATTLEBORO - For more than 50 years the lights concerts with Father Pat are held at 3 and 7 p.m., ofthe National Shrine ofOur Lady ofLa Salette have Tuesday through Sundays. Servant Song will perform been a part of the Christmas season and this weekend December 10 at 3 p.m., Tom Frederick will perform they will again bring the light of Christ to thousands December 12 at 7 p.m, Tatiana will perform who visit from across "Emmanuel: The Story New England. of Christmas," Decem"It's a work of love ber 19 at 7 p.m. and Phil and it makes usjoyful," and Sue Fortin will persaid La Salette Brother form December 26 at 7 Bob Russell, director of p.m. KARL BUDER, right, a parishioner of Good Shepherd the Shrine, ofits annual The La Salette Shrine Parish on Martha's Vineyard, hands the keys of a donated Festival of Lights. "It is a community ofpriests Nissan Pathfinder to Hurricane Katrina evacuees, from left, promotes the message and brothers founded in Courtney and Bill Hammond. of La Salette and when response to the apparition people come here they of Mary at La Salette in experience the beauty France in 1846. Our of this place. It's a Lady appeared to two pmyerful place to spend children and gave them time with Our Lady and a message to "make By DEACON JAMES N. DUNBAR known to all my people." drove a donated, refurbished 1997 Our Lord." MARTHA'S VINEYARD The theme for 2005 Today the Missionaries SUV loaded with expensive tools The Gospel teaches about using and equipment to Texas, only to is "We Are the Light of of La Salette work to well the talents God has given us. find Hammond had lost his the World," selected to bring her message to the emphasize the Beatiworld. All of us can find a role model in driver's license years earlier. an island innkeeper who salvaged Work on the light disRevisiting his expertise as a tudes and the idea that play was ongoing each the lives of an exiled Louisiana former federal probation officer, "Ifwe feel that Jesus is day up until Thanksgivfamily trying to make a start in Buder, a member of Good Shep- our light, we should exTexas. ing and when The Anherd Parish on the Vineyard, and press that to others," chorvisite<L staffand volBut trying to heap any praise a candidate in formation for the said Brother Russell. unteers were making fion Karl Buder finds him extolling permanent diaconate, skillfully "People come here to nal preparations. the generosity of others in the maneuvered through the courts, . get into the Christmas AI Fuller l)as been at Cape region who made possible the insurance company and Loui- spirit and we want to the Shrine for three years what amounts to a $10,000 ef- siana and Texas motor vehicle promote Christ as our and said that it gets easier fort to outfit down and out New officials to get Hammond back in light. Our focus is on MIKE PIECTOTA, Chris O'Hara and Ken Ross to put up the lights and Orleans electrician Bill Hammond, the good graces of the, law and the Christ child." The Festival of put the finishing touches on the Festival of Lights decorations each year who lost it all to Hurricane Katrina the states and thereby back on thtf. Lights .began on display at the National Shrine of Our Lady of La because they have develin August. job.' . In an adventure story that re"Today is the day we learn. if Thanksgiving night at 5 Salette. Lights are illuminated daily from 5-9 p.m., Turn to page nine p.m. and continues un- now until January 1,2006. (Anchon'Gordon photo) sembles a movie script, Buder, 57, - Festival Turn to page 16 - Pedal ANCHOR STAFF
Deacon candidate puts pedal to the metalfor Kat,:ina victims
Veterans, beloved· Korean War chaplain remembered at Mass
KOREAN WAR veteran Capt. Barbara Knight of Corpus Christi Parish, East Sandwich, delivers the first reading at a Veterans' Day Mass at Our Lady of Victory Church, Centerville, last week. Bishop Francis X. Roque, retired auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of the Military Services, U.S.A., second from left, was the principal celebrant. (Anchon'Jolivet photo)
By DAVE JOLIVET, EDITOR CENTERVILLE - Sitting among the congregation at Our Lady of Victory Church last week were men and women who knew first hand the horrors of war. Some were military veterans of World War II and the Korean War, and others experienced those conflicts at home waiting for loved ones to return. Also sprinkled throughout the dozens attending the special Veterans' Day Mass were those who know of these events only through history books. But there was one common thread - gratitude and respect for those who have served defending our freedoms and those who continue to do so. The Mass, organized. by Al Makkay Sr. of Centerville, himself a veteran, was celebrated by Bishop Francis X. Roque, retired auxiliary bishop ofthe Archdiocese ofthe Military Services, U.S.A., and Bishop Protector of the Catholic War Veterans. Msgr. Henry T. Munroe, retired pastor of Our Lady of Victory Parish, concelebrated.
In addition to honoring our nation's veterans, the Mass was also for the intention of the canonization of Korean War chaplain-, Father Emil 1. Kapaun, who died in a prison camp in Pyoktong, . North Korea in 1951. "Peace isn't just the absence ofconflict," Bishop Roque told the congregation. "As th~ late Holy Father Pope John Paul II said, 'there is no peace without justice. OJ, Offering prayers for veterans who have died in battle and those who have survived, in the past and the present, Bishop Roque said, "Today, terrorism has severely upset peace and order in our world." In one of the Mass' most moving moments, Msgr. Munroe offered the congregation the opportunity to share in the Prayer of the Faithful, asking them to "speak from your hearts." Prayers were requested for fallen comrades, the brave men and women serving in harm's way across the globe today, including sons, daughters and grandchildren Turn to page 16 - Veterans
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