Holiday shopping can have a Pro-Life punch By GAIL BESSE ANCHOR CORRESPONDENT
BOSTON - This Advent, even busy shoppers can ~ffortlessly raise money to make more room at the inn for pregnant women who need help as they carry the gift of life. With affinity and cause marketing programs, consumers have new ways to support ever-needy ProLife causes while shopping for presents, food, and even wine. At no extra cost to themselves, shoppers can make regular purchases with businesses that donate a portion of the items' price back to a participating charity. For example, five percent of. Amazon.com purchases can go to a non-profit like Massachusetts Citizens for Life, which promotes education and legislation. All that's needed is to enter the Amazon site through a portal on masscitizensforlife.org, the MCFL Website. Similarly, shoppers can avoid
businesses known to be big corporate supporters of today's King Herod - Planned Parenthood, which has killed about 4 million unborn children in the U.S. alone. "As Christians, we can't spend our money on purchases that even. tually end up taking life when Jesu~ Christ has given us eternal life," noted Pro-Life activist James Hartline of San Diego. "We believers need to honor Jesus through the way we spen9 our money during the Christmas season." Hartline has led a two-year nationwide boycott of poinsettia plants because 70-80 percent of all American poinsettias are grown from cuttings produced at the Ecke Ranch in California. Ecke family members are major Planned Parenthood donors. In a report published on the American Life League Website, Hartline asks Christians to spread the word as their families and Turn to page 18 - Pro-Life
Diocesan Communications director responds to Fall River editorial rapping Church - Page seven
o HOLY NIGHT -
Visitors from all over New England and beyond travel to the National Shrine of Our Lady of La Salette to witness the Festival of Lights every year. This year's theme is "Love is Born." Pictured are the lights surrounding the Rosary Walk and pond. (Photo by Matt McDonald)
Pilgrims trek from far and wide to see the Way, the Truth - and the lights By
MArT McDONALD ANCHOR STAFF
ATTLEBORO - Thirty-five minutes before showtime last Saturday, 11 buses were parked in the overflow lot at the National Shrine of Our Lady of La Salette in anticipation ofthe Christmas lights display there. The pilgrims weren't disappointed,. as about 5 p.m. much of the expansive property lit up like, well, a Christmas tree. That is, a Christmas tree with about 400,000 lights. ''It's just plain beautiful, that's all. I just can't pick out one thing. Your eyes are all over the place. They do an arnazing job," said Sal Demetrio, of
Chelsea, who was visiting with his wife Aorence, their daughter, and their daughter's husband. This is the 54th annual Christmas lights display at the La Salette Shrine at 947 Park Street in Attleboro. It runs 5 to 9 p.m. from Thanksgiving night through January 1. This year's theme is "Love is Born.'.' ' . The transfonnation of the shrine property on Route 118 in Attleboro as twilight recedes is startling, as members of the Frias Family learned Saturday. It had been years since Todd Frias, his wife Katie, and Todd's parents Bill and Ann had been to the Christmas
lights display. They decided to go last weekend, along with Todd and Katie's daughter, Maggie, a year and five months old. They were a little nervous upon approaching the dark shrine shortly before 5. '~s we were pulling in all ofa sudden they turned the lights on. It was very cool," said Katie Frias, who along with Todd and Maggie lives in Somerset. "It was like, 'Hit the lights, we're here.'" '~d they did," said her motherin-law, Ann Frias, who along with Bill lives in Swansea. Todd Frias of Somerset said the Turn to page 20 - Lights
Cape parish to host Night of Prayer for Life On December 8 at midnigqt it will join thousands of Americans in prayers for the unborn By DEACON JAMES
N.
DUNBAR
OSTERVILLE - A dozen or more people will spend one of four hours in prayer and eucharistic adoration in Our Lady of the Assumption Church in the early night hours on December 8, the feast of the Immaculate Conception. And as midnight strikes, the designated "Hour of Unity" wiIllink thousands of American Catholics in all four time zones across the nation in an appeal to the Mother of God to restore the sanctity of life in the lives of people everywhere. "There's much significance here," explained Larry K. Burke of Marstons Mills, a parishioner of Our Lady of the Assumption Parish and one of the planners for the prayer sessions that begins at 9 p.m.
i "It was on the feast of the Immaculate Conception that used to be celebrated on December 9, that Our Lady of Guadalupe, patroness of the Americas and the unborn, first appeared" to natiJe Aztec convert, and now St. Juan Diego, at Tepeyac in 1531. "The National Night of Prayer for Life bridges the two feasts of Our Lady on which we traditionally pray that respect for life will be restored," Burke told The Anchor. The feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe is celebrated December 12 in the universal Church. Burke said that the prayer night is the result of a grass roots movement spearheaded by Anne Murphy on Long Island, N.Y., in 1982. Turn to page 19 - Prayer