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Diocese of Fall River, Mass.

F riday , December 5, 2014

Judge Phillip Rapoza honored to meet with Pope Francis By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff

DARTMOUTH — There have been many milestones in Judge Phillip Rapoza’s already-impressive judicial career. In 1998, he was appointed to the Massachusetts Appeals Court in Boston, making him the first Portuguese-American in the Commonwealth’s history to serve in that capacity. In 2002, he was decorated by the president of Portugal and given the rank of Comendador in the esteemed “Order of Prince Henry the Navigator,” an honor akin to being named Knights Commander of the Order of the British

Empire. But the recent opportunity to have a private audience with Pope Francis at the Vatican was a singular honor and “incredible privilege,” according to the Dartmouth native. “I have had many opportunities and experiences during the almost 25 years that I have been a judge,” Rapoza recently told The Anchor. “I must say, however, that meeting Pope Francis was unquestionably the most memorable.” Rapoza, who currently serves as Chief Justice of the Massachusetts Appeals Court, was one of five individuals invited on October Turn to page 14

The altar in the chapel at the Catholic Memorial Home in Fall River was adorned with sights of the season for residents there during Thanksgiving. The chapel, which hosts Mass daily, is an oasis of peace and hope for many who must be away from home for various lengths of time. (Photo by Dave Jolivet)

Advent: Sense the presence of God around us

By Linda Andrade Rodrigues Anchor Correspondent

ATTLEBORO — Advent is the season of anticipation. A time to set off on a journey, walking alongside Joseph and Mary to Bethlehem, while awaiting the birth of Jesus. “The function of Advent is to remind us what we’re waiting for as we go through life too busy with things that do not matter to remember the things that do,” said BenedicMassachusetts appeals court Chief Justice Phillip Rapoza recently had a private audience with Pope Francis at the Vatican in his capacity as president of the International Penal and Penitentiary Foundation. (Photo courtesy of Judge Phillip Rapoza)

tine Sister Joan Chittister in “The Liturgical Year.” “Without Advent, moved only by the race to nowhere that exhausts the world around us, we could be so frantic with trying to consume and control this life that we fail to develop within ourselves a taste for the Spirit that does not die and will not slip through our fingers like melted snow.” Begin those first steps at the National Shrine of Our

Lady of La Salette on pilgrimage to the Christmas Festival of Lights, where the message is proclaimed: “Jesus, Light of Life.” “As you arrive at the Shrine grounds, you are first drawn to the Chapel of Light where the Beautiful Lady invites everyone to pray,” said Shrine Director Father Cyriac Mattathilanickal, M.S. “Renewal always begins by coming home Turn to page 18

Second Sunday of Advent 2014 — December 7

Area octogenarian writes an ‘udderly’ adorable Christmas tale By Becky Aubut Anchor Staff

DARTMOUTH — “Listen up children, listen up now/ And I’ll tell you the story of Catherine the cow.” So begins the saga of Catherine in “The Tale of a Cow: A Christmas Story,” where a cow’s breath deemed too warm for her barnyard friends becomes a soothing heat source for Christ after His birth. Based on a story written by Father Gerard Hebert when he was pastor of St. George’s Parish in Westport, the story was “poetized” and self-published by 88-year-old parishioner and Dartmouth resident, John Caron.

As one of 10 children growing up in East Taunton, Caron said his father instilled a deep respect of the Catholic faith: “My father was quite strict about our religion, and he told his six boys that if you go by a church, if you’re wearing a hat, you doff your hat. If you don’t have a hat, bless yourself,” said Caron. “I was in the fifth or sixth grade, and one day, Miss O’Brian, who was the eighthgrade teacher, had been dropped off to visit the church and say a prayer. She was waiting for a person to pick her up — and she thought the Caron kids were nice kids — so as I

walked by the church, I had two things in mind: I certainly have to doff my hat, and say hello to Miss O’Brian. I did them both together, and she got the biggest grin on her face thinking I had tipped my hat to her. She was very impressed and treated me better than others.” Caron didn’t know it then, but when O’Brian became his eighth-grade teacher, she would be one of the first to urge him to pursue poetry. Boys at that age were getting into basketball, recalled Caron, “but I was a scrawny, little kid. The jocks got all the attention from the girls, and guys are starting Turn to page 15

Dartmouth resident John Caron displays a book he put into poem form, from a story idea by Father Gerard Hebert. (Photo by Becky Aubut)


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