www.theleaven.com | Newspaper of the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas | Vol. 31, No. 19 December 18, 2009
Beads prepared Scout project puts rosaries in troops’ hands
By Joe Bollig
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Leaven staff
ichael Mahr is going to give the troops in Iraq and Afghanistan some highly desired survival items. They’re easy to deploy and simple to use. They’re lightweight, durable, nonmetallic, portable and silent. They come in nonreflective tactical black. They are, of course, rosaries. Mahr, 16, is a Life rank Boy Scout with Troop 247. He hopes to send thousands of rosaries to American military personnel at home and abroad — but especially in Iraq and Afghanistan — as his Eagle Scout project. Originally, Mahr wanted a project that helped cancer patients, but his plans fizzled out. Then he got some help from his mother, Cathy Mahr, a secretary at Queen of the Holy Rosary Parish in Overland Park. In September, Cathy Mahr had been approached about setting up rosary collection boxes at the parish by Jenny Pilarz, a member of St. Pius X Parish in Mission. Pilarz was making and collecting rosaries for military personnel. There was always need for more, and it sounded like a great Eagle project, so she suggested it to her son. Michael Mahr agreed, and he began to lay the groundwork. Mahr looked first for military contacts and found two. One was Father John Gwudz, a chaplain at Camp Lejeune, a Marine Corps base in North Carolina; the second was the husband of his former Cub Scout leader, who was serving in Afghanistan. “His chaplain said they would love for rosaries to come over there,” said Mahr. “My goal is to make 3,000 black rosaries,” said Mahr. “If they’re sent into combat zones, they have to be black so they don’t reflect light.” Mahr received pledges of $140 from the Queen Saints, a seniors group at the parish, and will probably get a donation from the Knights of Columbus. Naturally, Mahr won’t make all those black rosaries himself. He plans to organize workdays so volunteers can string beads. He intends to get help from Scouts in his troop, fellow parishioners, students at John Paul II School and the parish School of Religion, and the parish Divine Mercy prayer group. Mike and Judy Dowd, a couple in the parish who know how to make rosaries, will instruct the volunteers.
“My goal is to make 3,000 black rosaries. If they’re sent into combat zones, they have to be black so they don’t reflect light.”
Turn to “Scout” on page 7
Leaven photo by Joe Bollig
Michael Mahr needs about 3,000 rosaries in “tactical black” to put into the hands of soldiers in combat zones. But just about any color or style will do for the other places where American military personnel are stationed. Occasionally, even non-Catholics will pray the rosary, he has learned.