Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Letter from Vince Francioli, Benedictine High School Teacher to Russ Davis

This was sent to classmate Russ Davis, who invited Vince to attend our Benedictine Mens' Breakfast.

September 25, 2010

Dear Russell,

That was the most enjoyable reunion I have attended in a very long time. How very thoughtful of you to arrange it and to invite me.

Thank you for the photos. I hope to see you in church sometime. Many of  us from Mt. Carmel (recently closed Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church) are going to the 11:00 Mass at Our Lady of Peace. Come there and see us. I am sure everyone would enjoy talking to you.

God bless you. I remain your old teacher,

Vince Francioli

Sunday, September 19, 2010

The Birmingham Six

September 19, 2010

Birmingham, England. Pope Benedict XVI beatified Cardinal John Henry Newman, a 19th century convert from Anglicanism. Newman was an enormously influential man in both the Anglican and Catholic churches. The beatification moves him closer to possible canonization. 

In a related story, the six men arrested for allegedly plotting an attack on Pope Benedict were released without charge. No weapons or suspicious materials were  found in their homes. The arrests had overshadowed the Pope's visit in the English media.

Makes you wonder.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Sister Mary Ignatia, Sister of Charity of Saint Augustine

REMEMBERING AN IRISH-AMERICAN SAINT

By

J.C. Sullivan


Cleveland, Ohio. “Three things are necessary for the salvation of man,” said Thomas Aquinas. “To know what he ought to believe, to know what he ought to desire and to know what he ought to do.” Some of our fellow human beings never recognize even one of these truths. Rare is the person who understands two. One who understood all three was a woman who began life in County Mayo as Della Gavin and ended it as Sr. Mary Ignatia, Sister of Charity of Saint Augustine (CSA). Forty years after her passing she has been commemorated and fondly remembered.

A woman ahead of her time, many believe she should be commemorated for her life’s work and vision. Cleveland Attorney John Myers is one of those people. Through his efforts, and the support of numerous others, a street in Cleveland has been co-named Sister Ignatia Way. All this, forty years after her passing. A gathering of her sisters, dignitaries, friends, recovering alcoholics and others were on hand for a ceremony honoring Sister Ignatia’s memory.

From Ballyhane, two miles outside Castlebar, County Mayo, Ireland,  Patrick J. and Barbara (Neary) Gavin emigrated with their seven year old daughter. In 1916, while World War I was raging in Europe, she entered the sisters of Charity of Saint Augustine in 1916. Eleven years later, with fragile health and exhaustion dogging her, she was transferred from the Music Department to the new St. Thomas Hospital in Akron, Ohio. While there she was approached by a co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous to allow one of his patients into the hospital for care. Thus began a spiritually-directed endeavor with men and women addicts. In 1952 she was transferred to St. Vincent Charity Hospital in Cleveland, “to work with AAs.”

On the feast of the Holy Rosary she received permission to open “Rosary Hall Solarium.” Its initials also honor a co-founder of AA, “Robert Holbrook Smith.” Revitalizing RHS is Executive Director Dan Davies’ mission. “The rosary today was said in honor of Sr. Ignatia, who prayed it daily with patients.”

“My boss at the time was the late Bob Sweeney, who had Mulranny roots,” said Myers. “Bob had the sad honor of being one of her pallbearers when she died.  He made me aware of whom she was and I was amazed this woman had helped co-found AA, which is in every country of the world.” To have a woman who was a daughter of Ireland and daughter of Cleveland have such a remarkable affect on the world is a remarkable thing.”  Myers thinks that because she was a woman, and a religious, she never got proper recognition in her lifetime from those outside CSA. Myers believes AA would never have achieved its current status without the spirituality connected with the program. “Myers also gives much credit to former Cleveland Mayor Jane Campbell, then-Council President Frank Jackson and Cleveland City Council for supporting the legislation co-naming East22nd St.  He was also sure to thank the Gavin and Neary families of Mayo who “shared their daughter with the world.”

Sr. Ignatia was a second cousin to Cleveland’s Fr. Jim O’Donnell. Mary O’Donnell Hayes (John), who is active in the West Side Irish American Club, is another cousin. Sister’s late brother, Patrick, Jr., had no offspring.

Sr. Judith Ann Karam, President and CEO of Sisters of Charity Health System said Catherine O’Donnell Lenihan worked with Sister during the 1960s. Her father, Mike O’Donnell, is Sister Ignatia’s cousin. Her Catherine’s husband is Frank Lenihan from Ballycroy. “This is a wonderful celebration of the life of Sister and the wonderful community that is AA. It was always so awe-inspiring for me to see the work she was doing and the influence she had on the people she served.

 Her legacy, according to Sr. Mary Denis, Archivist, for the Sisters of CSA, is, first and foremost, all those who were present at the ceremony. those who have struggled with demons and have come to sobriety.” Furthermore, for the community and those who have ministered and supported them, has always been “a willing acceptance of whatever God sends can indeed be a blessing, not only for oneself, but in untold ways, for countless others.  Bill Wilson recalled having a small dinner with her on her 50th jubilee and could only think of her of poignant and repeated saying, ‘Eternity is with us now.’ 

Sister Ignatia was one of the untold many living saints who now, and throughout the ages, have ministered to humanity. John Myers believes the gift, the miracle, of a path to sobriety, which Ignatia helped form, is something larger than any one person, one program or one institution. “… Her genius was to infuse a movement with a life-renewing and sustaining spirituality. Not that of a faraway Pope, or the dogmas of religion; not the church or the clergy, but rather, the simple spirituality which is appropriately here on the street, an every day spirituality, an every man, every woman  spirituality; a higher power found, recognized and shared here on the street.  This is why we gather on the street, in this small way, long overdue, to honor her memory and say thank you.”

Monday, April 19, 2010

THE FAMINE (AN GORTA MOR) AND THE CHURCH

THE FAMINE AND THE CHURCH
by
Timothy J. Meagher, Archivist
Catholic University of America

The memories of Ireland’s Great Famine (1845-49) would echo through Irish and Irish American history. Many Famine exiles turned their energies to building up the Catholic Church in America. Indeed, the power and influence of such Famine survivors in American Catholicism was remarkable.

Just a rough count reveals that at least 16 of the 89 bishops of the United States in 1890 had grown up in Ireland during the Famine. The first three rectors of the Catholic University of America, John J. Keane, later Archbishop of Dubuque; Thomas J. Conaty, later Bishop of Los Angeles; and Denis O’Connell, later Bishop of Richmond, had also grown up in Ireland during some or all of those bleak Famine years.

This group of Famine survivors among the Catholic Church’s hierarchy also included the two most important and powerful men in the American church at that time, or at any time in its history, for that matter:  Cardinal James Gibbons of Baltimore and Catholic University’s first chancellor, and Archbishop John Ireland of St. Paul. John Ireland was 8 years old when the Famine hit his native Kilkenny. Hunger and disease carried off his aunt and uncle, forcing his parents to take in a brood of young cousins. Eventually, Ireland’s family, the cousins included, emigrated to America.

Gibbons suffered even more from the Famine’s havoc. His father, Thomas, died from Famine fever in 1847. and two years later Gibbons sister also died. Young James was so distraught at her death he refused to eat for several days.

How did these paragons of the American church remember the Famine? John Ireland did his best to forget – at least publicly. America and the future, not Ireland and its past, became his passion.

Gibbons, too, loved America, but he did not forget the Famine. For Gibbons the Famine could only be understood as part of God’s “mysterious providence.” To him, “the Famine had been sent to send the Irish upon a mission to America where they would build the church in the greatest republic in the world.”

Ireland’s suffering had produced America’s salvation, perhaps, but the pain of the sacrifice of people never really went away.

Jewish Sam Miller on Catholics

Excerpts from an article written by non-Catholic Sam Miller -- a prominent Cleveland Jewish businessman:

Why would newspapers carry on a vendetta on one of the most important institutions that we have today in the United States, namely the Catholic Church?

Do you know -- the Catholic Church educates 2.6 million students everyday at the cost to that Church of 10 billion dollars, and a savings on the other hand to the American taxpayer of 18 billion dollars. The graduates go on to graduate studies at the rate of 92%.

The Church has 230 colleges and universities in the U.S. with an enrollment of 700,000 students.

The Catholic Church has a non-profit hospital system of 637 hospitals, which account for hospital treatment of 1 out of every 5 people -- not just Catholics -- in the United States today.

But the press is vindictive and trying to totally denigrate in every way the Catholic Church in this country. They have blamed the disease of pedophilia on the Catholic Church, which is as irresponsible as blaming adultery on the institution of marriage.

Let me give you some figures that Catholics should know and remember. For example, 12% of the 300 Protestant clergy surveyed admitted to sexual intercourse with a parishioner; 38% acknowledged other inappropriate sexual contact in a study by the United Methodist Church; 41.8% of clergy women reported unwanted sexual behavior; 17% of laywomen have been sexually harassed.

Meanwhile, 1.7% of the Catholic clergy has been found guilty of pedophilia. 10% of the Protestant ministers have been found guilty of pedophilia. This is not a Catholic problem.

A study of American priests showed that most are happy in the priesthood and find it even better than they had expected, and that most, if given the choice, would choose to be priests again in face of all this obnoxious PR the church has been receiving.

The Catholic Church is bleeding from self-inflicted wounds. The agony that Catholics have felt and suffered is not necessarily the fault of the Church. You have been hurt by a small number of wayward priests that have probably been totally weeded out by now.

Walk with your shoulders high and you head higher. Be a proud member of the most important non-governmental agency in the United States. Then remember what Jeremiah said: "Stand by the roads, and look and ask for the ancient paths, where the good way is and walk in it, and find rest for your souls." Be proud to speak up for your faith with pride and reverence and learn what your Church does for all other religions.

Be proud that you're a Catholic.

Friday, April 9, 2010

List of Prison and Jail Locations throughout the Cleveland Diocese

                        Diocesan Ministry to the Incarcerated

CUYAHOGA COUNTY

Rev. Frank Godic, Pastoral Care Services and Health Affairs
7911 Detroit Avenue, Cleveland, OH 44102, 216-431
-5900.
For general jail and prison resources, please call:
Parish Life Office, 216-696-6525, ext.3500

St. Edward Church, 419-289-7224
Cuyahoga County Jail

1215 West 3rd Street
Cleveland, OH 44113
216-443-6000
Rev. Mr. Martin Thiel, 216-443-6182; 216-749-0414
Parish Life Office, 216
-696-6525, ext. 3500
Rev. Neil Walters, 216-581-2852

North Royalton City Jail
14800 Bennett Road
North Royalton, OH 44133
440-237 -8686

Euclid City Jail  
545 East 222 Street
Euclid, Ohio 44123
216-289-8522
St. Christine Church, Euclid, Rev. Patrick Henry, 216-261-1410

Sr. Elaine Theresa Burrows, SIW, St. Thomas More Church, 216-749-0414

Northeast Pre-Release Center
2675 East 30 Street
Cleveland, OH 44115
216
-771-6460
Rev. James O'Donnell, 216-566-0531
Mrs. Linda Catanzaro, 216-348-4119

Cuyahoga County Detention Home
2209 Central Avenue
Cleveland, OH 44115
216-443-3300
Rev. James O'Donnell, 216-566-0531

Cuyahoga Hills Juvenile Correctional Institute
4321 Green Road
Highland Hills, OH 44128
216-464-8200
Rev. James Masek, 440-842-5533

ADULT FACILITIES:         
Ashland County Jail
1205 East Main Street
Ashland, OH 44805
419-281-9009
GEAUGA COUNTY
Geauga County Jail
13281 Ravenna Road
Chardon, OH 44024
440-286-4031
St. Helen, Newbury, Rev. Mr. Will Payne, 440-564-5805
St
. Edward, Parkman, Rev. John Burkley, 440-548-3812
St
. Lucy, Middlefield, Rev. John Burkley, 440-548-3812

Geauga County Youth Center
13300 Aquilla Road
Chardon, OH 44024
440-285-2222, ext
. 5340

MEDINA COUNTY

Medina County Juvenile Detention
655 Independence Drive
Medina, OH 44256
330-764-8408
St. Francis Xavier, Rev. Mr. Dan Norris, 330-725-4968
Medina County Jail
555 Independence Drive
Medina, OH 44256
330-725-0028
St. Francis Xavier, Rev. Mr. Dan Norris, 330-725-4968

Grafton Correctional Institute
2500 South Avon Belden Road
Grafton, OH 44044
440-748-1161
Rev. John Seybold, 440-926-2364
Rev. Mr. John Rivera, 440-327-4426

LAKE COUNTY
Lake County Youth Detention Center
53 East Erie Street
P.O. Box 490
Painesville, OH 44077
440-350-3159
St. Anthony of Padua, Fairport Harbor, Mary Rininger, 440-354-4525



Lake County Jail
104 East Erie Street
Painesville, OH 44077
440-350-5601
St. Mary Parish, Painesville, Marty Hillier, 440-354-4381
St
. Anthony of Padua, Fairport Harbor, 440-354-4525

LORAIN COUNTY

Lorain County Detention Home
9967 South Murray Ridge Road
Elyria, OH 44035
440-326-4040
St. Agnes Parish, 440-322-5622


Lorain Correctional Institute
2075 South Avon Belden Road
Grafton, OH 44044
440-748-1049'
Rev. Charles Ryba, 440-236-5095
Mrs. Rita Bowen, 440-322-5622, ext. 17
Lorain County Jail
9896 Murray Ridge Road
Elyria, OH 44035
440-329-3718
Rev. Albert Krupp, 440-322-5622
Mrs. Rita Bowen, 440-322-5622, ext. 17

Lorain/Medina CBCF
9892 Murray Ridge Road
Elyria, Ohio 44035
440-323-3233
Rev. Albert Krupp, 440-322-5622
Mrs. Rita Bowen, 440-322-5622, ext. 17

North Coast Correctional Treatment Facility
2000 South Avon Belden Road
Grafton, OH 44044
440-748-5000
Fr. Charles Ryba, 440-236-5095
Mrs. Rita Bowen, 440-322-5622, ext. 17



LUCAS COUNTY


Mohican Juvenile Correctional Facility
1012 ODNR Mohican 51
Perrysville, OH 44864
419-994-4127
St. Peter Parish, 419-994-4396

WAYNE COUNTY
Wayne County Jail
201 West North Street
Wooster, OH 44691
330-287 -5770
St. Mary of the Assumption, Wooster, Rev. Steve Moran, 330-264-8824
SUMMIT COUNTY
JUVENILE FACILITIES:
Boys Village Ohio, Inc. (Smithville)
2803 Akron Road
Wooster, OH 44691
330-264-3232
St. Mary of the Assumption, Wooster, Rev. Steve Moran, 330-264-8824

Summit County Jail
205 East Crosier Street
Akron, OH 44311
330-643-2113
Mr. Dell Rogers, 330-688-6412, ext. 467

Summit County Juvenile Detention Services
650 Dan Street
Akron, OH 44310
330-643-2960/330-643-2962
St. Martha Parish, 330-376-5144

Youth Development Center
996 Hines Hill Road
Hudson, OH 44236
330
-656-2282
St. Mary Parish, Rose Gordyan, 330-653-8118, ext. 227

St. Helen, Newbury, Rev. Mr. Will Payne, 440-564-5805 

Friday, April 2, 2010

PLAQUE HONORING WWII HEROES RESCUED

PLAQUE HONORING OUR LADY OF MOUNT CARMEL’S WWII DEAD RESCUED


The Greater Cleveland Veterans Memorial (GCVM) was created as a living memorial to honor those Greater Clevelanders who lost their lives in wars of the 20th Century. They are memorialized at the GCVM website http://www.clevelandvetsmemorial.org/.

Recently a plaque honoring the parishioners of Our Lady of Mount Carmel who lost their lives in World War II was rescued from possible oblivion when it was announced the church was being closed. It is currently in the office of Frank Piunno, NCR, Inc., Mayfield Hts., Ohio. He is the nephew of Michael J. Piunno, who is among those listed on the plaque. A smaller reproduction of the plaque is pictured here held by Russ Davis.

Davis and JC Sullivan, Vietnam War U.S. Army veterans and members of the Italian American War Veterans Post 34, have taken up interest in the names on the plaque. They discovered a number of gaps in information at the GCVM memorial site. They are asking the Italian-American community of greater Cleveland if they can help. Missing from the memorial site are:

BARBERA, SALVATORE. No photo or unit information. Died in No. Africa, 1943.
CALCO, WILLIAM M. Died in Italy. No photo or other information.
CELLURA, ANGELO T. No photo.
ELLIS, EDWIN. Non-battle death at Alexandria AAF, LA. No photo or other information.
FUSCO, RALPH A. No photo.
LONGO, JOSEPH A. No photo.
NOTARO, ANTHONY. No Photo
PIUNNO, MICHAEL J. No picture or unit information.
SWEENEY, JOHN R. No photo
TODARO, FRANK. No photo or unit information.
PETRARCA, FRANK J. No unit information. Medal of Honor information has been sent to the website.

The following parishioners are not listed on the website:

CINKEVIC, ANTHONY; D'ANGELO, JERRY; IAVENNA, JAHN; IOFFREDDO, JOSEPH; KABALA, CHARLES; RIZZOLLO, MICHAEL; SANTELLI, ALBERT; SCARVELLI, SAM; VAIRETTA, STEVE.

If any readers can help fill in the blanks please contact Russ Davis (usprep1987@aol.com) or Sullivan (osullivan9@roadrunner.com).