Catholic Standard El Pregonero
Classifieds Buy Photos

United in faith, Asian and Pacific Island Catholics gather at National Shrine for 20th annual pilgrimage

Members of the Our Lady of La Vang Mission, a Vietnamese Catholic community in Chantilly, Virginia, participate in a procession before a May 6 Mass marking the 20th annual Asian and Pacific Island Catholics Marian Pilgrimage to the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. Washington Cardinal Wilton Gregory was the main celebrant at the Mass. (CS photo/Mihoko Owada)

As 10 members of the youth group from Our Lady of Vietnam Parish in Silver Spring, Maryland, dramatically played traditional drums at the front of the sanctuary of the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, the 20th annual Asian and Pacific Island Catholics Marian Pilgrimage on May 6 opened with a procession of nearly two dozen Catholic communities with roots in that part of the world.

The 600 pilgrims who gathered at the basilica came from Washington, D.C., Maryland, Virginia, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and North Carolina, and in the procession, they carried banners and wore native dress as they carried statues and portraits of Mary as the patroness of countries including the Philippines, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, China, Laos, Myanmar, India, Pakistan, Vietnam, Korea, Samoa and the U.S. island territory of Guam.

In the photo above, Asian and Pacific Island Catholics from New Jersey participate in a procession before a May 6 Mass marking the 20th annual Asian and Pacific Island Catholics Marian Pilgrimage to the National Shrine in Washington. In the photos below, a woman carries a statue depicting Mary as Our Lady of Korea during the procession, and members of the Indian Catholic community carry a banner and a statue honoring Mary as Our Lady of Good Health, Vailankanni. (CS photos/Mihoko Owada)

As the pilgrims marched toward the altar, a choir sang a Marian hymn in Tagalog, a language of the Philippines, and the participants reverently placed their statues and portraits of Mary at the sanctuary and lined their banners in an area behind the altar.

Celebrating a Mass for the pilgrims that afternoon, Washington Cardinal Wilton Gregory said, “Your presence is a magnificent witness of how all-encompassing are the places and nations where God’s word has been planted and flourished.”

In his homily, the cardinal also noted, “As our neighbors from Asia and the Pacific Islands assemble here in Mary’s Shrine, you continue to remind the entire Church that God’s Spirit is present in every corner of our world. His divine glory is to be found in every part of our planet.”

The pilgrimage was sponsored by the Asian and Pacific Catholic Network, in collaboration with the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Secretariat of Cultural Diversity in the Church, and with related offices from The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Washington and the Diocese of Arlington, Virginia.

After the gathering began with time for Confession and then the opening procession, a call to prayer featuring sacred songs and movements included expressive performances by dancers wearing native dress from the Samoan Catholic Community of Metro Washington, D.C.; the Chinese Catholic Community of the Archdiocese of Newark, New Jersey; the Montagnard Catholic Community of Charlotte, North Carolina, representing an indigenous people from the highlands of central Vietnam; and St. Paul Chung Korean Catholic Church of Chantilly, Virginia.

In the photo above, the call to prayer before a May 6 Mass marking the 20th annual Asian and Pacific Island Catholics Marian Pilgrimage to the National Shrine featured sacred songs and movements by participating groups, including the Samoan Catholic Community of Metro Washington, D.C. In the first photo below, the groups performing during the call to prayer also included dancers from St. Paul Chung Korean Catholic Church in Fairfax, Virginia, and in the second photo below, dancers from the Chinese Catholic community in New Jersey. (CS photos/Mihoko Owada)

Then members of the Camacho family, Filipino Catholics from All Saints Catholic Church in Manassas, Virginia, participated in crowning a statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

Annalee Camacho crowns a statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary before a May 6 Mass marking the 20th annual Asian and Pacific Island Catholics Marian Pilgrimage to the National Shrine. She was joined by members of her family, including her younger sister Alana Camacho at left and their mother Lia at center in the background. Standing at right behind the statue is Vincent Camacho. The Filipino Catholic family attends All Saints Catholic Church in Manassas, Virginia. (CS photo/Mihoko Owada)

“The Blessed Mother brings all her children together to her Son,” said Msgr. Vito Buonanno, the basilica’s associate rector and director of pilgrimages, as he welcomed the Asian and Pacific Island Catholics.

Before the Mass, the joyful mysteries of the rosary were prayed in different languages and led by members of the Couples for Christ from northern Virginia; the Korean Catholic community from New Jersey; the Burmese Catholic community from Metro Washington; the Asian Catholic community of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia; and the Syro-Malankara Eastern Catholic Rite from the Archdiocese of Washington.

In the photo above, before a May 6 Mass marking the 20th annual Asian and Pacific Island Catholics Marian Pilgrimage to the National Shrine, members of the Burmese Catholic Community of Metro Washington, D.C., lead the congregation in praying the third joyful mystery of the rosary, the Nativity of Our Lord. In the photos below, members of the Syro-Malankara Eastern Catholic Rite from The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Washington, lead the congregation in praying the fifth joyful mystery of the rosary, the Finding of Jesus in the Temple, and people in the congregation join in praying the rosary. (CS photos/Mihoko Owada)

Welcoming the pilgrims at the beginning of Mass, Msgr. Walter Rossi, the basilica’s rector, noted that Cardinal Gregory would be marking the 50th anniversary of his ordination to the priesthood on May 9, and the congregation applauded Washington’s archbishop for that milestone.

In his homily, Cardinal Gregory said the Blessed Mother “has chosen to visit many of the places in this part of God’s world,” showing her maternal love and closeness as she reveals herself in the garb and appearance of the people she visits.

Cardinal Wilton Gregory gives his homily during the May 6 Mass marking the 20th annual Asian and Pacific Island Catholics Marian Pilgrimage to the National Shrine. Statues and portraits of Mary venerated by Asian Catholic communities were carried in a procession and displayed at the front of the sanctuary. (CS photo/Mihoko Owada)

Noting the diversity and unity of the Asian and Pacific Island Catholics, the cardinal said, “The Spirit of God receives the gifts that we bring… (and) fashions those differences into an ever new and wonderful image of Christ fully alive and risen in the contemporary world.”

Washington’s archbishop then emphasized that “the aim of the Church of Christ cannot be achieved by a secular ‘multiculturalism,’ as noble and much needed as such an accomplishment may be, especially at this time in history.”

Cardinal Gregory underscored how Catholics are a people who profess one faith, share one Eucharist and are sanctified by the sacraments. “Our unity is never simply tolerance, but oneness in faith and in grace,” he said.

The cardinal encouraged the Asian and Pacific Island Catholics to unite their hearts in prayer, asking God that peace and evangelical love be poured out on the lands and over the people represented there. Concluding his homily, the cardinal pointed out that, “After all, the Lord promised we would be one Church, one people, His people, His beloved, and He will do it.”

People participate in the May 6 Mass celebrated by Washington Cardinal Wilton Gregory marking the 20th annual Asian and Pacific Island Catholics Marian Pilgrimage to the National Shrine. (CS photos/Mihoko Owada)

Prayers of the faithful were then offered in Tagalog, Chinese, Indonesian, Burmese, a language of the Montagnards, the Konkani language of India, and then a final prayer in English, asking that God “grant the blessings we need as we journey together in His love.”

Then offertory gifts were brought to the cardinal by representatives of some of the communities wearing native dress.

During a May 6 Mass marking the 20th annual Asian and Pacific Island Catholics Marian Pilgrimage to the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, Washington Cardinal Wilton Gregory receives offertory gifts from Carolyn Ng, a catechetical leader at Our Lady of China Pastoral Mission in The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Washington. (CS photo/Mihoko Owada)

Music at the Mass was led by a Filipino choir from Our Lady of Good Counsel Church in Vienna, Virginia; a Vietnamese choir from Our Lady of La Vang Mission in Chantilly, Virginia; and a Bengali choir from St. Camillus Parish in Silver Spring, Maryland. According to the Mass program for the pilgrimage, participating communities also included Catholics with roots in Bangladesh, Cambodia, Japan, Thailand and Lebanon.

Cardinal Wilton Gregory blesses members of the congregation after celebrating a May 6 Mass marking the 20th annual Asian and Pacific Island Catholics Marian Pilgrimage to the National Shrine. (CS photo/Mihoko Owada)

At a reception after the Mass, Wendi Williams, the executive director of the Office of Cultural Diversity and Outreach for The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Washington, called the gathering “a beautiful celebration and opportunity for us to be together in prayer.”

In an interview, Sister Myrna Tordillo, a native of the Philippines who is a Scalabrinian sister and serves as the assistant director for the Subcommittee on Asian and Pacific Island Affairs for the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Secretariat of Cultural Diversity in the Church, said the annual pilgrimage offers a vibrant witness of the religious identity and cultures of the participating immigrant and refugee communities as they seek to pass on their Catholic faith to younger generations.

A mother holds her child at the May 6 Mass marking the 20th annual Asian and Pacific Island Catholics Marian Pilgrimage to the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. (CS photo/Mihoko Owada)

“We are united in our diversity through our faith and our devotion to our Blessed Virgin Mary who is our model and example of being a disciple to her Son, our Lord Jesus Christ,” she said.

That point was echoed by Dr. Fred Semendy, a native of India who is a retired physicist and engineer and who serves as the president of the Asian and Pacific Catholic Network. He said the gathering began as an effort to bring Asian Catholics together at the basilica to pray the rosary, and has continued for the past 20 years as an annual pilgrimage, a shared spiritual journey for those communities.

“Even though our cultures and languages are different, we are uniting under Jesus and Mary. Through Mary to Jesus, that is our goal,” he said.

The Samoan Catholics participating in the pilgrimage included Puna Ta’amu, her husband Tusapa and their five children, ranging in ages from 18 to 7. The couple serves in the military for the Army Corps of Engineers, and their family attends St. Mary’s Catholic Church of Piscataway in Clinton, Maryland.

Puna Ta’amu, who along with some of her family members participated in the call to prayer, said that for Samoans, “dancing is a big part of our culture.”

Reflecting on the pilgrimage, she said, “As Catholics, we’re a multicultural community. We touch every part of the world, and it’s important to show that, although we are from different parts of the world, we are united in our faith and our love for our Mother Mary.”

Also participating in the call to prayer were dancers from St. Paul Chung Korean Catholic Church in Fairfax, Virginia. Maria Kim said the group from their church volunteers in the community, performing traditional Korean dances at schools, hospitals and nursing homes, to share their culture. She said seeing the other Asian and Pacific Island Catholics coming together at the pilgrimage to pray, dance and sing nearly brought her to tears.

Jacinta Mascarenhas, a native of India who works as a government consultant and is a leader with the Asian and Pacific Catholic Network, also said she was very moved by the devotion of the pilgrims. The member of St. Leo the Great Parish in Fairfax, Virginia, said the annual gathering of Catholics with roots in Asia and the Pacific islands shows “there is a place for us at the table.”

Another member of that network, Carolyn Ng, serves as a catechetical leader for the Our Lady of China Pastoral Mission in the Archdiocese of Washington. She noted that the pilgrims from North Carolina started driving at midnight to attend the gathering. “They (the participants) are proud of their heritage and their faith, and they want to come together to celebrate it,” she said.

Among those attending the pilgrimage for the first time was Ogie DeLeon, a native of the Philippines who works as a software developer and is a member of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Parish in Lake Ridge, Virginia. “It’s really wonderful to hear different prayers in different languages in the Asian and Pacific Island communities, and actually knowing that we are one in faith,” said DeLeon, who wore a traditional Filipino Barong shirt with ornate embroidered patterns.

Jean Berdych, a member of the Burmese Catholic community at St. John the Baptist Parish in Silver Spring, Maryland who works as an accountant, helped lead the rosary in her native language at the gathering. “We are Catholics, a universal church. You can see we may be speaking different languages, but we are all together,” she said.

That sense of solidarity in faith was also emphasized by Gabriel Francis, a hardware engineer who is a member of St. Patrick’s Parish in Rockville, Maryland, and who serves as president of the Indian American Catholic Association. He said the pilgrimage participants who spoke different languages and have different customs came together in prayer, as “one body in Christ.” 


Menu
Search