Wednesday, August 12, 2015

SALTILLO MISSION ADDS CHAPEL, AND MORE




NEW CHAPEL UNDER CONSTRUCTION
                                     
                                       


SALTILLO MISSION ADDS CHAPEL, DORMITORY, AND CONVENT, CONTINUING WORK OF FR. QUINN

BY:  Msgr. Michael Flannery
Taken from Mississippi Catholic, August 7, 2015

     SALTILLO, MEXICO--The good work begun by Father Patrick Quinn in Saltillo, still continues to bear fruit.  The most recent project is the building of a new church within the City of Saltillo, which will be named Divine Mercy.  This will bring the total number of churches within the city under the responsibility of San Miguel Mission to eight.  The mission is also responsible for 25 mountain villages, some of which are six hours away from Saltillo.

     The new project is about two miles form San Miguel the Archangel which is presently the center of the mission.  Within the confines of that same campus there are plans to build a home for unwed mothers and a dormitory-style building to provide housing for college students coming from the mountain villages who cannot afford to pay the housing costs during their college years.  Finally, there will be a convent on the campus where the Divine Mercy Sisters, a newly founded religious order, will supervise the operation of the campus and its ministries.

     On Dec. 1, 2014, Bishop Joseph Kopacz joined Bishop Raul Vera Lopez, Bishop of Saltillo, in blessing the cornerstone of the Divine Mercy Church.  The ceremony was attended by about 300 people.



                                          Father David with Bishop Kopacz
                                            and Msgr. Flannery in Mexico


Saltillo Bishop Raul Vera Lopez



     The Saltillo Mission was initially begun in response to an appeal made by Blessed Pope Paul VI to the U. S. Conference of Catholic Bishops in 1967,  to consider adopting a mission in Latin America.  At the time the ratio between priests and people in Latin America was one priest for every 10,000 baptized Catholics and the ratio in the United States was one priest for every 1,000 Catholics.  Then Bishop Joseph Brunini, of happy memory, responded positively to the challenge.

     Father Murray Clayton, a priest from Shreveport, La., who was  involved with an orphanage in Saltillo, suggested that the diocese consider going there.  Saltillo is 200 miles south of the border at Laredo, Mexico.  Father Patrick Quinn volunteered to be the first pastor of the mission.  Father Quinn spent three months learning Spanish at Laredo before he moved to Saltillo and became pastor of one of the poorest parishes in the diocese, Perpetual Help (Perpetual Socorro), in 1969.


"THE MAN"


     Father Quinn remained the pastor of Perpetual Help Church until the time of his death on Jan. 7, 1997. During that 40-year administration, the parish had grown and several parishes were split off from it. The city of Saltillo grew from 200,000 to 709,000.  The first group of Catholic youth to visit the mission was from Pascagoula Our Lady of Victory Church Parish in 1969.  It became a very popular retreat for the youth of Mississippi and Father Quinn built a dormitory to house up to 100 youth at a given time.  It is estimated that over the 40 years more than 40,000 people from Mississippi went to the mission and for many of those youth it was a life changing experience.

     The situation in Mexico changed to the point where  the safety of the youth could not be guaranteed and  the state did not recommend sending young people there.  Shortly after Father Quinn's death, a decision was made to move the center of the mission from Perpetual Help to San Miguel, and Msgr. Michael Thornton was appointed pastor.  Presently, Fathers David Martinez and Elevio Casarubias staff the mission and the good work begun by Father Quinn continues.

Padre Elevio and Padre David

     Because of the shortage of priests in Mississippi, we find it impossible to send priests to the mission. However, the shortage of priests in Latin America has changed to the point where we are looking to Mexico for seminarians and we are blessed to have a number of priests from Mexico working in our midst.

     "We cast our bread on the water and it is returned to us."
                    (Msgr. Flannery is pastor of Madison St. Francis Parish)

Msgr. Flannery served with Father Quinn in Saltillo from 1971-1974.
(photos added)







Sunday, August 2, 2015

OH, GOOD MAN! The Legacy of Patrick Quinn



"OH, GOOD MAN",  a book about Father Patrick Quinn, Pastor of the Mexican Saltillo Mission in Saltillo, Coah., Mexico, by Jesus "Chuy" Salas Cortes, is now on sale in the United States. 

     Chuy brought the book to America for Presentation and book signing on July 25, 2015, in Biloxi, Mississippi.

     The books can now be purchased at the following locations:

1.   Annunciation Catholic Church book store, Kiln, Mississippi.

2.    Immaculate Conception Catholic Church, Laurel, Mississippi.

3.     Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Hattiesburg, Mississippi.

4.     Fatima Catholic Church, Biloxi, Mississippi.

5.      Ascension of Our Lord Catholic Church, Laplace, La. 

6.      St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church,  Madison, Mississippi.

and through the mail at email erubielsando@hotmail.com .

     The book is bilingual with English in front, then lots of pictures of the much-loved priest, then the Spanish version.

     

      Father Quinn was born in Ireland on June 25, 1930,  ordained a priest in Ireland,  then came to the United States, Diocese of Jackson, Mississippi, then volunteered to open a Mission in Saltillo, Mexico.  He arrived in January 1969, then became Pastor of  Perpetuo Socorro Catholic Church, on Abasolo Street, and also other churches in the City of Saltillo, as well as a large number of  rancho churches scattered throughout the mountains, near and far from the City.

     Many are still awed by the fact that he could take care of such as large and   vast parish.

     Doing great work there for 28 years, he passed away unexpectedly, on January 9, 1997.

     During his ministry he touched many thousands of lives.  He loved them and they loved him.  He is sorely missed in Mexico, the United States, Ireland, and around the world.  

     The book is a chance for those who knew him to remember the life and works of a great man, and for those who did not know, to become aware of how amazing this great man was.  

     Father Benny Piovan,  former Pastor of the Saltillo Mission, began the movement to have Padre Quinn canonized a Saint by the Catholic  Church.  Father Benny, himself, passed away while working at the Mission doing great work for his parishioners.

     The Mission started by Padre Quinn is still going strong, still doing great work started by him,  and now located at San Miguel A. Catholic Church, Saltillo, where it moved after the death of  Padre Quinn.

     BRAVO PADRE QUINN................................

His mission is on Facebook at:  Saltillo Mission San Miguel

Thursday, July 9, 2015

COMING TO AMERICA!!!!


     Members of the Perpetuo Socorro Catholic Church choir in Saltillo,  Mexico are planning a trip to Biloxi,  Mississippi  to remember in concert a charismatic and lovable Irish priest named Padre Patrick Quinn, who served as their Pastor for 28 years, and as a way to thank those from Mississippi, Louisiana as well as other parishes around the United States who often visited  and supported the Mission over the years since the Mission was started by Father Quinn in 1969.   The choir has even written songs about this legend of a man.  Father Quinn was born in Ireland on June 25, 1930,  spent time in Mississippi after being ordained a priest, and took up missionary work in Saltillo, Mexico, in January, 1969, where he stayed until his death in January, 1997.





       A mexican author, Jesus "Chuy" Salas Cortez has penned a book about the famous beloved Pastor, and plans to open a book tour at the same event.   This is the english edition.  The spanish version was launched last year.  The book includes many photos along with the history of  the life and times of this great man.  Fr. Quinn's amazing  accomplishments are brought to life with this first book written about the saintly Father Quinn.  He was simply a legend in his own time.  He was loved and still missed by thousands of people whose lives he touched. 


EXCERPT FROM THE BOOK:

OH, GOOD MAN
by
Jesus Salas Cortes


For Benjamin Piovan,
with great affection.

PREFACE


      Sometimes, when you least expect it, life sends you a gift. That’s what happened to me when I received this story about Father Quinn. Like most people from Saltillo, I had heard of the Irish priest who was at the Church of Perpetuo Socorro, the priest who took food and clothing to people who lived in rural areas, but now I truly regret never meeting him. I didn’t know Chuy Salas, the author of the book that tells the story of the life and work of this missionary priest, either.
     
     A few weeks ago I received a phone call, the announcement of the gift that life was sending to me: the opportunity to be in close contact with the life and work of Father Quinn, by intercession of Chuy Salas Cortes. It was the latter who was calling to
ask me to help him with the correction of style of his book, since a friend of his, Miguel Sanchez Maldonado, had recommended that Chuy contact me for this task. I will never be able to thank Chuy enough for taking his friend’s advice.

     When I found out about the type of book I was dealing with, I thought it would be about a priest that was well-loved in his parish, one of many in our city; and only that. As I read the text I realized how wrong I was. The hero of the story that Chuy tells is far from being a common priest. He was a man who performed his ministry with total dedication, a revived example of Christ on Earth.

     According to Catholic doctrine, there are three main functions of priests, the men who are consecrated into the ministry of service to the Church: preaching, administering sacraments, and pastoral government. Some theologians say that preaching is the essential work of a priest, that a priest is the herald of God’s word.

     Others point out that the aspect of worship is predominant. Yet others argue that
guiding the faithful is the most important issue.

     According to Jean Galot, priests are present to serve the community, and guiding at same community is a service offered in love: “Christ guides His flock through His Word and guarantees the truth of his teachings through the supreme testimony of giving
of Himself.”  That’s what Father Quinn was: a living testimony of the teachings of Jesus, who also gave his life for his brothers.

     As you read these pages, those of you who had the blessing of knowing him will remember the genius and the wit of this priest. Those who were not so lucky will discover the wonderful man in this Irish priest, a man who served thousands of people
from rural and urban Saltillo with joy, love and passion, and who touched the lives of many with his example.
    
      I know that writing this book was an act of reverence and love inspired by Patrick Quinn. The book is without doubt a heartfelt tribute to the unforgettable Irishman who came to Saltillo one good day to fulfill a mission and never left because
he wanted to stay with us forever.

                                         Odila Fuentes Aguirre
             Saltillo, Coahuila de Zaragoza, October, 2014


-------------------------------------------------------------
Details of  the book sales will be announced at the Fatima event. Part of the proceeds will be donated to the Saltillo Mission San Miguel.  The Mission is still going strong. 
The Mission is on Facebook at Saltillo Mission San Miguel. 







































Friday, July 25, 2014

SALTILLO MISSION HISTORY-PADRE QUINN



(Printed with permission of  the Mississippi Catholic newspaper, Diocese of Jackson. 
Originally published in Mississippi Today,  June 23, 1989.)




FATHER PATRICK QUINN




SALTILLO, MEXICO
OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HELP
(PERPETUO SOCORRO CHURCH)






     Some addictions are life-giving. Consider the one which has Father Mike Flannery in its thrall.  By his own admission, this tall, red-haired Irishman, judicial vicar of the Jackson Diocese, is "addicted" to Saltillo, Mexico, and to the parishioners of Our Lady of Perpetual Help, the parish there which is co-sponsored by the Diocese of Jackson and  Diocese of  Biloxi.





PERPETUO SOCORRO CHURCH



    "Saltillo just gets in your blood," says Father Flannery who served from 1971 through 1974 in this city founded in 1577. "I needed to be deprogrammed when I got home," he chuckles, remembering the culture shock of going from a parish of 45,000 to Rosedale, Miss., a parish of 45.  Now, Father Flannery claims he returns to Mexico every year "to get a fix."





Father Flannery, Bishop Brunini, Fr. Quinn


     Priests are not the only ones to experience the lure of Saltillo.  Young people who have made the trip with CYO groups long to return there.  Montrel Cooper, the newly elected diocesan CYO (Catholic Youth Organization) president, thinks, "Every kid in Mississippi should have a chance to go to Saltillo."


     Nicknamed "Refrigerator" by the Mexican children, Cooper claims, "It's worth the trip just to get to be around Padre Quinn."


     The Padre is Father Patrick Quinn, a native of County Galway, Ireland, and by now such a legend in the annals of  Mississippi Catholicism that when people talk about him, they always resort to exaggeration.  " A white-headed god," says Cooper, recalling when everyone else at the mission is exhausted, the Padre, who rises before daybreak, is still going strong.


     Catholics from Mississippi and Mexico are not alone in their admiration for the handsome missionary with the shock of snow-white hair.  In May 1986, 15 years after he was named pastor of the Saltillo parish, Father Quinn was awarded an honorary doctorate in humane letters from Loyola University of New Orleans.


     In conferring the degree, Father James Carter, SJ, president of Loyola, found Father Quinn could not be described in ordinary language.  Old Testament Scriptures,  he began, "recall another age when 'there were giants on the earth....'  One of those giants still walks the Earth, specifically in Saltillo, Mexico, in the guise of Father Patrick Quinn."


     In the mid-summer of 1969, however, this giant of a man was full of gigantic uncertainties.  He had just been appointed pastor of a Mexico parish the size of the State of Delaware with a Catholic population of 45,000, all Spanish-speaking, and he spoke no Spanish.




SALTILLO, MEXICO


AN IDEA IN THE '60S

     It all started with an idea.
     Calling Latin America "the world's largest mission field,"  Pope Pius XII began urging bishops in developed nations to come to the aid of the church in Latin America where nearly half of the world's Catholics were being served by 10 percent of the world's priests.


     Politics and poverty had created this priest vacuum.  Vocations, by and large, come out of the middle class.  Latin America, with its small middle class produced almost no vocations.  Millions of Latin Americans never saw a priest; millions more waited years to receive the sacraments.

     Pope John XXIII and later, Pope Paul VI continued urging the Bishops of  the world to become involved in Latin America.


     In the summer of 1967, Auxiliary Bishop Joseph Brunini, who was administrator of the diocese and the other hero of this tale, and Father Bernard Law, president of the Priests' Senate, mailed questionnaires to the priests of Mississippi, asking if they would support a diocese mission in Latin America.  Over 80 percent of he priests favored such a project.
     When he was installed as the eighth bishop of the diocese, Bishop Brunini announced a Latin American mission would be a priority in his episcopacy.  To the diocesan priests assembled at the ceremony at St. Peter in Jackson, he issued an invitation for volunteers.
     Why did Father Quinn apply for the job?
      "I had voted in favor of the mission," he explains. " It didn't seem right to vote for it without volunteering for the job."
       In October 1968, Bishop Brunini and the newly organized personnel board, a Vatican II innovation, gave Father Quinn the twin tasks of selecting the mission site and for making arrangements for the diocese to staff it.


SALTILLO SELECTED


     Saltillo was not the only place under consideration.  Parishes in Panama and Guatemala had sent requests as well, but Father Quinn had Mississippi Catholics in his mind when he settled on Saltillo.  The Mexican parish, only 1,000 miles from Mississippi, was by comparison close to home.  The priest wanted Mississippi Catholics to have the opportunity of participating personally in the mission work.
     "On Jan. 13, 1969," wrote Father Quinn on the mission's 10th anniversary,  "I left St. Therese Parish in Jackson to begin preparations in Saltillo and its surrounding missions."  By many standards, Mississippi parishes, measured in miles rather than city blocks, are considered large.  Our Lady of Perpetual Help is enormous.
     Originally, it included the church and several "colonies" where Mass was celebrated in the city plus numerous villages, or "ranchos," dotted throughout the surrounding mountains.  Caring for Perpetual Help would be a gigantic undertaking.


     The original plans had called for the priest to send his first six months in Mexico in preparation-learning Spanish, acquainting himself with the Mexican culture, and visiting the villages.
     "It was a time of mistakes and blunders for me," confesses the missionary, but it was a time of  confirmation as well.  "Visiting the villages for the first time," he writes, "and watching the faces light up when I told them in broken Spanish that soon priests would visit them and say Mass for them.  These were the most moving experiences of my life."
     However, three months into this preparation period, Father Quinn received an urgent call from Ireland.  His father was seriously ill.
     Immediately, the priest left for Ireland.

     Father Quinn made pastor.
     Three weeks later, when he returned to Mexico, he found a letter awaiting him. Bishop Luiz Guizar, Bishop of Saltillo, has appointed him pastor of Our Lady of Perpetual Help.
     "This is ridiculous," Father Quinn remembers thinking.  "I haven't yet preached a sermon in Spanish.  I won't understand the problems of the people."  When he went to Bishop  Guizar with his questions and his reservations, he was met with other questions and with what had turned out to very sound advice.

     "Father," began the old Mexican bishop, "do you think St. Paul knew the language and the dialects of the people he preached to? Do you think St. Francis Xavier knew the language of the Japanese when he converted them?  Above all, do you think St. Patrick knew the language  and dialects of the Irish people when he converted them?"
     The Irishman must have shook his head at each question because the wise old man continued, "The greatest conversions in history were made by people not fluent in the languages in which they preached."
     Father Quinn knew Bishop Guizar's history.  Twice, during the 1930s persecution of the Mexican church, he had been condemned to death, and twice the firing squads had allowed him to escape.  Father Quinn believed he was in the presence of a saint.

     "People don't listen to words, said the bishop.  "They listen to a person.  Go ahead and take that parish, Father.  Let Christ work through you."

     The rest of the story is about what happens when a person follows that last bit of advice.

     On June 27, 1969, when Father Quinn accepted the job as pastor of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Parish in Saltillo, Mexico, Mississippi Catholics entered a new era in their history as a people.


     Within that first week, Father Patrick Murray arrived in Saltillo to begin work as the mission's first assistant pastor.


     By early September, the two priests had witnessed 16 weddings, baptized over 50 babies, prepared 125 children for First Communion, and were learning the virtue of patience.


     The Mexican bureaucracy moves slowly, particularly when the church is involved.  The special permit for the mission pick-up truck had not arrived, but that delay had not kept the two priests away from the ranchos, several of them six hours away from Saltillo.


     In one of the ranchos, a tiny chapel was already going up.  The cost of the building supplies had been donated by a Jackson Catholic, but the villagers were doing the work themselves.  It was a pattern of partnership between Mexican and Mississippi Catholics.


     In Saltillo, plans were being laid by two groups to build small churches at two of the "colonies."  And construction on the rectory had begun at Out Lady of Perpetual Help, but it was slow going.


     " 'Manana' does not mean tomorrow," wrote Father Murray to Bishop Brunini, "or the next day or the next...But if you have patience, they will do a good job."


     Father Murray remained at Perpetual help from 1969 through 1973, helping to organize the village ministry and "Saltillo Summer", a three-week long missionary experience for older Mississippi teenagers in which, 18 years later, over 8,000  young  people have participated.


     Father Flannery arrived in Saltillo in 1971.  Among his lasting contributions there was the establishment of the catechetical program.


     But in order to understand that program, one must know something about the population of the Mexican church.




FAITH OF YOUNG ADULTS


     According to Father Flannery, the most striking thing about the church in Mexico is the faith of the young adults.  "When you go into an American church," said the priest, " and look around at the congregation, you have to ask yourself  'where are the 18-to-24-year-olds?' "


     In contrast, he explains,  "the young adults in Mexico not only make up the largest part of the membership, there are the powerhouse."


     The  catechists come from the population.  Under Father Flannery's leadership, 100 catechists were trained as religious education teachers.  They organized themselves into choirs.  They took on the responsibility of teaching religion to the elementary children in the city itself, and they began accompanying the priests on their daily journeys to the ranchos where they assisted at Liturgies, sang, entertained and taught the village children.   Today, at Our Lady of Perpetual Help, over 300 catechists carry on their vital ministry.


      By the end of the 1970s, Father Michael Thornton, who served from 1973 through 1977, had developed the mission's medical program.




FATHER MIKE THORNTON AND FATHER HENRY MCINERNEY



     Father Louis Lohan, who served from 1974 through 1978, had initiated and organized the parish youth program and Father Paul Madden the parish choirs.





FATHER LOUIS LOHAN AND FATHER PATRICK MOCKLER






     "The '70s have been times of trial and error, success and failure for us."  wrote Father  Quinn in the January 30, 1981, edition of Mississippi Today.  "However, thank God many fruits appear."

    The accomplishments during  the first 10 years were impressive. In the villages, 38 simple mission churches had been build.  Within the city of Saltillo, a convent and medical offices had gone up.

     At four sites around  the city, community centers, each complete with church, recreation center and assembly hall, had been built.

     Fifty solid one-room houses had been constructed for families who had formerly lived in huts.
     And untold tons of beans had been distributed to the poor.  Spiritual needs had been met as well.  Each year the mission priests had witnessed over 250 weddings. Each year over 1,200 babies had been baptized.  Each year 1.200 children had received First Communion.  Each year another 1,200 had been confirmed.

     People who had attended Mass only rarely had been given the opportunity of receiving  the Eucharist at least once a month.

     Like Mexico, Mississippi is mission territory, still being served in large part by missionaries from Europe.  Yet in the matter of a mission to Latin America, the Diocese of Natchez-Jackson set an example for Catholics in other states.

     After Father Quinn came to Our Lady of Perpetual Help, the Archdiocese of New Orleans established a boys' home in Saltillo.  And when the Diocese of Corpus Christi, Texas, decided to support a Latin American mission, its bishop announced, "If Mississippi with so few Catholics can do it, we can too."

     By the end of that first decade, the number of catechists had risen from 10 to 300.  The number of seminarians had increased from zero to six.  Originally, only five sisters were working at the mission.  By 1980, there were 13.

     Saltillo had become a household word in Catholic homes across Mississippi.  The CYOers worked hard to support their favorite charity.

     Nurses, doctors and dentists had established the tradition of taking working vacations in Saltillo.  Other Mississippi Catholics launched  clothing drives for the mission, and Ralph Bandy, a retiree from Gautier, Miss., had begun his ministry to Saltillo.

    He bought  a used Greyhound bus which he renovated into a mobile home.  Several times a year in the bus loaded to capacity with clothing and medical supplies, Ralph Bandy continues to make trips to Our Lady of Perpetual Help.


WHO ARE POOR?

     Father Quinn, on his annual trips home to make mission appeals, was teaching Mississippi Catholics lessons in global awareness when he  preached on "Who are the poor?"

     The poor are not fat, healthy men, sitting around drunk and lazy, on welfare.  They are the children with swollen stomachs full of worms.
     They are the sick, the aged, the crippled.
      They are old men and women suffering horrible, painful mouth infections from gums that have  grown over  old roots after the teeth that have rotted away.
      They are people crowded in one-room adobe huts, sleeping sitting upon damp clay floors because there are no beds and not enough room to lie down.
      They are broken-hearted parents listening to and unable to satisfy  their  children crying from hunger pains.

    Poverty for the most part is invisible.  Relative few have shriveled up bodies or beg from tourists.  Most suffer for years in quiet obscurity.  They get sick often.  Death when it comes seldom comes as an undisguised case of starvation.  Usually it takes the more merciful form of measles, diarrhea, or some ordinary sickness.

     It is expensive to be poor.  Most of the poor live in isolated rural areas.  Ordinary groceries are from 30 percent to 50 percent more expensive for them because of the cost of transportation.  Having no refrigerators, they have to buy daily in small quantities which is the most expensive way to buy.  They never have enough money  to buy in large enough quantities to get a discount.

     It emergencies when they have to borrow they are often charged outlandish and very unjust interest rates.  I know a man who borrowed 200 pesos to pay for the coffin of his dead mother.  He gave the papers of his poor adobe house as collateral.  Three years later to recover these papers he had to pay 800 pesos.

     Who are the poor?  They are my brothers, and there go I, but for the grace of God. 

Perhaps one incident will illustrate Padre  Quinn's solidarity with the poor.


AN EMERGENCY IN 1973

     One night in 1973, while returning to  Saltillo from a rancho,  the priest in the Bronco hit a very large truck.  The accident was terrible.  The driver of the other  truck was bleeding and unconscious.  Father Quinn, crushed beneath the steering wheel, suffered fractured ribs, a crushed pelvis, a broken knee cap and heel.

     "Emergency knows no law," shrugs Father Flannery when he recalls how he assisted a young Mexican intern  in picking glass fragments out of the pastor's knee in the emergency room late that night.

     A few days afterward, while Father Quinn was recuperating in the Saltillo hospital, his condition began to deteriorate. His worried assistant called doctor friends on the Gulf Coast who flew down to Saltillo in and ambulance plane prepared to take Father Quinn home.

     "He refused to go," said Father Flannery.  "He had thrown in his lot with the poor, and he wanted nothing they could not  have."  So strong was Father Quinn's solildarity with the poor that it took an order from Bishop Brunini to get the stoic priest on a plane to Mississippi where he recovered.


Father Quinn in recovery


     By 1984, the Saltillo parish had produced her first priest  son, Feliciano Villa Nuevo.  Within the next few years, Jesus Sanches ('86) and Herado Martinez ('88) would also be  ordained.

     The numbers of  those  receiving the sacraments increased so dramatically that  in 1984 an addition was made  to Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church which doubled its size.  The parish compound now covers the entire city block.


SALTILLO CHURCHES

     Churches in Saltillo under Perpetual Help Parish include Assumption (1969), St. Martin de Porres (1970), St. Alphonsus (1985), St. Patrick (1986), St. Peter and St. Paul (1988), St. Philip of Jesus (1988), St. Michael (1988), Divine Providence (1989) and St. Mary Magdalene (1989).

     The retreat center where the catechists are  trained also houses Cursillo and Marriage Encounter weekends.  At the dormitory,  100 people can be bedded down for the night.  There are two kitchens on the compound so various groups can use the facility without disrupting the parish functions.

     Under the wing of Our Lady of Perpetual Help is the motherhouse of the Missionary Sisters of the Holy Family and the Holy Spirit, founded by Sister Olivia Garcia who saw the need for catechists and pastoral ministers in Mexico.

     Of the 13 churches in Saltillo which are satellites of Perpetual Help, none is more striking than St. Patrick.  Designed in the shape of a shamrock with shamrock windows to commemorate the Ten Commandments, the church is a tribute to Padre Quinn.

     The community St. Patrick serves grew up almost overnight in the wake  of the 1985 earthquake in Mexico City when thousands of refugees from the quake poured into the northern capital.

     The city of Saltillo has doubled its population since 1969, going from 200,000 to 400,000 in 18 years.  But the hope held out by new industries which located there in the late '70s has not meant prosperity for most of the citizens.

     Thirty-five percent of the people in Saltillo are either unemployed or underemployed.  Life for them is austere.  Within the limits of this industrial city there are shanty towns where entire families live in cardboard shacks.  There are places where 200 families depend upon one outdoor faucet for their water supply.

     Out in the remote villages, living conditions are even more austere.  Corn, beans and wheat struggle to grow in the dusty, stony  ground.  Water is at a premium.  A child's hold on life is tenuous.

  

BEANS  ARE MEAT FOR POOR

     In Mexico there is no social welfare system.  Consequently, at Perpetual Help 125  tons of beans are given out on the first Monday of every month. During the month and additional 10 to 15 tons of beans are distributed.

     As Father Quinn is quick to point out, "Beans take the place of meat for the poor."

The priests at Perpetual Help, Father Quinn and Father Patrick Mockler, who in 1986 organized  the choirs in the villages and an apostolate of getting the men to church, visit villages every month.  The people receive the sacraments.  Medicines, beans and clothing are distributed with thr help of the catechists and sometimes with the help of groups from North America.




BEAN DAY AT THE MISSION


   Among early  medieval Christian communities there were scattered hospices where the stranger, the poor, the widow, the orphan could come to be served by the more fortunate.

     It is raised to that level at Perpetual Help.  Guests are always there- retreat groups, CYO groups, the poor coming for beans, the children coming for lessons, the parishioners coming for Mass, the sick coming for medicine.  Visitors from all parts of the United States and from overseas have begun to seek out Perpetual Help.

     The hospitality they experience is Latin.  The courtesy which so quickly humbles them is Latin, as well.  But the one they've come to see is the Irishman who lets Christ work through him, and who makes the word "church" not a noun but a verb.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
UPDATE:

     Father Patrick Mockler stayed at the Mission from 1986 until 1990.   Father Quinn carried on by himself at the Mission until his death January 9, 1997.

     The Mission was moved from Perpetual Help (Perpetuo Socorro) to San Miguel  Arcangel on the outskirts of Saltillo and right in the middle of the the barrios, a fitting place among the poor.  Father Michael Thornton again came to take over the Mission after Fr. Quinn's death.    He served from 1998 until 2004.  Father Thornton is from the Diocese of  Biloxi.

     Replacing him at the Mission was Father Bill Cullen from the Jackson Diocese.  He stayed until
2007,  and due to ill health returned to his diocese.

     He was replaced by  Father Richard Smith from the Diocese of  Jackson.  He remained only two years and was recalled to Jackson due to shortage of priests, according to Bishop Latino. 

     Also at the Mission at that time was a retired priest from Laplace, La., Father Benny Piovan, who had been helping at the mission since 2006.  He was asked by the Bishop to remain and  take over the mission.  He is still there and doing well.     Assisting him are two young, recently ordained Mexico priests,  David Martinez Rubio and Evelio Rodriguez.

     The said news this  week was the untimely death of the beloved pastor, Father Benny  Piovan.
February 24, 1936----August 4, 2014.  R.I.P.


Father David Martinez Rubio, Father Benny Piovan and Father Evelio Rodriguez



NEW SAN MIGUEL CHURCH



SAN MIGUEL STEEPLE
















THE  MISSION GOES ON!
















































































































































































































































































Saturday, May 31, 2014

FATHER BENNY COMES HOME AGAIN!












     The priesthood anniversary of Father Benny Piovan was celebrated on Thursday, May 29, 2014 at his old parish church, Ascension of Our Lord Catholic Church, Laplace, La.   The event marked his 50th Anniversary to the priesthood.  

     Also celebrated was the 35th Anniversary of the founding of AOL Church, also founded by Father Benny Piovan.

     It was also the feast day of  the  Ascension of Our  Lord. The Church was packed for the celebration as well as the reception afterwards.

     Archbishop Gregory M. Aymond was the celebrant for the Mass.  Father Benny  and the Archbishop  taught together a few years back at St. John Vianney Prep. School.

     Also in attendance was retired Archbishop Alfred C. Hughes and Father Henry McInerney, Pastor of  Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Church, Biloxi, Mississippi, as well as a number of priests and deacons from the area.


     Father Benny retired in 2006 from the Archdiocese of New Orleans while pastor of  AOL
Church.  "Father Benny said he was "retiring" in 2006, when he reached 70  years of age, but  then we found out that was not the case.  He decided to work in the Mission fields of Mexico and located in a familiar venue of the Saltillo Mission in Saltillo, Mexico.  He "ONLY" has 7 (large) parish churches as well as 50 rancho churches to take care,"  the Archbishop stated about his friend. " And he looks great and in good shape.  He must have been ordained at age 15."

     Father McInerney, a frequent visitor to the Mission also remarked as  to Fr. Benny's ability to keep going.  "Fr. Benny looks quite youthful for having spent 50  years in the ministry, having spent many years in Louisiana and retired to Saltillo to assist in the mission work there, and now in charge of the mission.  He probably  takes care of nearly as many parishioners in a month as we have in the entire Diocese of Biloxi, between the Barrios and the mission villages (ranchos) that he visits," Father Henry explained.   Fr. Henry has also visited the Mission since Fr. Benny has been in charge for the dedication of the main Mission church at San Miguel.


    The parishioners in attendance gave their beloved former pastor, a standing ovation at the end of Mass when the Archbishop  thanked him for all he has done.






OUR FRIENDS FROM SOUTH OF THE BORDER



     Father Benny brought a busload of  his Mexican parishioners with him from Saltillo for the AOL celebration.  Father Benny was born in Padua, Italy on February 24, 1936 and is still going strong at age 78 and has no plans to retire again.

     Father Benny also has been busy building Churches in Saltillo, sorely needed by the poor people of the Barrios, which grow larger by the day.  





A COMMON HOUSE IN THE BARRIOS


     The San Miguel church is located in one of the poorest sections of Saltillo.  "The barrios  are growing day by day, with more people moving in and putting up their cardboard shacks in which to live, with no electricity and no running  water. God is sending  us more and more poor, not one by one, but by the thousands," Father Benny stated.



THE CHILDREN



     "I love Laplace, but this is where I need to be and I thank God every day for giving me the opportunity to serve Him through the poor of Saltillo."  Father said.




     THANK GOD FOR FATHER BENNY!

Father Benny can be reached at bennyinmex@yahoo.com
or the Mission facebook page at SALTILLO MISSION SAN MIGUEL.

 

Monday, May 12, 2014

FATHER BENNY IS COMING TO TOWN!







                                                           FATHER BENNY PIOVAN



THE  ARCHDIOCESE OF NEW  ORLEANS  HAS  ISSUED THE FOLLOWING ANNOUNCEMENT CONCERNING OUR MISSION PASTOR, FATHER BENNY:

50TH ANNIVERSARY OF FR. BENJAMIN  PIOVAN'S PRIESTLY ORDINATION AND ASCENSION OF OUR  LORD 35 YEARS IN FAITH COMMUNITY 1979-2014

      Father Benny has been connected to several parishes in the Archdiocese of New Orleans for many years and has touched many lives in "RETIREMENT".  He is presently serving as missionary to Saltillo, Mexico.

     All are invited to attend the celebrations below.

     Tuesday, May 27, 2014 at 6:30 p.m. at St. Joseph's Catholic Church, Gretna, Louisiana.(Reception to follow.)

     Wednesday, May 28, 2014 at 6:30 p.m. at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church, Kenner, Louisiana (Reception to follow)

     Thursday, May 29, 2014 at 6 p.m. at Ascension of Our Lord Catholic Church, Laplace, Louisiana.  The Mass will celebrate Fr. Piovan's 50th Priestly Ordination Anniversary & 35th Anniversary of Ascension of Our Lord Catholic Church, 1900 Greenwood Dr., Laplace, La.  (Reception to follow at St. Charles Catholic  High School, 100 Dominican Dr., Laplace, La.)

     For more information, contact Mimi at 504-343-2478 or call AOL parish office 985-652-2615.
                                                            End of Announcement.


 
 
 



MAP SALTILLO AND SURROUNDING AREA
Mission Rancho churches southwest of Saltillo located in Parras and north  in Ramos Arizpe.

  Father Benny was the founding Pastor of AOL Parish in Laplace, La.  and served there until he
"retired" in 2006.  Always desiring to serve in the Mission fields,  he chose the Mission in Saltillo, Mexico.  He has previously visited the Mission with groups from his parish and fell in love with the people and the place.    The Mission center is located in one of the poorest areas or barrios on the outskirts of  Saltillo,  Mexico, a City of  close to a million people. Saltillo is also a sister city of Austin, Texas.
 
     Father Benny has already celebrated his Anniversary with the Mexican people in March of this year and now will return to Louisiana to celebrate with his friends there.
 
 
 


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     Father Benny is coming from Mexico for the celebrations and is bringing a busload of Mexicans from his parish to help him celebrate, so if anyone is the area on the dates mentioned above stop in and  help Fr. Benny celebrate this big occasion.
 
 




  

 
 
Father Benny at work in the barrios 
 
     Father Benny is doing  a wonderful job in Mexico serving literally thousands of  parishioners throughout his wide ranging areas in the City and the mountain villages.
 
 
THANK GOD FOR FATHER BENNY!!!!
 
    


CHILDREN  OF THE BARRIOS

FATHER WITH TWO MISSISSIPPI BISHOPS
 


FATHER WITH  ROGELIO AND WIFE
 
 
 


FATHER BENNY CELEBRATING IN SALTILLO
 
 
 
Father Benny can be reached by email at  BENNYINMEX@YAHOO.COM
 
The Saltillo Mission  can be followed  on Facebook at "SALTILLO MISSION SAN MIGUEL"


Sunday, March 30, 2014

PADRE BENNY---50 YEARS



                                                          PADRE BENNY PIOVAN


     Father Benjamin was born in Padua, Italy on February 24, 1936. He later became a Salesian Brother, who taught in the United States for some time before deciding to return to Italy  to continue his studies for the priesthood.  He was ordained to the priesthood on March 23, 1964 and returned to the United States and served in New Jersey before relocating to Louisiana to serve in the Arch-Diocese of New Orleans. 

     He recently celebrated his 50th Anniversary to the Priesthood with a Mass at San Miguel Catholic Church, Saltillo, Mexico, attended by Bishop Villalobos, retired Bishop of Saltillo, as well as an over-flow crowd of parishioners. 












   His last assignment in the United States was founding pastor of Ascension of Our Lord in Laplace, La. on July 2, 1979. 

     Father Benny heard about the Mississippi Mission in Saltillo, Mexico and began taking groups to serve there, until he "RETIRED" at age 70 in 2006.   He was not ready to take it easy and rock the days away, and since he always wanted to serve in the Mission fields, he decided to sign on as assistant at the Saltillo Mission. "I was not ready to retire from active ministry and liked Saltillo from my visits there and thought that would be the perfect spot for  me to serve in my retirement years," stated Father Benny.

     Father Benny was serving as Assistant to the Jackson, Mississippi priest, until the Bishop of the Jackson Diocese decided he was needed in the Mississippi Diocese and recalled him, leaving Father Benny to handle the enormous workload of the Mississippi, began in 1969, by the Saintly priest, Father Patrick Quinn, originally from Ireland, and serving in Mississippi when the  Dioceses decided  there was an important need for priests in Mexico.

      Father Benny expanded the work of the Mission by taking on additional ranchos and barrios, and when asked by Bishop Raul Vera, Bishop of Saltillo, to take on more work in the ranchos that seldom have seen a priest or the sacraments,  he said "SIGN ME UP."   Father Benny expects there might be around 100 churches in ranchos and barrios and in the City of  Saltillo in his parish when he is finished sorting them all out.

     The Diocese of Saltillo stated that the work of foreign priests takes much commitment and the work they do is extremely important to Bishop Vera.  For that reason he visits them, calls them frequently and asks them favors, because Bishop Vera trusts their pastoral service.

     "There   is a terrible need for the Mission here.  Father Benny Piovan, pastor of  the Mission is a good Missionary.  I was sorry when the Bishops of Mississippi stopped sending priests to San Miguel.  Fortunately Father Piovan chose  to remain, and the Mission has a good team of priests and lay people working in that Parish.  Father Benny has a good number of Ejidos (ranchos) as well as those in the City of Saltillo (barrios) and we need the help of the Mississippi Diocese," stated Bishop Vera.

     This the first time in the history of the Mission that a priest from the Mississippi Dioceses has not served at the Mission.

     Father Benny has two young Mexican priests assisting him in his task of visiting the many churches as well as a good number of catechists. Most of the ranchos are many miles away from Saltillo nestled in the mountains outside of the City of Saltillo.

    Many of the ranchos are miles away from the City of Saltillo and the newly acquired ranchos have not seen a priest in over a year, and some, like La Popa have not had a Mass in 20 years.

     The ranchos and barrios are among poorest in that region of Mexico.

     "We have faith in our Lord that he has a plan for  this Mission and I am confident that it is NOT to close the Mission, but to continue to serve these wonderful people of Saltillo and surrounding areas," Father Benny stated.

     Good job,  Padre Benny! God Bless  you!







Father Benny can be reached at bennyinmex@yahoo.com or on
Facebook at  Saltillo Mission San Miguel