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Hundreds honor Virgin of Guadalupe at the Sacred Heart Chapel
for the annual Novena celebrations
By Ingrid Marie Rivera, La Prensa Correspondent
LORAIN: While hundreds of thousands of devout Catholics in
México and other Latin-American countries honored the Virgin of
Guadalupe on Dec.12, 2009 – the date commemorating her
apparition 478 years ago– hundreds of people gathered to honor
her at the Sacred Heart Chapel in Lorain. |

Members of the clergy perform the
Eucharist ceremony during the Saturday's Mass, Dec. 12, 2009 at the
Sacred Heart Chapel for the novena in honor of the Virgin of
Guadalupe. |
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During the last four years, the number of people attending the
chapel on that date has increased.
Nearly eight hundred people attended the bilingual Masses
(English and Spanish) at the Sacred Heart Chapel during nine
days – known as the “novena,” from Dec. 3 to Dec.12, 2009, to
honor the Virgin of Guadalupe.
They
recited the rosary, followed by Mass where they asked the Virgin
for blessings and they presented her with gifts. Near midnight,
Dec. 11, they sang to her “Las Mañanitas” with a
Mariachi band called “Joya de México.”
Many
Catholics observe every Dec. 12, believing it was a miraculous
day full of great revelation. They believe that in the year
1531, the Virgin Mary under the title of Our Lady of Guadalupe,
appeared to the peasant, Juan Diego on the Tepeyac hill, outside
México City, México.
She asked Juan Diego to tell the Bishop Fray Juan de Zumárraga
to have a temple constructed for her there. But the bishop asked
him for proof of the apparition. Following the Virgin’s
instructions, the peasant carried roses to the local bishop in
his cloak, or tilma, where the image of the Virgin Mary
appeared and convinced the bishop of the apparition’s validity.
Meanwhile, Juan Diego’s dying uncle was miraculously healed.
Today, millions migrate, some by foot, to that temple in México,
called la Basílica de Guadalupe, where Juan Diego’s tilma
is kept, still holding the imprint of the image of the Virgin of
Guadalupe.
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Mexicans living within the United States, away from their
families, said, to honor the Virgin of Guadalupe on the day of
her apparition is another way to reconnect with their culture,
their people and their beloved country of origin. The nine-day
festivities are a tradition that has become a great part of the
Mexican identity.
Blanca Herrera
went to the Masses in Lorain and helped to serve the Mexican
food.
“First of all, I am 100 percent Mexican. Since I was a little
girl, this was always a tradition; now honoring her brings me
great pride,” Herrera said.
She continued “Since migrating here, singing to the Virgin is
like having a piece of your heart return to [México]. It’s very
emotional. This is very important for Mexicans,” she said.
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Alma de Mexico dance group pose just
before performing at the Sacred Heart Chapel, Sat. Dec.12 for the
Novena in honor of the Virgin of Guadalupe.
From left: Kayla Villa, Falicia Cruz, Vanessa Villa, Jackie
Velasquez-Prosak, and in front a boy joins them dressed in the
Mexican "Charro." |
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She also added that she wants to continue to pass on her Mexican
culture to her four boys, of 8, 6, 4, and 2 years old, even
though they live far away from their country.
“Especially (because) we are in a country where we are
immigrants, this is very – it's even more important to teach the
children to have respect for the Virgin,” she said.
During the Masses, the attendees sang to the Virgin along with
the Mariachi “Joya de México” several songs including “Buenos
Días Paloma Blanca,” and “La Guadalupana,” among
others, and the audience would cheer “¡Que Viva la Virgen de
Guadalupe! Que Viva!”
Each day during the “novena” a different ethnicity or society of
the chapel was represented and an individual or family chosen
from that group would take the symbolic gifts of wine and bread
to the Virgin for the Eucharist. The most popular days were the
last two, Friday, Dec. 11 and Sat. Dec. 12.
The Saturday Mass began with “Los Matachines” group, from
the St. Paul Church of Norwalk, Ohio, who performed
several indigenous dances of México to the rhythms of the drums.
Following them into the chapel were several representatives of
the different societies of the church.
At the conclusion of the Masses, attendees received Mexican food
of: pozole verde o rojo (a soup), carnitas (meat),
arroz (rice), fideo (spaghetti), nachos con
queso, tamales, empanadas de calabaza (pumpkin baked
goods), agua de piña (pineapple juice), agua de
horchata (cinnamon rice milk), ponche de frutas
(fruit punch), and arroz con leche (rice with milk).
While they ate, the Mariachi “Joya de México” performed more
traditional Mexican songs. The group “Los Matachines” danced to
the drums, and the “Alma de México” group consisting of
four women twirled their traditional Mexican dresses as they
performed three ethnic dances.
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Felix Soto,
73, of Mexican origin, is a member of a St. John’s Church in
Lorain but he attends the Masses for the “novena” celebrations
at the Sacred Heart Chapel.
He went with his wife, Carmen Soto, 71.
“I owe so much to the Virgin of Guadalupe,” Felix
Soto said “God is first, then comes the Virgin of Guadalupe and
then comes my wife. I love the Mass here because it is in
Spanish. It reaches my heart better,” he said.
Father Christopher Gibson, from the Passionist
Congregation in Chicago, Illinois celebrated the Masses with
Rev. A. James Quinn, Father William A. Thaden of
Sacred Heart Chapel, Rev. Juan Ortiz, and Deacon Tony
DeGracía.
Father Gibson explained that the apparition of the Virgin “is a
beautiful synthesis of the gospel,” that calls for tolerance of
different people. He spoke about the importance of humility and
tolerance for different cultures in order to achieve peace.
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Some celebrated the novena festivities dressed in traditional
Mexican clothing.From left here are Maria de los Angeles, Noema
Torres, 4, and Maria Guadalupe. |
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He explained that before the apparition of the Virgin, great
tension existed between the Mexicans and the Spaniards. The
apparition was an invitation for the union of those two groups.
In fact, that is precisely what happened. The two groups united
and converted the people of México into one called mestizo,
which means a hybrid or union between two races, Gibson
explained.
The image “appears before the people of México became a
mestizo people,” Gibson said. “It costs us humans to
integrate ourselves but this is an invitation to integration,”
he concluded.
The face and eyes of the image of the Virgin of Guadalupe
Gibson explained that digital photography has allowed experts to
discover other images within the eyes of the image of the Virgin
of Guadalupe. Images of an Indian, a bishop, an African woman
slave, and a family of one man, one woman, and three children
were discovered within her eyes.
Gibson said the image calls for unity and tolerance for
differences. Her face is mestizo but she has bluish-green
eyes, and within the eyes are images of people of both sexes, of
all ages and of different cultures, he said.
Father William Thaden, of the Sacred Heart Chapel, said even
though the “novena” mostly attracts Mexicans, people of various
cultures also attend.
“There’s such a variety of people that come, Puerto Ricans and
other Latinos, people who aren’t Latino, people that it’s
perhaps not their tradition but it means something to them,”
Thaden said “They come because something is touching them,” he
said.
He added “We’re using this event to unify all people, as a way
to connect people who aren’t here all the time, trying to bring
them back,” he said.
After Saturday’s Mass, Alejandra Pacheco, 21, of Mexican
origin, walked up to the altar of the Virgin of Guadalupe, that
was surrounded by flowers, within the Sacred Heart Chapel. She
lowered her head in reverence while silently praying for a few
minutes. It was her first time visiting this chapel for the
“novena” festivities.
“My
sister invited me, and I have come to see her because she is our
dear Virgin of México,” Pacheco said “She is my second, well my
first mother. She is close to God and takes care of us from up
there,” she said.
Editor’s Note: See La Prensa’s Ingrid Rivera’s video coverage of
this tremendous event at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CF_dmQ0Lf1o
See more of La Prensa’s video
coverage of the Novena celebrations at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyWg4-aXwJ4
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Los Matachines of the St. Paul Church in Norwalk,Ohio danced
indigenous Mexican dances to the rhythm of the drums for the
novena in honor of the Virgin of Guadalupe at Sacred Heart
Chapel, Dec. 12. |
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The Mariachi Joya de Mexico
performed during the Mass, near midnight, Friday, Dec.11, 2009
at the Sacred Heart Chapel for the novena in honor of the Virgin
of Guadalupe. |
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