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PAGE 2—THE BULLETIN, January 24, 1959
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Ey Father James I. Tucek
(Radio, N.C.W.C. News Service)
VATICAN CITY — “Every
family founded on work, mutual
respect and on the fear of God
constitutes the strength and sol
idity of the villages, cities and
nations,” His Holiness Pope
John XXIII declared on the
feast of the Holy Family.
The Pontiff addressed a group
gathered in St. Peter’s square at
noontime hoping for a glimpse
of him. The brief address mark
ed one more innovation in the
pontificate of Pope John. It was
the first time that an informal
address was delivered through
loudspeakers from a window of
his private apartment to the
faithful in the square below.
His noon appearance was one
of two outstanding activities
that occupied the Pope’s day,
both of them related to the
meaning of the feast of the Holy
Family. In the afternoon he
went to the St. Martha Hospice
in Vatican City, where he dis
tributed gifts to more than 200
of the city’s poor children. And
walking home from the hospice,
he decided on the spur of the
moment to drop in at the home
of a Vatican City journalist.
In his speech to the people in
St. Peter’s square, the Pope
said:
“He who is addressing you
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had a home and a family like
you and everybody else. He re
calls with deep personal emo
tion what value the examples
of religious piety and domestic
virtues had for his soul as a
child in the house where he was
born.”
Assuring his listeners that the
God-fearing family is the
strength of the nation, he ex
plained that “it is the nucleus
and foundation of every virtue,
the protection against dangers
of corruption, the source of new
and healthy energies for the
welfare of individuals and of
civilized society.”
Pope John spoke of the hid
den sufferings of the Holy Fam
ily and expressed his concern
for the difficulties to the law of
God, he said, they often suffer
trials and privations unknown
to others. He invited better-off
families to help their needy bro
thers. The Pope expressed con
cern for young men and women
whose desire to raise their own
families is confronted with the
serious difficulties of these
times.
He ended his noon appearance
by inviting those in the square
to join him in reciting the An-
gelus — “the sweetest prayer of
our ancient families.”
At four o’clock, the Pope was
at St. Martha Hospice, After a
visit to the chapel, he was es
corted by the Daughters of Cha
rity who staff the institution to
the refectory, where the hospice
children — all under two —
waited for him either in car
riages or in the arms of their
mothers.
Here again Pope John turned
to the subject of large families.
He told the parents — repre
sentatives of the city’s poor—
that they shouldn’t be afraid to
fl
Vv
n
POPE GIVES TOYS TO TOTS—His Holiness Pope John
XXIil strokes the head of a little baby, one of some 150 needy
children under two years of age to whom he distributed Epiphany
gifts at the Vatican’s hospice of Santa Martha on the Feast of
the Holy Family. The Holy Father blessed the children and toid
their mothers to have more children because “this-world has not
been created to be a cemetery.” This is a radiophoto.—(NC
Photos).
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have large families, saying that
God always gives His grace to
large families.
He remarked in what appear
ed to be a reference to the aging
populations in countries where
the birth rate declines, that “the
world wasn’t created to become
a cemetery.”
The Pope recalled the lesson
of Blessed Gregory Barbarigo,
17th century Bishop of Padua,
who, he said, “twice ran the
risk” of becoming Pope, Blessed
Gregory, he recalled, used to
say to the mothers of Padua,
“Courage, be happy! The Lord
blesses the family pot when it’s
big.”
Pope John’s own advice to
parents was; “Be good, be sim
ple and pure.”
Gift packages were distribut
ed by the Pope with the assist
ance of His Eminence Nicola
Cardinal Canali, president of
the Pontifical Commission for
the State of Vatican City, and
other Vatican prelates. The gifts
included processed milk sup
plied by Catholic Relief Serv
ices - National Catholic Welfare
Conference. Present as represen
tative of the charities of Ameri
can Catholics in this and other
forms of assistance to Italy’s
poor was Msgr. Andrew P.
Landi, head of the Italian mis
sion of CRS-NCWC.
One of the mothers said of
the Pope afterward: “He didn’t
say anything to my baby; he
only caressed it. It was enough
that the Pope distributed Christ
mas packages to us with his own
blessed hands.”
As the Pope left the hospice,
he told his chauffer to go back
without him — that he’d return
on foot.
Vatican gardens behind St. Pet- The only Benedictine monas-
er’s Basilica, the Pope passed tery in the state of Florida, the
the office building of the Vati- abbey belongs to the American
can Tribunal. Cassinese Congregation, which
One of Pope John’s walking will observe its 70th anniversary
companions casually remarked this year. Preparations are al-
that Mrs. Giuseppina Lolli, wife ready under way far its diamond
of Cesidio Lolli, L’Osservatore jubilee. The abbey’s founder,
Romano reporter, had fallen Abbot Leo Haid, O. S. B, of
there 10 years earlier, and had Belmont, N. C„ whose name was
been paralyzed ever since. adopted by the monks here
Then and there the Pope de- when they chose st Leo the
cided to call on Mrs. Lolli and Great as their patron, will again
give .her his blessing. He simply be gratefully remembered on
brushed aside Mr. Lolli’s plea thus occasion
that the house was in disorder. r
Built admist fragrant orange
First Faith
Was In God
BROOKLYN, N. Y. (NC) —
“My first faith was in God,’
said a jubilant mother whose
infant daughter was recovered
nine days after she had been
kidnaped from St. Peter’s Hos
pital here.
The baby, Lisa Rose Chion-
chio, was found in the Brooklyn
apartment of Mrs. Jean lava
rone, 43-year-old mother of
eight children. Police arrested
her for kidnaping the child.
James B. Leggett, chief of de
tectives, said that Lisa Rose
was identified by her father,
Frank Chionchio, who immedi
ately phoned his wife, Frances,
that the baby was alive and
healthy.
“I never gave up hope that
Lisa would be found,” said Mrs.
Chionchio. “My first faith was
in God. My second in the FBI
and the police.”
The seven-pound infant was
taken from the fourth floor
nursery of St. Peter’s Hospital
shortly before midnight on Jan
uary 2. In a public appeal, Mrs.
Chionchio had asked whoever
took the baby to “please have
her baptized a Catholic.”
INSPECT ABBEY’S CITRUS CROP
At St. Leo, Fla., is the Benedictine monastery of St. Leo.
unique because it was built with proceeds from the sale of
oranges. The abbey belongs to the American Cassinese Congre
gation, which will observe its 70th anniversary this year. Abbot
Marion R. Bowman O.S.B. (center), inspects the new abbey citrus
crop with two visitors, Abbot Leonard Schwinn. O.S.B. (right),
and Father Placid Jordan, O.S.B.—(NC Photos).
Orange Sale Proceeds Help
Make Florida Abbey One Of
Tbe Most Unique In World
By Father Placid Jordan, O. S. B.
(N. C. W. C. NEWS SERVICE)
ST. LEO, Florida — St.
Leo Abbey here is a unique
monastic institution. Two of the
reasons why it is unusual are
that it was built with proceeds
from the sale of oranges, and
Walking through the because it has a monk postmater.
groves on the shores of beautiful
Lake Jovita in one of Florida’s
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abbey has its own modern pack
ing plant for citrus fruit. It ships
a monthly average of 5,000
boxes — each holding about
200 oranges, grapefruits and
tangerines — to individuals and
distributors all over the United
States and Canada.
A million oranges and kindred
fruit thus support to a large
extent this thriving community
of monks now made up of 27
Fathers, 24 Brothers and IS
clerics, novices and oblates.
“Oranges actually built our
new church.” said 54-year-old
Abbot Marion Bowman. O. S. B.,
a Kentuckian by birth who grew
up in Florida, and is now the
monastery’s third superior.
The sale of citrus fruit not
onlv provides the funds that
went into the imnosing sand
stone structure adjoining the
monastery proDer, but the
“golden river of orange juice”
continues to raise a steady in
come that goes far toward fill
ing the abbey’s current needs.
In their choir stalls facing the
main altar and the huge cruci
fix carved out of a solid piece
of flawless Tennessee marble,
the monks offer up thanksgiving
for these bountiful blessings
which they receive year, in and
year out. For their citrus grove
income also aids in the support
ef St. Leo College Preparatory
School for boys, which prides it
self on an enrollment of some
250 students of all faiths, from
14 states and 12 Latin American
countries.
On the other side of the palm-
shaded campus stands the mod
ern, air-conditioned library
which provides space for some
75,000 books.
Next to. it, the first Catholic
college for men in Florida is
now being built. With boarding
facilities on the campus, it will
open its doors to the first class
of freshmen this fall. Basic
courses in the arts and sciences
will be offered, leading to de
grees in all fields. Along with a
number of lay teachers the Fa
thers will staff the faculty.
St. Leo also has a monk post
master. When Theodore Roose
velt came to Jacksonville in
1905, St. Leo’s first Abbot, Fa
ther Charles H. Mohr, O. S. B.,
was introduced to him as
“Abbot and Postmaster,” for in
the latter capacity he had been
installed six years before.
“Delighted to meet a live
Abbot,” said the President. “All
that I know of them is what I
read in Sir Walter Scott!”
The President and the Abbot
became lifelong friends. Abbot
Charles died in 1931. He was
succeeded by Abbot Francis
Sadlier. O. S. B., who resigned
some five years ago to become
chaplain of the U. S. Govern
ment Health Service Hospital
for Lepers at Carville, La.
For the nast few years Broth
er David Gormican of Roanoke,
Va. has been in charge of St.
Leo’s post office as postmaster.
He proudly shows visitors the
patent, signed bv President
Eisenhower, which he keeps
framed on the wall.
One pioneer who helped to
build the monastery and started
the abbey groves is Brother Leo
Fuchsbuechler, a native Bava
rian. He will soon be 87 years
old. A shotgun was his principal
agricultural tool in the early
days. He always carried it when
(Continued on Page Three)
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