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DIOCESE OF SAVANNAH EDITION
Serving
Georgia's 88
Southern Counties
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF SAVANNAH
Published By The
Catholic Laymen's
Ass'n of Georgia
Vol. 42, No. 6
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 1961
10c Per Copy — $3 A Year
"FREEDOM"
UNDER CASTRO
THE NUNS' STORY
LITTLE FOOD AND
NO PRIVACY IN CUBA
By Millard Everelt
(N.C.W.C. News Service)
NEW ORLEANS — Months of privation, harass
ment and interrogation—then exile. This is what 27
Poor Clare nuns endured in Cuba.
This is their story.
In January, 1961, Cuban mi
litia occupied the nuns’ Santa
Clara Monastery in Havana,
despite the fact that it was
strictly cloistered. The militia,
most of them women, installed
guns on the roof of the monas
tery and ammunition inside
it.
The Poor Clares depended
on iheir property for support,
but the Castro regime confis
cated it, they sought other
ways to exist. They baked food
and candy and sold it; they
sewed and washed clothes for
Cuban families.
When ihe Castro_ regime
stopped virtually every source
of food supply to the monas
tery, the nuns were forced to
live on canned fish, cornmeal
and canned milk. In the cans
of food they often found slips
of paper inserted by Cuban
workers reading: "Don't be
fooled. We are slaves."
The nuns were interrogated
frequently, their rooms were
searched and they were even
accused of making bombs. For
safety’s sake, they lived and
slept together in one room for
months. Often, even at night,
they were forced to move to
another room when the militia
decided to make a search. One
sick nun, completely helpless,
had to be moved during each
search.
The yard man for the nuns
told the militia that he would
die before he allowed them to
molest the nuns. He was beat
en and tortured by the milit
ia. The next morning his body
was found hanging at the front
door of the monastery, so ar
ranged as to give the impres
sion that he had hanged him
self.
The nuns, many of them still
ill from months of malnutrition
and suffering under Ihe Castro
regime, are now safe in fhe
St. Clare Monastery of the
Blessed Sacrament here. One
is so ill she was anointed
by Father Joseph Clinic,
O. F. M., chaplain of the mon
astery.
Some of the oldest nuns were
flown to Miami in June on a
Philadelphia
Requiem For
Miss O’Hara
PHILADELPHIA — Miss
Margaret O’Hara, sister of
the Most Rev. Gerald P. O’
Hara, D.D., J.U.D., Apostolic
Delegate to Great Britain,
died on Monday, August 7.
Funeral services were
conducted from the Church
of Our Mother of Sorrows
in Philadelphia on Friday,
August 11th.
Archbishop O’Hara serv
ed as Ordinary of the Dio
cese of Savannah from 1936
until his resignation in No
vember of 1959.
Attending the funeral
were Bishop Thomas J. Mc
Donough and Msgr. Andrew
J. McDonald.
Hungary Court
Rules For Church
VIENNA, (NC) — Commun
ist Hungary’s Supreme Court
has ruled that a museum con
nected with the Esztergom ca
thedral, which contains a valu
able collection of Italian Ren
aissance paintings, is the prop
erty of the Church, it has been
reported in an issue of Uj Em
her, Hungarian Catholic publi
cation, received here. Eszter
gom is the See of Jozsef Card
inal Mindszenty, now in ref
uge at the U. S. legation in
Budapest.
chartered plane with 83 Marist
Brothers and some other Sis
ters. Four in the first group ar
rived in New Orleans on June
16. Another group of 16
arrived July 12. The final
group of seven came July 17.
The Mother Superior and
three companions stayed in
Havana to try and retain their
monastery. What their fate will
be, nobody knows.
The group of nuns who ar
rived here later came to the U.
S. by boat. Day after day they
tried to arrange for passage
from Cuba, only to be turned
down by Castro agents, until
they finally obtained permis
sion to leave. The ones travel
ing by boat were allowed to
bring more luggage, mostly
clothing.
But none was permitted to
bring money. Instead, each car
ried some whisky. The superi
or had bought an expensive
brand of whisky in the hope
that it could be sold in the U.
S. to provide the refugee nuns
with some cash.
Of the 27 nuns, one had
spent 70 years in the cloister;
another, 55; and a third, 50.
The Cuban nuns are almost
embarrassingly grateful for ihe
haven and welcome given
them by the Poor Clares here.
New Orleans archdiocesan au
thorities and the Catholic peo
ple who support the Blessed
Sacrament monastery.
Their attitude was expres
sed best by the 85-year-old
nun who has been in the clois
ter 55 years and was flown to
the U. S. in a wheel chair.
When she arrived in New Or
leans, she had to be wheeled
up a ramp and into the clois
tered enclosure, for she can
walk only with fhe greatest of
difficulty.
But when she was brought
into the chapel, she leaped
from her wheel chair, threw
herself upon the floor, kissed
it, and exclaimed, "Thank
God!"
Youth Camps
Hotbeds Of
Propaganda
BUENOS AIRES (NC)—Two
former leaders of Cuban Cath
olic Action have charged that
pupils in Cuban Catholic
schools are being subjected to
communist propaganda in the
regime’s vacation camps.
Alfredo Cepero and Antonio
Fernandez said all youths are
forced to join Castro’s “Young
Rebels” on their 12th birthday.
They said the Castro govern
ment’s campaign for the eradi
cation of illiteracy is a mere
vehicle for training in com
munism.
Dissatisfaction with the
country’s precarious economic
state is widespread, they said,
but so is fear of complaining
about it. Already about 100,-
000 political prisoners are in
Castro’s prisons, they said.
Cepero and Fernandez have
been touring Latin America
with Father Enrique Osle,
S.J., former ecclesiastical ad
visor to Christian trade unions
in Cuba.
To Carry Faith To Soviet Union
ans For Secret
issioners
LONDON (NC) — Father
John Ryder, S.J., of the Rus
sian Center at Fordham Uni
versity, New York, has arrived
here with plans for secret mis
sionaries to carry the Faith
underground into the Soviet
Union.
The bearded 61-year-old
U. S. Jesuit said he is prepared
to go into Russia as the priests
of Reformation times disguised
and smuggled themselves into
anti-Catholic Britain to offer
Mass, administer the Sacra
ments and seek converts,
knowing they were facing al
most certain capture and a ter
rible death.
He said he believes hun
dreds of young men will vol
unteer for such a mission
once ihey hear of it. It
should not be more difficult
than in 16th-century Eng
land, he went on. Although
communist secret police
might be more efficient than
authorities of 16th-century
Britain, Russia is far larger
than England and contains
vast areas where a man
could live undetected by the
authorities for years.
Father Ryder spoke in an
interview given to the Catho
lic Times, British weekly.
He said he had dedicated his
life to the Russian mission
when the plan was started by
Pope Pius XI 30 years ago. “It
was then thought that within
a year or two circumstances
would be propitious,” he add
ed. “That amount has never
come.”
But now, he said, he feels
that the huge beaucratic sys
tem in the U.S.S.R. based on
permits, identity cards and
other papers has gone on for
so long that facilities are to
be. found everywhere for ob
taining such documents.
"We do not want to go info
Russia to find a glorious
deaih," Father Ryder said.
"But by ingenuity and care
we want to live for years
until we can satisfy the spi
ritual longings and needs of
even a few of the Russian
people."
It is impossible to overesti
mate the boredom of the Rus
sian people with materialism,
he added. They are avid for
ideas. They want the answer
to fundamental questions.
Though it is almost impossi
ble to send literature into
Russia, some books are getting
through, Father Ryder said,
and they are very welcome.
People copy them out in long
hand and circulate manuscript
copies, he added.
Father Ryder said he be
lieves the impact of all ef
forts to convert Russia so
far would be as nothing
compared with the inspira
tion that would be aroused
if it were known thai even
one man from the West had
gone into the Soviet Union
risking his life for no other
reason that to tell the people
there about Christ.
New Rector Named
ROME, (NC)—Father Mat
thew Schneider, S. V. D., has
been named rector of the Col
lege of St. Peter the Apostle
here to replace its first rector,
Father Francis Rosenbaum, S.
V. D., who died July 8 in Frit-
dorf, Germany.
NEW CONGO PREMIER—Cyrille Adoula (right) recent
ly named Premier of the strife-torn Republic of the Congo,
chats with Msgr. Bakole, vicar general of the Luluabourg
diocese, during a special session of the Congolese parliament
at the Catholic Louvanium University, Leopoldville. Premier
Adoula, regarded as a staunch anticommunist, is expected to
respect the liberties the Church in the Congo demands for
the family, society and individuals.—(NC Photos).
DEATH WITHOUT TEARS
PRICE OF IDEALISM IN CUBA
Newark, N. J. — Idealism
dies hard in Cuba; some
times it dies without tears.
This is how 23-year-old
Alberto Tapia Ruano died:
standing, dry-eyed, against
the wall in La Cabana fort
ress in Cuba — his faith in
Fidel Castro shattered, his
faith in God renewed. De
tails of his death have now
been received here.
Alberto was an idealist. As a
student at the University of
Havana, he joined the Cuban
University Students Federa
tion. He started revolutionary
activities against the dictator
ship of Gen. Fulgencio Batista
by joining the Revolutionary
Students Directory. He was a
close friend and collaborator of
Jose Antonio Echevarria, ex
president of the group, who
who was killed by Batista po
lice in front of the university.
Alberto at first believed in
the promises and ideals of Fi
del Castro, as did 90 per cent
of the Cubans. Alberto joined
the students’ militias that
helped keep order in Havana
during the early days of Jan
uary, 1959.
But when he really realized
that Castro was betraying his
countrymen, Alberto joined
the underground and worked
against Castro’s brand of com
munism. He helped relay sup
plies for the revolutionary
movement against Castro. He
was captured this past April
through the efforts of a com
munist neighbor who spied on
him and his companions.
Alberto Tapia Ruano was
tried on April 17 and sentenc
ed to death. He was shot in
the early morning hours of
April 18. But Alberto had an
opportunity to write a last let
ter to his parents.
This is what he wrote:
"Just a few momenis ago
I received Ihe raiificaiion of
fhe death penalty, and that
is why, now that I am in my
final hours, I write you these
lines. You will not believe it,
but I assure you that never
in my life have I experienc
ed so much peace of soul as
I feel now. Sincerely, I tell
you that I am happy to think
that very soon I shall be
with God, waiting and pray
ing for you.
(Continued on Page 8)
Editorial Comment 4
Book Reviews 7
Backdrop
4
Obituaries 5
Marriages 5
Doris Answers Youth 5
Report From West Berlin 2
Federal Aid
To Education 3
Headline Hopscotch 4
Now In Session At Camp Villa Marie
Leadership Class In Christian Living
CAMP VILLA MARIE—Ap
proximately 40 student leaders
from Georgia, Florida, Alaba
ma and Maryland are attend
ing a Leadership Camp in
Christian Living sponsored by
the Sisters of Mercy, province
of Baltimore. The camp open
ed August 17th and will con
tinue through the 26th.
Object of the 10-day session
is “to afford student leaders
with an opportunity to learn
techniques of leadership as
well as to gain a wealth of
background information on
current problems.” Students
attending are from the colleges,
nursing schools and high
schools staffed by the Sisters
of Mercy.
The speakers at the camp
session include men and wo
men in the theological fields,
professional areas, political
figures. >
The speakers and their top
ics are as follows:
The Rt. Rev. Msgr. T. James
McNamara, rector, Cathedral
of St. John the Baptist, Savan
nah, “Leisure — Its Meaning
and Use,” Rev. John Cuddy,
Diocesan superintendent of
schools, Diocese of Savannah,
“The Ecumenical Council”;
The Rev. W. Thomas Larkin,
pastor, Christ the King Church,
Jacksonville, Fla., “Commun
ism”; The Rev. John McShane,
S.M., Marist Seminary, Wash
ington, D. C., “Prayer and Sac
rifice in the Church”; The Rev.
Marvin Le Frois, pastor, St.
Theresa Church, Albany, “The
Mystical Body”; the Rev. Felix
Donnelly, pastor, Church of
the Nativity, Thunderbolt,
“Parish Life.”
Sister Mary Gratia, R.S.M.,
Mount Saint Agnes High
School, Baltimore, Md., “Effec
tive Public Speaking”; Sister
Mary Sarto, R.S.M., Catholic
High School, Pensacola, Fla.,
“The Psychology of Leader
ship”; Sister Mary Michelle,
R.S.M., principal* Mercy High
School, Baltimore, Md., “Joy
in Sacrifice—Religious Life.”
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McDon
ough and Mr. and Mrs. Chris
R. Sheridan, “Joy in Sacrifice
—Family Life”; Miss Patricia
Cannon, Director, Nursing Ser
vice, Chatham County Health
Department, “Joy in Sacrifice
—Nursing”; Andrew Ryan, so
licitor general, Savannah, “The
Christian in Politics”; Bart
Shea, attorney, immediate past
president, Savannah Junior
Chamber of Commerce, “Labor
—Its Organization, Manage
ment, and Dignity.”
Michael Gannam, attorney,
instructor in political science,
Armstrong Junior College,
Savannah, “International
Life”; William Starrs, director,
Savannah Little Theater, “The
Church and Drama”; John F.
Ahern, Director, Occupational
Training Center, Savannah,
“Modern Quest for Truth—De
velopment of the Intellectual
Life”; Mrs. W. C. Broderick,
past president, Deanery Coun
cil of Catholic Women, “Prac
tical Points of Parliamentary
Law”; Miss Margaret Ann
Broderick, faculty member, St.
Vincent Academy, Savannah,
“Critical Thinking — Com
munications.”
SISTER THERESE CLOTHED
IN HOLY HABIT OF CARMEL
SAVANNAH — Saturday
morning, August 5th, Feast of
Our Lady of the Snows, Car
mel’s chapel was filled with
friends and relatives, as a
young girl received the Holy
Habit of Our Lady of Mt. Car
mel. Dressed in the family
wedding gown of rich lace and
tulle and holding the lighted
tapering candle, symbolic of
the Virgins, Sister Therese of
the Queen of Carmel knelt at
the open grate to offer herself
to God and to pray for souls
in a life of prayer, solitude,
penance and works.
The Right Rev. John D.
Toomey, pastor of St. James
Church and Diocesan Vicar for
Religious, celebrated a Low
Mass and performed the Inves
titure ceremony.
After the Low Mass, Sister
Therese retired from the open
grate to exchange her bridal
gown for the rough brown
Habit of Carmel. The Holy Ha-
PIED PIPER PRIEST OPERATES HOME FOR "LITTLE BROTHERS"
Providing a home for 200 boys in Cuernavaca, Mexico, Father Guillermo
Wasson has formed a “hogar” of love out of selfishness and hate. Starting
with one juvenile delinquent who robbed church poor boxes in 1955, Father
Wasson has developed the Our Little Brother Institute into a self-support
ing enterprise. During the day, formal workshops and classes are attended
by the hoys. Pictured at left, Father Wasson towels the first of a group of
■■■ ■. , i r> :
"little brothers” who have been through the shower. In center photo, the
hoys pitch in on the home’s newest project, a garden. A few goats provide
the milk for the little ones. At right, the priest escorts some of the older
boys on a cultural visit to the University of Mexico in Mexico City, 48 miles
from Cuernavaca. His final goal is to help the boys become future leaders
of their country. (NC Photos)
bit is a symbol of consecration
to God; the color brown for
labor, austerity, penance, mor
tification; the girdle of leather
for chastity, soldiers gird
themselves for battle, travelers
for the journey, laborers for
their work. It is a shield of
protection. The scapular sym
bolizes the arms of Our Lady
enfolding and guarding and
sustaining. It is a pledge of
dedication to her. The mantle
is a symbol of purity . . . vir
gins follow the Lamb clothed
in white. It expresses a life of
prayer. Brown and white re
veal the double spirit of the
great Teresa of Avila and St.
Elias. Penance-mortification;
prayer-contemplation . . . the
heart and spirit of Carmel.
The Rev. John V. Mulvey,
S.M.A., delivered an inspiring
sermon, explaining the interp
retation of the new Novice’s
name, Theresa ... as “Bearer
of sheathes of corn” . . . the
fruit of good works and virtue.
the marriage promises of hus
band and wife to those inade
by the Bride of Christ who
also promises to leave all other
loves for the Heavenly Bride
groom as she offers “her all”
for the salvation of souls, by
renuoncing the world’s materi
al gains, pleasures, and even
her own will to follow in the
Footsteps of Christ.
At the end of the ceremony
relatives, friends and visitors
went to the “speakroom” to
see the newly clothed Novice
and to express their good
wishes, before Sr. Therese of
the Queen of Carmel returned
to her cloistered life in Car
mel.
A simile was made between can institutions.
58 Foreign Sisters Arrive
CHICAGO, Ill. — 58 foreign
nuns from India, Burma, Peru
and Brazil have arrived in the
U. S. to begin four years of ed
ucation at 30 Catholic colleges
at the expense of the Ameri-
ST. JOSEPH’S, SAVANNAH,
GRADUATES TWENTY-ONE
SAVANNAH — Twenty-one
young women were graduated
by St. Joseph’s Hospital School
of Nursing on July 30th.
Commencement exercises
were held in the Cathedral of
St. John the Baptist, with the
Most Rev. Thomas J. McDon
ough, Bishop of the Diocese,
delivering the graduation ad
dress.
First honor graduate was
Margaret Kay Stegin. Second
honor graduate was Sheila
Elizabeth McNall. Both honor
graduates are from Savannah.
Other Savannahians among
the graduates:
Kaye A. Bruggeman, Ashby
Elizabeth Connolly, Lucille M.
Dulohery, Zona Elizabeth
Glackin, Mary Helen Johnson,
Kathleen E. Killorin, Carolyn
F. Parrish, Lillie L. Rawlings
and Sharon Ann Sumner.
Out-of-towners among the
graduates were Barbara Jean
Brown of Augusta, Billie J.
Burke of Brunswick, Dora G.
Coffey of Charleston, Florrie
L. Cook of Augusta, Joan E.
Copeland of Jesup, Ruth C.
Hood of Thunderbolt, Anita K.
Lenz of Brunswick, Hanna
Emily Salvo of Charleston and
Linda Fay Sapp of Collins.
l pray for OUR |
PRIESTLY DEAD *
i * i
REV. WM. F. BROWNE
Aug. 23. 1881
REV. CHAS. J. RETHANS
Aug. 26, 1951
O God, Who didst give to
thy servants by their sacredotal
office, a share in the priesthood
of the Apostles, grant, tve im
plore, that they may also be one
of their company forever in
heaven. Through Christ Our,
LwdL Amen, _ . . *