The Very Rev. Fr. James McCurry, OFM Conv.

Fr. James at the Normandy American Cemetery at Omaha Beach (Cimetiere Americain de Normandy), where the graves of 9,387 soldiers, a chapel, memorials and garden can be visited to honor the courage, skill and ultimate sacrifice made by those who are laid to rest there.

“I pray you will indulge me a brief reminiscence. The hamlet of Gueutteville in the Norman village of Picauville looks today nearly as it did seventy years ago when paratroopers of the 508th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the US Army’s 82nd Airborne Division landed before dawn on D-Day (or as the French call it Jour-J). It remains a one-lane assortment of ancient stone houses surrounded by hedgerows and farm fields.  Only two differences between then and now are notable.  A large new yellow farmhouse has replaced the café-grocery where the American troops secured their wounded, and which was later destroyed by blasts from a Nazi tank.  The second new element is a Memorial erected in 2012 to honor the Paratroopers’ Chaplain Capt. Father Ignatius Maternowski, OFM Conv.  The Memorial is situated in a clearing across the lane from the spot where the chaplain was gunned down by a Nazi sniper several hours after he had jumped with his comrades from a C-47 on that fateful D-Day.

Fr. Ignatius Maternowski, OFM Conv., the son of Polish immigrants, was born in Holyoke, Massachusetts, in 1912.  Having joined the Franciscan Friars Conventual, he was ordained a priest of that Order in 1938.  At the request of his Franciscan superiors, he and several fellow friars enlisted as chaplains in the US Army in 1942.  Soon after, Fr. Ignatius volunteered for the Parachute regiment.  Eventually deployed to Ireland and England, he celebrated one last Mass for his troops on the eve of D-Day, and gave them General Absolution, appreciating full well the enormous peril awaiting them.  He died on 6th June attempting to negotiate with the Nazi occupiers of Gueutteville for a humanitarian “safe-zone” to be established, where a common hospital could be used for all of the American, German, and French casualties.

Seventy years later. “L’Association U.S.-Normandie ‘Memoire et Gratitude’” organized a commemorative service at the Father Maternowski Memorial in Gueuteville on the 4th of June 2014 at 4:00 PM.  Reconciliation was the theme of the program.  The Lutheran Paratrooper chaplain from the 82nd Airborne, Reverend Cruz, gave the invocation.  Speeches were given by Colonel Michael Dean of the 82nd Airborne and by the President of the U.S.-Normandie Association, Monsieur Daniel Briard.  I myself, in my role as Minister Provincial of the Franciscan Friars Conventual, was invited to speak in French and English on behalf of the religious family of Fr. Maternowski.  Lt. Colonel (ret.) Kelly Carrigg, a teacher at the chaplain’s alma mater St. Francis High School in Athol Springs, New York, gave final remarks on the theme of reconciliation.

Reconciliation was surely on the minds of all as a large contingent of German soldiers laid a wreath beneath the Fr. Maternowski Memorial, during the service.  The German ambassador had already sent a special spray of flowers from the German government.  Further tributes were paid by wreath-layings from the French, British, and US military representatives.  Flag-bearing honor guards of French and US military stood at attention throughout the ceremony.  The largest delegation of military personnel in attendance came from the US Army Parachute Infantry Regiment of the 82nd Airborne.  Members of the US Air Force coordinated a flypast  tribute of C-130s.

The 91-year-old US Army Sergeant Major (ret.) Rock Merritt, a veteran of the 508th PIR, placed a floral tribute in honor of his fallen comrade.  Rock recalled how word of their chaplain’s killing had spread like wildfire among the men of the 508th, inspiring their resolve to press on to victory.  (Interestingly, two days after he attended the ceremony honoring Fr. Maternowski, Rock Merritt would be sitting on the stage at Omaha Beach behind President Francois Hollande of France and US President Barack Obama, who made specific mention of Rock during his formal address.)

Among the participants in the commemoration of Fr. Maternowski at the Gueutteville ceremony was Monsieur Louis Marion and 3 ladies, all of whom were villagers who witnessed the events of D-Day 1944.  The 89-year-old Louis was one of the local eyewitnesses to the shooting of Fr. Maternowski, and he gave testimony about the final moments of the chaplain’s life.   He placed a floral tribute in homage to the “priest whose blood has sanctified our village.“  The other three ladies were teenagers at the time, kept indoors by their frightened mothers as the fighting raged outside their houses.  They recalled their mothers telling them about the dead priest lying in the road.

The paratroopers’ 82nd Airborne Choir from Fort Bragg, North Carolina, sang a cappella the hauntingly beautiful “Last Full Measure of Devotion.”  A tear rolled down the cheek of one of the choir soldiers.  At the ceremony’s conclusion, “Taps” was played by an Army bugler, followed by the national anthems of the United States and France.  Everyone stood at attention, united as one – army, air force, and marines; privates and colonels; American, German, French and British; D-Day veterans; village survivors; civilians of all walks of life.

The humble little friar whose memory was being honored could have never foreseen this extraordinary tribute.  He simply did his duty as a faithful chaplain, a patriot, a friar-priest, a Franciscan peacemaker.  May he rest in peace!  May his example inspire all of us friars towards a sacrificial “love without limits” in the ministries where we are privileged to serve.”

~ Written by the Very Rev. James McCurry, OFM Conv., Minister Provincial of the Our Lady of the Angels Province, upon his return from Normandy June 2014

Farewell to Fr. Michael Zielke, OFM Conv.

Very Rev. Michael Zielke, OFM Conv. Story and photos by Julie Beaulieu, Iobserve.org

On April 30, 2014, at the Conventual Franciscan Friars’ St. Bonaventure Province’s Ordinary Chapter, at Marytown Friar Michael Zielke, OFM Conv. was elected as the Province’s new Minister Provincial. Friar Michael was born in Baltimore, Maryland. He has been a solemnly professed friar since 1985 and an ordained priest since 1989.

Having served as pastor of St. Stanislaus Bishop and Martyr Basilica Parish since 2001, Fr. Michael celebrated both a farewell Mass with his parishioners, while also celebrating his silver jubilee as an ordained priest, at the June 8, 2014 Noon Mass.
In a June 8th iobserve.org online article, Fr. Michael shares his thoughts on his time spent in Chicoppe, MA.

VA Crisis Through the Eyes of a Friar

Our Lady of the Angels Province friar, Br. Frank Grimaldi, OFM Conv. shares his insights into care for Veterans. Br. Frank works as Social Worker and Chaplain at the Friends of the Soldiers Home in Holyoke, MA.  Here, he expresses his views of the VA crises that has been in the news recently.  He also give a great accounting of the facility and care given to veterans in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

 

Br. Frank Grimaldi, OFM Conv.

6/6/14 – Holyoke – Four veterans who were in the Normandy invasion were honored at the 70th anniversary ceremony held in the Holyoke Soldiers Home canteen. Invocation given by the Soldiers Home Chaplin, Br. Frank Grimaldi, OFM Conv. ( JOHN SUCHOCKI / THE REPUBLICAN )

The Soldiers Home at Holyoke is a 300 bed skilled nursing facility for Veterans living in the Commonwealth. We have a sister campus in Chelsea. Our revenue source is the general fund of the Commonwealth. We are totally independent of the VA.

There has been very little discussion here about the wait-times at the VA. We provide primary care medicine in house with very short wait times. However, we do partner with the VA for psychiatric and some other services. If a psychiatric bed is available at the VA, our veterans are generally placed within days of a request. The majority of our veterans go to private practices for specialty medicine. Wait times vary greatly as they do with the general population.

Overall, I believe the general impression of the VA is a good one. Most of our veterans are pleased with the services provided by the VA. Many national surveys of those that primarily use the VA for their health care needs give it high marks!

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Franciscan Conservation In Action

Our Ellicott City, Maryland campus (location of the Our Lady of the Angels Provincial House, Portiuncula Friary, Shrine of St. Anthony, St. Joseph Cupertino Friary, Companions of St. Anthony and Carrollton Hall) has a power purchase agreement with Solar City, including on site solar panels, with an expansion project in the works.
Click this link to view the system array: SolarGuard

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St. John’s Wort – One of the Many Beautiful Specimens in the Portiuncula Friary Rain Gardens

On the grounds of the Provincial House, there are also rain gardens, created through the Restoring the Environment and Developing Youth (READY), a program funded by Maryland’s Howard County, and administered by the Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay (the Alliance), with support of People Acting Together in Howard (PATH) designed to meet environmental health and employment goals for young people aged 16-25.  Building rain gardens throughout the county will help alleviate the flow of toxic storm water runoff polluting streams, rivers, and ultimately the Chesapeake Bay, in addition to significantly eroding our land, while creating green jobs and improving watershed health through the reduction of storm water runoff. The project focuses on training in the design and installation of green storm water techniques such as rain gardens and rain barrels. It also reduces the amount of storm water runoff in Howard County by installing these storm water practices on institutional properties within the County, resulting in the capture of runoff from approximately 240,000 square feet (120,000 in phase 2) from rooftops and other impervious surfaces. The final goal is to link these young adults to local environmental job opportunities.

The Our Lady of the Angels Provincial House~Portiuncula Friary, in Ellicott City, Maryland, was chosen as one of the sites for some of their work. In the summer of 2012, the instructor and team leader visited the site and measured out three different areas in the front of our building and parking area that would be conducive to creative a rain garden. Plants included in these gardens are Japanese Sedge, White Turtlehead, Pink Turtlehead, Green-and-Gold, Tickseed, Coneflower, Blaze Star, St. John’s Wort, Crested Iris, Blue Flag Iris, Soft Rush, Gayfeather, Cardinal Flower and Maryland’s Sate Flower, the Black Eyed Susan.
There are hopes to add more rain gardens to the property. Now in our 2nd year, the gardens are thriving, adding not only beauty to the property but helping the friars promote and encourage conservation.

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After Three Summers – The Rain Gardens Are Thriving!

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Original Plan for the Portiuncula Friary’s Rain-Garden Pictured Above