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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here. ©
2002 The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Former
Sisters priest visits Scotland
Although the
Diocese of Idaho has invoked its prior claim on former Sisters priest Fr.
Tom Faucher, it will still have to wait a while before getting him back.
Instead of Boise, Faucher
is currently preaching his message in Scotland as part of a well-earned
sabbatical.
Faucher arrived in Kirkcudbright,
Scotland, on July 12, where he is filling in for Scottish priest Fr. Neil
O'Donnell, who himself is on sabbatical in the southwestern United States.
O'Donnell also visited Sisters
in June of this year.
Kirkcudbright, which Faucher
described as "a little teeny fishing village," is midway along the southern
coast of Scotland. The directions are simple: "Drive north to Scotland
and turn left."
The only town of any size
in the area is Dumfries, which lays claim to Scottish poet Robert Burns.
Lockerbie, which achieved
notoriety as a result of the Pan Am jetliner bombing, is also nearby.
In addition to St. Cuthbert's
Catholic Church in Kirkcudbright, Faucher is also conducting Masses at
nearby Catholic churches in Castle Douglas and Gatehouse of Fleet.
Faucher actually arrived in
Britain a few days before reporting to Kirkcudbright and spent some time
working his way north.
Much of that time was spent
as the guest of Fr. Adrian Morrin, parish priest at Our Lady of the Rosary
Church in Buckley, Wales.
The two have been friends
for many years, and Morrin has also visited Sisters.
As it happened, Faucher arrived
in town on the eve of the 146th "Buckley Jubilee." Morrin told Faucher
that the parade and crowd of thousands were there to welcome him.
In actuality, the annual event,
which began in the mid-1800s, is a community display of Christian solidarity,
in which all denominations march together.
"I saw one lady explaining
to her granddaughter how the parade was when she was a little girl," said
Morrin
Morrin acknowledged that the
role of religion is changing in the United Kingdom.
"In the past," he said, "people
went to church tribally, and religion was a form of self-definition. We're
no longer a religious country. Being Catholic in England, however, is
still part of being in a tribe."
Before heading north to Scotland,
Faucher also took time out to visit St. Winefride's Well and Shrine at
Holywell in Wales.
The new prayer garden at St.
Edward's Church in Sisters is dedicated to St. Winefride of Holywell.
Kirkcudbright is a neat and
compact little Scottish town. It has several impressive brick and stone
churches, but some of them also stand empty.
Faucher concedes that centuries
of religious wars and infighting may have contributed to some of today's
apparent disenchantment with religion in Britain.
Still, many churches in Britain,
such as St. Cuthbert's, continue to play an active role in the community
and in people's lives.
Prior to leaving the Isles,
Faucher will be leading a "Cathedrals of Britain Tour" from September
27 to October 15.
The tour will include highlights
of London, Stonehenge, Bath, Winchester Cathedral, Shakespeare Country,
Liverpool, Edinburgh, Glasgow and many other sites.
Tour participants include
residents of both Central Oregon and the Boise area.
At present, a few slots still
remain open for the tour. For further information contact Darlene Gratton
at (208) 888-1013.
Faucher will be returning
to the United States in late October and plans to visit Sisters on October
28. |
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