
Pictures of the
Events:
Miss
Missionary Contest
Masters Soccer Event
Mass-Vigil
Main
Celebration
Youth Soccer Event |
Thanksgiving for 40 Years
of Parish Life
This year marks the 40th anniversary of
the founding of St. J oseph
the Worker (San Jose Obrero) parish in Chulucanas. This was the first
mission in Peru of the Augustinians of the Villanova Province and was begun
with Frs. Frank Kelly, Richard Appicci and John Sheridan. Shortly after
being installed as the first pastor, Fr. Kelly had to return to the U.S.
because of illness and Fr. Appicci became the pastor and served in and
around the parish for all of his 20 years in Peru. The other long term
pastor of the parish is Fr. Art Purcaro who served there until 1984 when he
was assigned as the first Augustinian pastor of the mission in Pacaipampa.
Fr. Art later was called to serve for 12 years as Assistant General of the
Order in Rome and last year returned once again to San Jose Obrero as
pastor.
The feast of the Exaltation of the Cross was for many years a major
celebration in San Jose so it was chosen to be the opening of the
celebrations for this 40th anniversary event which will continue until
December when the bishop, Dan Turley, will make his pastoral visit and close
the anniversary.
The celebration began on Friday evening with the contest of crowning “Miss
Beautiful Missionary” (Belleza Misionera). Holding beauty contests to crown
the “Queen” (Reina) of a major feast or civic holiday is a stable in
Peruvian culture. However, this year the parish wanted to put a different
spin on this type of activity and instead of awarding someone with physical
beauty, look for the person whose life and values witnessed to the beauty of
Christ. Thus the contest gave no points for physical attributes, rather
everything was calculated based on service provided in the local community,
answers to questions about faith and family values, costumes that reflected
cultural historical appreciation, etc. In this year where the Latin American
bishops are calling for a new missionary age within the continent, the
winner had to show how she was attempting to build these values with those
in her parish zone. They each organized an 8 minute dramatization to show
how this was being done, with the hope of animating others to follow suit.
The contest was a great success judging by the number of participants and
people present enjoying the ceremony which lasted from 8pm to 1 am on
Friday. The local stadium where the event was held could hold up to 2,000
spectators and almost all the seats were filled. Each of the contestants had
their own “routing section” from the parish zone where they live and who
they were representing. It was an evening of lost of fun, laughs and a
healthy building of community relationships.
On
Saturday in the local soccer stadium there was a competition centered around
the family. With food booths set up the idea was to promote the
participation of the parish in a family friendly event which included 4
teams of “senior” players. All the players had to be over 40 and were mostly
in the 50s as it included people who played soccer in the first parish
leagues organized almost 40 years ago.
In the evening mass the Vespers of the Feast of the Cross was celebrated.
Fr. John Lydon, representing all the Augustinians of the Augustinian
Vicariate, presided at the mass emphasizing the need to remember these forty
years, celebrate the graces received and the need to fortify us for the
continuing mission of the years ahead. The following morning the pastor, Fr.
Art Purcaro presided at the main celebration to mark the anniversary with
Fr. Wilder Vasquez, the local prior, Fr. Hugo Erazo and Fr. John also in
attendance. Fr. Art emphasized the special charism of San Jose Obrero from
its foundation as being a
parish
at the service of the poorest and the excluded members of society. He
mentioned the fundamental role of Fr. Appicci in setting up social programs,
as well as the Augustinians who were the first to go out to the local
villages when the previous model was to only have the people come into the
parish church and with this to begin a whole new way of thinking of
evangelization that now includes the entire diocese. In a special moment of
prayer people who served the parish in the first zone teams and who are now
deceased were remembered as well as the Augustinians who served in the
parish and have gone to their eternal reward with the Lord (Frank Kelly,
John McKniff, John Kelly, and Richard Appicci).
Responding to the special emphasis on the outcast and forgotten, a special
collection of food was taken up for prisoners in the local jail. As Fr. Art
mentioned, we do it not because they are guilty or innocent, for that we do
not yet know, we do it because they are abandoned and they are always our
fellow human beings. In a moving tribute the poor people of San Jose
responded with great generosity as small boxes of food supplies were brought
up by the different parish zone teams.
At the end of mass people were invited to carry the statute of St. Joseph
the Worker to the local cemetery where in the chapel flowers were placed and
prayers said once more for the Augustinians and lay people who ministered in
the parish during these 40 years and who the Risen Lord now has at His side.

Finally, like the previous day a sporting event was held, this in the local
parochial school with the participation of youth teams rather than seniors,
from the different zones of the outlying areas and some from the town of
Chulucanas. Once again it was promoted as a family day of celebration with
food and drink on sale to allow people to stay through until the late
afternoon.
With this closing sporting event of soccer and volleyball the weekend of
activities came to a close and final prayers emphasized once again all that
the Lord has accomplished in these 40 years, when the parish began in a
former restaurant, at the side of the town market, in the lowest and most
abandoned part of Chulucanas. That charism to search of the poorest and the
most forgotten in the main legacy of San Jose Obrero and one that the
Augustinian community continues to try to promote among all the laity.
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