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Feature News | Monday, September 07, 2015

From Homestead to Philadelphia, for Pope Francis

90 Members of St. Ann Mission prepare for pilgrimage to World Meeting of Families

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Father Jesús Alberto Bohórquez, administrator, St. Ann Mission with Argentina flag when Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio was elected Pope and adopted the name of Pope Francis. Father Bohórquez will accompany his parishioners on the pilgrimage to Philadelphia, with a return stop to see the historic sites in Washington, D.C.

Photographer: COURTESY : P. JESUS BOHORQUEZ

Father Jesús Alberto Bohórquez, administrator, St. Ann Mission with Argentina flag when Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio was elected Pope and adopted the name of Pope Francis. Father Bohórquez will accompany his parishioners on the pilgrimage to Philadelphia, with a return stop to see the historic sites in Washington, D.C.

MIAMI | When South Florida realtor Isabel Nuñez heard of Pope Francis’ upcoming U.S. visit for the World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia, she phoned a travel agent who had helped her plan a previous trip.

Nuñez, a member of St. Ann Mission near Homestead, said she has never been to a papal event, and the same is true for many of the immigrant families who are members of St. Ann Mission.

“As soon as we heard that he was coming we started to get this going,” said Nuñez, adding that the plan is for some 90 members of the mission to take a low-cost, no frills trip to see Pope Francis. They will be traveling on two buses and staying in motels 45 minutes outside of Philadelphia.

St. Ann Mission has historically served the farmworker and Mexican-American community of southern Miami-Dade County. As such, it is probably one of the southernmost parishes making a pilgrimage to Philadelphia.

“A lot of our people are excited. We are going to work our schedules around Pope Francis, so we want to be there early and wait for him, to see him in the plaza (Benjamin Franklin Parkway),” said Nuñez.

She is also exploring the possibility of taking the parishioners to Pope Francis’ meeting with Hispanics and immigrants outside Independence Hall, if that becomes possible.

Some of the finer details of the papal itinerary in the U.S. are still being announced, and this being Pope Francis there might be a few surprises. His six-day visit, Sept. 22-27, will begin in Washington, D.C., continue in New York City and conclude in Philadelphia, which is hosting the Vatican-sponsored World Meeting of Families. Before he lands in the U.S., Pope Francis will visit Cuba for three days, Sept. 19-22.

Hundreds of Catholics from the Archdiocese of Miami are traveling in archdiocese-organized pilgrimages to stops along Pope Francis’ route.

Two archdiocesan groups and Archbishop Thomas Wenski will join the pope for the Mass in Havana Sept. 20; another group will see him in Washington, D.C., Sept. 23 and 24; and a fourth group will take part in the closing festivities of the World Meeting of Families the weekend of Sept. 26 and 27 in Philadelphia.

Several local parishes and entities such as St. Ann’s have planned their own pilgrimages to see Pope Francis, whose Sept. 26-27 agenda in Philadelphia will include two big public events on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway. The pope will attend the closing ceremonies of the World Meeting of Families Saturday night and celebrate the closing Mass Sunday afternoon.

Photographer:

At the closing festival, which starts at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, he is expected to listen to performances from Andrea Bocelli, Juanes, and the Philadelphia Orchestra. Both events are free and do not require tickets, according to organizers.

The pope also will have more private encounters with Pennsylvania’s bishops, priests, men and women religious at the Cathedral Basilica of Sts. Peter and Paul, and is expected to visit with prisoners at the Curran-Fromhold Correctional Facility.

The pilgrims from St. Ann Mission will be accompanied by their pastor, Father Jesus Alberto Bohorquez, who is of Colombian descent but was born in Buenos Aires, the same Argentinian city where Pope Francis lived and served as Archbishop Jorge Mario Bergoglio.

“When I heard the news about Pope Francis’ (election) I celebrated like it was a soccer game. I got my Argentina flag out,” Father Bohorquez said.

He added that in 2013 he arranged for St. Ann’s young people to watch the World Youth Day events from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on television. Next year, 28 youths from the parish will travel to World Youth Day 2016 in Poland.

Those traveling to Philadelphia are mostly adult parishioners, and have made considerable sacrifices to join the trip. They also understand that there is no guarantee they will get close to Pope Francis.

Exterior view of St. Ann Mission, which ministers to a largely Mexican, agricultural community in Homestead.

Photographer:

Exterior view of St. Ann Mission, which ministers to a largely Mexican, agricultural community in Homestead.


“This is such a historical event that as long as we know the pope will be in Philadelphia we will be there. We will help make the statement to the whole nation that Catholics stand with the pope,” Father Bohorquez said.

The pilgrimage planning process has revealed the importance of Pope Francis in the life of Mexican people, the priest added. “They have a special love for the papacy.”

The St. Ann group created their own pilgrimage T-shirt for the occasion, which displays the St. Ann Mission logo and which reads, in Spanish, “One Family in Christ, One Family of Christ.”

Afterwards, the group plans to go see some of the historic sites in Washington, D.C., before returning to Florida. Joining the group will be a retired priest from the Archdiocese of San Juan, Puerto Rico, who assists at St. Ann’s, and several religious women from the Missionary Guadalupanas of the Holy Spirit.

Nuñez said she is prepared for the difficulties and uncertainties of the experience and for navigating the hundreds of thousands of visitors who will be on hand for the events in Philadelphia.

“I know it might be crazy, and that we will have to walk with a multitude of people,” she said. “Our members have a deep respect for the clergy and so this is a dream come true for our group. They love the pope’s humility and especially his apparent joy of the Gospel and how Pope Francis says we need to bring joy back into evangelization.”

Calling Pope Francis a “breath of fresh air,” Nuñez said living as a Christian in the U.S. can sometimes feel “like you are swimming against the current” � but “the pope assures us we are on the right track.”

STILL SOME ROOM ON THE BUSES
  • St. Ann Mission still has some spots available on their pilgrimage buses to Philadelphia. The cost of the package is:
  • $800/person for a single room
  • $650/person for two people in a room
  • $500/person for four people in a room.
  • The price includes all transportation and five nights in a hotel. It does not cover food.
For information, call 305-259-2917.

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