Mississippi
Eucharistic boat procession set to roll down Mississippi River
CNA Staff, Aug 6, 2024 / 12:34 pm
Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament will float down the Mississippi River this August in a Eucharistic procession.
A procession of house, tug, and steamboats is set to launch in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on Aug. 14 and land in New Orleans the following evening.
The 130-mile procession, known as the Fête-Dieu du Mississippi, has garnered attention from state and local officials who are encouraging attendance. The event is a fusion of the National Eucharistic Revival with a local tradition held by the religious Community of Jesus Crucified (CJC).
“The historic river procession is planned in conjunction with the national three-year Eucharistic Revival taking place in the United States and is intended as a missionary endeavor following on the heels of the recent National Eucharistic Congress held in Indianapolis this past July,” read the Aug. 4 press release.
“Over the past three years the Catholic Church in the United States of America has been experiencing a Eucharistic Revival,” said nationally-acclaimed speaker and Baton Rouge pastor Father Josh Johnson in a statement shared with CNA. “The bishops are now sending all Catholics out on mission to share our Eucharistic Lord with everyone throughout our neighborhoods, on the highways, and even in the water!”
Jesus in the Eucharist will be accompanied by at least 14 boats.
While a procession on foot is usually led by a crossbearer, this procession will have a dedicated boat to carry a specially-made 17-foot-tall crucifix. Another vessel carrying historic bells will announce the coming of the Blessed Sacrament, while a houseboat will bear the 14-foot-tall monstrance.
Beyond the Bayou
While the traditional procession is on the Bayou Teche, this year’s 10th annual procession will float along the Mississippi River, blessing the state of Louisiana and the river itself.
Louisiana’s governor and local mayors have encouraged residents to attend the river procession, citing its historical and religious significance.
“The Mighty Mississippi, once named the River of the Immaculate Conception, has been a blessing to our great state with all types of industry, commerce, worship, and recreation occurring on its waters and along its banks,” Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry said in the press release.
Landry said the procession is “an historic moment in our state, highlighting the strong faith of our people and giving us an opportunity to ask God for his protection.”
“This historic event not only celebrates our faith but also unites our community in a spirit of reverence and reflection,” Baton Rouge Mayor Sharon Broome added.
“New Orleans could not be the world-class city it is today without the Mississippi River and those who work hard on it day in and day out to provide for their families,” noted New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell, who said she “could not be more excited for the Fête-Dieu du Mississippi to bless our city, state, and river!”
Archbishop Gregory Aymond of New Orleans in a July 31 letter shared with CNA said the event is “one of a kind,” calling it “an extraordinary public witness of our faith” and encouraging laity, religious, and clergy to participate.
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Bishop Andrew Cozzens of Crookston, Minnesota, who headed the National Eucharistic Revival and Congress, endorsed the event, encouraging people to attend the Masses and processions.
“As the bishop of the diocese where the Mississippi begins, I am so delighted that the wonderful tradition of the Fête-Dieu du Mississippi continues to grow,” Cozzens said in a statement. “As we saw through the National Eucharistic Pilgrimage and Congress, whenever we honor Our Lord in the Eucharist, he pours out blessings upon us and our country.”
130 miles along the Mississippi
This year’s procession is set to begin with Mass at St. Joseph’s Cathedral celebrated by Bishop Michael Duca of Baton Rouge followed by a milelong procession on foot to the river.
“It is my prayer that the men and women participating on any leg of the procession route will be living witnesses of Christ, awakening a faith-filled fire and inspiring those around them to love one another as he has loved us first,” Duca said in the press release.
Along the Mississippi River, Eucharistic Revival rally spots will host speakers, prayer, and mobile confessionals while participants await the flotilla’s passing. The Blessed Sacrament will travel through Plaquemine, Donaldsonville, Convent, Luling, and Audubon Fly before reaching its final stop in New Orleans.
Local businessman Kurt Crosby of Crosby Tugs volunteered his houseboat to carry the Eucharist as well as a tugboat to push the “floating church” that will carry religious sisters, brothers, and priests on the river procession.
“We are looking forward to the event, most importantly to show people the living Eucharistic Lord on the Mississippi River in this starving world,” Crosby said in the press release.
When the boats arrive in Convent at the end of the day, participants will process to St. Michael the Archangel Church, where all-night prayer will be offered. Father Vincent Dufresne, pastor of St. Michael’s, has been organizing more than 100 volunteers in preparation for the event.
“It is my prayer that all participants, young and old alike, will be strengthened by this experience of community devotion to Our Lord and Savior; that they will continue to work for an ongoing awareness of Jesus in his real presence with us in our local churches,” he said in the press release.
The first-ever blessing of the Mississippi River and the state of Louisiana will take place on the solemnity of the Assumption at the Audubon Fly as the flotilla makes its way along the river.
The event will also feature a Holy Hour on the Steamboat Natchez, where participants may pray and make a Holy Hour on the water. The steamboat will meet up with the flotilla for the last hour on Aug. 15, according to an archdiocese spokesperson.
The flotilla is set to arrive in the French Quarter at about 4:25 p.m., where there will be Benediction on the levee at 5:15 p.m. in front of Jackson Square, followed by a procession into St. Louis Cathedral, where Aymond will celebrate Mass.
“We desire to thank God for the great state of Louisiana and its mighty river and we desire to beg God’s blessing as we embark on our future journey toward him,” said Father Michael Champagne, CJC, longtime organizer of the event.
The historic procession
The unique procession is an outgrowth of a traditional procession known as Fȇte-Dieu du Teche, which has been celebrated annually by the Community of Jesus Crucified and local Catholics.
“For 10 years, La Fête-Dieu du Teche has led Eucharistic processions down the waterways of south Louisiana. Each procession has been a unique celebration of Catholic faith and Cajun [and] Creole culture,” Louisiana native Father Aquinas Guilbeau, OP, told CNA in an email. Guilbeau, chaplain at The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., is set to speak at the event.
The Bayou Teche procession is in honor of the feast of the Assumption and carries a statue of the Assumption of Mary along with the Blessed Sacrament. The procession makes occasional stops, disembarking to celebrate Benediction at makeshift altars along the waterways.
“What I love best about the Fête is that it reminds me of the Gospels when people would come from all over to see, hear, and touch Jesus… Hundreds of people waiting for the Lord to come… That’s what it’s like… It’s like you opened the Scriptures and dove in,” Courtney Chrisholm, an annual participant in the Fête-Dieu procession, said in a press release.
“At each stop along the way, there are hundreds of people adoring the Lord in the Eucharist. It’s incredible and such a gift,” she added. “Every year I have gone, I have encountered Our Lord in a new and profound way along the Bayou.”
The annual procession is part of a series of creative ways to evangelize developed the CJC as part of the new evangelization: Bible marathons, which entail 100 hours of the Bible being read aloud in shifts; mobile confession units styled after ambulances; and even a “friar truck,” a bold red repurposed fire truck that contains a massive pulpit.
The boat procession recalls local history, honoring the journey made by the Acadians, who were exiled from Nova Scotia for their Catholic faith, many of whom settled in Louisiana, according to the organizers of Fête-Dieu du Teche.
“This year, barely a month after the National Eucharistic Congress, the procession will go down the Mighty Mississippi, which Catholic explorers and missionaries first crossed nearly 450 years ago,” Guilbeau said. “The two-day procession from Baton Rouge to New Orleans will again claim the river, its lands, and its peoples for Christ and his Church.”
“I pray that all the towns and cities through which the Lord ‘passes by’ will receive abundant graces of conversion and renewal. I hope to see everyone — in the words of the old spiritual — ‘down by the riverside’!” he said.
Mississippi
Mississippi’s first Dutch Bros now open in Pearl
PEARL, Miss. (WLBT) – Mississippi’s first Dutch Bros is now open in Pearl!
The coffee shop had its grand opening on Wednesday, July 8, around 5 a.m. It is located at 200 Bass Pro Dr.
To celebrate the grand opening, customers can enjoy $3 medium drinks on Wednesday.
Store hours are Sun-Thurs: 5 a.m.- 10 p.m., Fri-Sat: 5 a.m.- 11 p.m.
Dutch Bros now has stores in 26 states.
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Mississippi
Police investigating video of Nolan Wells’ alleged argument on Horn Island before Mississippi teen went missing
MIAMI – Police are said to be investigating a video that allegedly shows a heated argument before Mississippi teen Nolan Xavier Wells went missing and was later found dead – as his grandfather said: “There’s nothing right about this.”
The 18-year-old star football player vanished during a Fourth of July boat trip with friends Saturday and a body which authorities said matched his description was found Monday morning.
Wells was last seen around 3 p.m. Saturday “talking to a girl” at the north end of Horn Island, a popular barrier island about 10 miles off the Mississippi Gulf Coast, the Cajun Navy Jackson County Sheriff’s Department said.
Law enforcement have been looking into a viral clip circulated online which appears to show several people having an “intense” argument near the shoreline, TMZ reported.
It sparked speculation that the tense moment could be connected to Wells’ disappearance.
However, authorities have not confirmed that the footage is authentic or whether the people seen in it have any connection to the college student.
Jackson County Sheriff John Ledbetter said that Wells’ friends had left the island and gone back without him, ABC News reported.
“From what we understand, he chose to stay there,” Ledbetter added.
Ledbetter said in a statement released Tuesday afternoon that officers want to speak with anyone who “observed or heard an argument, disturbance, or other unusual activity while on the island that day.”
Meanwhile, the family of the teen – who played as a wide receiver at Southwest Mississippi Community College – said they were seeking answers.
“Too many unanswered questions — how can a Island that was searched yesterday produce my grandsons body this morning,” his grandfather Christopher Wells Sr. wrote on Facebook on Monday.
“There’s nothing right about this, Nolan Xavier Wells deserved the same things that people he knew and associated with will enjoy in life.”
Wells Sr. later said Wells’ mom Christine and dad Elmore had “prayed for a positive outcome but they also had to prepare themselves for the worst”, adding that “it’s time for answers.”
Photos of the 6-foot-1, 180-pound teen showed him shirtless while sporting blue swim trunks, sunglasses and grinning alongside friends on a boat before he went missing.
The United Cajun Navy non-profit disaster relief organization launched aerial reconnaissance during the search to scour the waters between Horn Island and Ship Island, stretching south to the Chandelier Islands.
The United States Coast Guard, the Mississippi Department of Marine Resources, and the Harrison County Sheriff’s Department also reportedly assisted in the frantic search.
Mississippi
Jabil to invest $119 million in Marshall County, create 2,200 jobs
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Staff
Global manufacturing giant Jabil plans to open a massive new production facility in Marshall County, representing a $119 million corporate investment that will create approximately 2,200 jobs North Mississippi, officials announced Tuesday, July 7.
The St. Petersburg, Florida-based company is purchasing and renovating an existing 1.5 million-square-foot facility to support customers in the booming data center infrastructure market.
The expansion comes just nine months after Jabil first entered the Marshall County landscape. In September 2025, the company’s healthcare division announced a separate $70 million investment over three years to establish X-ray sterilization capabilities in the area.
“Investments like this are why Mississippi has one of the hottest job markets in America,” Gov. Tate Reeves said in a statement, noting the quick turnaround between Jabil’s local projects. “Jabil would not be making this investment unless the company was confident that Mississippi and her people can deliver results.”
The Mississippi Development Authority is assisting the project through the Mississippi Flexible Tax Incentive, known as the MFLEX program. Additional support is being provided by Marshall County officials, AccelerateMS and the Tennessee Valley Authority.
Large scale facility is key
State economic leaders emphasized that the scale of the facility positions Mississippi to capitalize on the rapid expansion of digital infrastructure.
“A 1.5-million-square-foot operation producing data center infrastructure isn’t a marginal project,” said Bill Cork, MDA executive director. “It’s proof we are in the game for advanced manufacturing tied to global demand.”
Jabil operates in more than 25 countries with a workforce of 140,000 employees, providing engineering, supply chain and manufacturing solutions across the robotics, automotive, healthcare and energy sectors.
Matt Crowley, Jabil’s executive vice president of global business units for intelligent infrastructure, said domestic capacity is becoming increasingly vital for the industry.
“Companies across the data center ecosystem are looking to build fast, and they’re increasingly looking to build in the United States,” Crowley said.
A timeline for the completion of the renovations and the start of hiring has not yet been disclosed.
Ross Reily is a writer for the Clarion Ledger, part of the USA TODAY Network. He can be reached at rreily@gannett.com or 601-573-2952. You can follow him on the X platform, formerly known as Twitter @GreenOkra1.
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