Louisiana
Louisiana boat procession to highlight saints known for love of Eucharist
LAFAYETTE, Louisiana — The annual Fête-Dieu du Têche within the Diocese of Lafayette takes place on the feast of the Assumption, Aug. 15, and this yr’s 40-mile eucharistic procession by boat down the Bayou Têche coincides with the U.S. Catholic Church’s three-year Nationwide Eucharistic Revival now underway.
“In an effort to domesticate a deeper devotion to Jesus’ presence within the Eucharist, boaters will be capable of select a patron from a listing of fifty eucharistic witnesses — saints and blesseds “who exemplified a life completely devoted to Jesus within the Holy Eucharist,” in keeping with a information launch about this yr’s occasion.
Saints identified for his or her love of the Eucharist can be highlighted, together with St. Thomas Aquinas, St. Jean Vianney, St. Katharine Drexel, St. Teresa of Kolkata, in addition to Blessed Carlo Acutis.
Boats will characteristic cutouts, flags and banners bearing the title of their chosen saint and current quotations from them in regards to the significance of the holy Eucharist.
“The intention for the all-day non secular and cultural celebration can be for a ‘Renaissance Eucharistique’ in Acadiana and past,” the discharge stated.
Acadiana refers back to the French Louisiana area — composed of twenty-two parishes — that’s house to the Cajun individuals. Cajuns are descendants of the Acadians, a individuals exiled from present-day Nova Scotia by the British in the course of the French and Indian Warfare. They settled alongside the bayous and prairies of southwest Louisiana.
Mary is the patroness of the Acadian individuals and of Acadiana. This yr her feast day marks the 257th anniversary of when these French Canadian immigrants first got here to this a part of Louisiana, bringing their Catholic religion with them.
“After the French and Indian Warfare, round 1763, the British demanded that these dwelling in present-day Nova Scotia resign their Catholic religion and swear allegiance to the British King,” stated Lafayette Bishop J. Douglas Deshotel.
“Those that didn’t have been expelled from the nation. They misplaced their lands, their properties and a few their lives,” he stated. “It was the primary instance of ethnic cleaning within the New World. Many got here to settle in south Louisiana the place it was French and Catholic.”
“They introduced their tradition, their meals and their Catholic religion — a particular devotion to the holy Eucharist and Mary the Mom of God,” he added.
Fête-Dieu du Têche will start with an 8 a.m. Mass celebrated in French by Bishop Deshotel at St. Leo the Nice Catholic Church in Leonville.
Following the Mass, there can be a procession with the Blessed Sacrament and a statue of Mary and St. Joseph to the close by boat touchdown. Households are inspired to affix the procession as a household and comply with it to the boat touchdown for Benediction.
The Blessed Sacrament can be fastened on an altar on the lead boat beneath a cover. One other boat will carry the statue of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
At 9:30 a.m., boats will depart in procession down the Bayou Têche towards St. Martinville, retracing the voyage made by the Acadians 257 years in the past. Bayou residents are inspired to collect as a household and greet the Blessed Sacrament because it passes close to their house.
The boats will cease to permit their passengers to disembark for the rosary and Benediction at church buildings within the cities alongside the best way: St. Francis Regis Church, Arnaudville; St. Joseph Church, Cecilia; St. Bernard Church, Breaux Bridge; and St. Joseph Church, Parks.
The ultimate cease can be St. Martinville. Contributors will disembark and stroll in procession to Notre Dame de Perpetual Secours for Benediction, then to St. Martin de Excursions for benediction, and at last to Mater Dolorosa Chapel for solemn vespers and Benediction.
Fifteen clergymen can be obtainable to listen to confessions in cell models at every of the stops alongside the best way.
Along with those that be part of within the eucharistic procession by boat, others with journey by automobile and collect alongside the banks of the bayou on the varied deliberate stops.
“The Most Blessed Sacrament touring by boat on the bayou, which was a serious channel of transportation for our ancestors, calls to thoughts the very important position that the Eucharist has performed within the religion of Acadiana,” stated Bishop Glen J. Provost of Lake Charles, a neighboring diocese of the Lafayette Diocese.
The area’s Catholic religion “is the material that creates our distinctive tradition right here in south Louisiana,” stated Louisiana Legal professional Normal Jeff Landry.
“Fête-Dieu du Têche is an expression of our religion in God, our respect for household and devotion to our group that enable us to construct a greater tomorrow,” he added.
Father Michael Champagne, a priest of the Group of Jesus Crucified in St. Martinville, who’s the organizer of the daylong occasion, stated the all-day flotilla requires some 120 volunteers to guarantee that its many “transferring components” synchronize.
One volunteer, Denise Denais, who’s accountable every year for boat registration, famous that she “has skilled a deeper religion in witnessing the various prayerful devoted lining the banks of the bayou merely to worship Our Lord within the Holy Eucharist.”
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Editor’s Notice: Extra info could be discovered on-line at https://www.jesuscrucified.web or www.fb.com/CommunityofJesusCrucified. A livestream can be obtainable the day of the procession on the Fb web page.
Louisiana
Two more candidates join Baton Rouge and Lafayette state Senate races on day 2 of qualifying
Two more candidates qualified on Wednesday to run for open seats in the Louisiana Senate.
One of the vacancies is to represent District 14 in Baton Rouge and the other is to represent District 23 in Lafayette.
Carolyn Hill signed up to run in Baton Rouge on the second of the three-day qualifying period, which closes Thursday afternoon. She is running as a Democrat.
Hill, 42, has a career in policy social work and currently works for East Baton Rouge Parish Schools. She also founded and owns Hill and Hills Associates, a political consulting firm that supports candidates running for office.
In 2011, she won a race to represent District 8 on the state Board of Elementary and Secondary Education. She lost a 2015 bid for reelection to BESE.
In Lafayette, Republican Jesse Regan formally qualified to run for state Senate.
Regan was elected to represent District 3 on the Broussard City Council in 2019. He won reelection in 2022.
Regan is a mortgage lender at Preferred Lending Solutions. He also co-founded DJD Development Group and co-owns Madison Banquet & Reception Centre in Broussard, according to an online biography.
The candidates who signed up Wednesday join four others who qualified Tuesday.
Democrats Quentin Anthony Anderson and state Rep. Larry Selders qualified in Baton Rouge, and Republican state Rep. Brach Myers and Kristopher Harrison, who is running unaffiliated, qualified in Lafayette.
Louisiana
Editor of Louisiana newspapers remembered for mentorship, nose for news
Marvin Gene Mearns, of Mandeville, a longtime editor of The Baton Rouge Advocate, New Orleans Times-Picayune and Houma Daily Courier, died Dec. 21, 2024.
He was 86.
Beloved for his steady and gentle mentorship of generations of Louisiana journalists, Mearns began his 50-year career in journalism covering the state Capitol for United Press International following his graduation from LSU.
After he was drafted and served in the U.S. Army, Mearns returned to Louisiana newspapers. He worked during different points in his career as the St. Bernard/Plaquemines bureau chief for The Times Picayune/The States-Item, as the executive editor of the Daily Courier and as an editor of suburban and metro news for The Advocate.
Born Feb. 21, 1938, in Lake Charles, Mearns lived for many years in Houma and New Orleans and later Baton Rouge. Wherever he was, he remained a fixture in the newsroom, his family said, even after Hurricane Katrina displaced him in 2005.
Mearns, who went by his middle name “Gene,” was an exacting wordsmith with rare editing skills. He could refine reporters’ copy with strong, precise verbs and concise phrases but keep his own fingerprints hidden, retaining the style of the writer.
A calming voice for reporters facing imminent nighttime deadlines, Mearns also exceled at seeing the long view, often giving journalists nudges to dig beneath the daily story.
“Gene had a good nose for stories and a wonderful rapport with his reporters,” said Fred Kalmbach, managing editor for The Advocate. “He also was a great writing coach, with a penchant for sniffing out and eliminating cliches.”
Dr. Micah Hatchett, Mearns’ stepdaughter, said he was a wonderful father and grandfather who gave her the same training in writing that he had given so many young journalists.
Hatchett said journalism and writing were among the “biggest loves” of his life.
“He read the paper every day until the day he died, so that’s the kind of man he was,” she said.
Mearns is survived by his wife, Bridgid Hirt Mearns; Hatchett and her husband, Jesse; and grandchildren, Brice Hatchett, and Luke Hatchett. He is also survived by his siblings and many extended family members and friends.
Services will be held privately at a later date.
Louisiana
Louisiana high school teacher framed by female students for ‘inappropriate messages’ they actually sent: police
Two Louisiana high school students have been charged with fabricating “inappropriate messages” they claimed were sent to them by a teacher to frame him as a sexual predator.
The Lafourche Parish Sheriff’s Office said they launched an investigation on Dec. 18 after two female students at Central Lafourche High School in Mathews — about 45 miles southwest of New Orleans –claimed an unidentified male teacher had sent them X-rated messages.
However, a two-week-long investigation soon revealed that the 15 and 16-year-old students had fabricated the conversations on an online instant messaging platform.
Detectives obtained a search warrant for the girls’ electronic devices and shockingly found that the teacher had not sent any messages to them and that they had created an online profile for him to make it appear that he was having risqué conversations with them.
The students would share screenshots of the phony conversations and share them with friends to make their con seem legitimate, the Lafourche Parish Sheriff’s Office said.
Investigators then determined the teacher was not the predator, as the girls claimed, but was the victim of a serious accusation.
When confronted by the findings, one of the students allegedly admitted to having been involved in framing the educator, police said.
“Our juvenile detectives are diligent and take claims of inappropriate behavior very seriously. They are, however, equally serious about false claims,” Sheriff Craig Webre said.
“Someone’s life can be instantly ruined by a false allegation and I am proud that our investigators were able to get to the bottom of this.”
The girls, who have not been named due to their age, were charged with one count each of false swearing for the purpose of violating public health or safety, cyberstalking, and online impersonation on Monday, according to police.
“Technology has made it very easy for people to try to manipulate the truth, but technology also makes it easy for investigators to ultimately find the truth,” Webre said.
The superintendent of Lafourche Parish School District, Jarod Martin, said he was “shocked and appalled” after hearing one of his teachers was framed and nearly lost his livelihood over the serious, yet fake, allegations.
The superintendent condemned the attack on the teacher and criticized the students’ alleged blatant attempt to ruin his “credibility and reputation.”
“We are committed to investigating all allegations of misconduct in order to provide a safe environment conducive to learning and working for all of our students and staff.”
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