Monthly Newspaper • DIOCESE OF BRIDGEPORT

FAIRFIELD—Al DiGuido, founder and CEO of Al’s Angels, will be at St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic School at 8:30 am on Friday, March 29, to present a special commendation to students for organizing Hoops for Hope to raise money for Cam Simpson’s fight of AHS.

Hoops for Hope participants paid a $5 entry fee and were given two minutes to make as many free throw baskets as they could. Prizes were awarded to most baskets and most money raised by age group. More than 150 students, parents, faculty and community members participated. In just two hours, they raised nearly $5,000 toward the Simpson’s goal of $100,000 for their son’s treatment.

St. Thomas’ sixth grade girls and boys basketball teams managed all aspects of the event—inception, promotion, scheduling, and collecting pledges. Claire Russell, a sixth grader, was the student leader who organized the team of volunteer middle-school students Sarah Quan, Hollis Huntington, Olivia Marshall, Lily Garate, Melissa Dunn, Kate Cimador, Paige Patrignelli, Sophia Lostumbo, Nora Lesizza, Luke Levanant, Tommy Berry, Timmy King, Nick Rotondo, Connor Brennan, Robert Patrignelli, Ellie Stefanowicz, Maggie Russell, Kelley Monahan, Lauren Marsden.

Mr. DiGuido commented, “I feel incredibly blessed that the students of St. Thomas understood the need that we were involved in providing for young Cameron and immediately felt a responsibility to do something to help. It’s rare in our world today that young people take on such a strong initiative and see it all the way through to completion. For Al’s Angels, we feel it is mission critical and appropriate to recognize these young “angels” for the work that they do and the role models that they are to others. I am excited to award the students with this recognition and thank them for their great work. The students at St. Thomas are true examples of Al’s Angels in action.”

About Al’s Angels
The mission of Al’s Angels (www.alsangels.org) is to provide holiday meals, gifts & support to children and families battling cancer, rare blood diseases, natural disasters & severe financial hardship. The organization has been performing this work for over 23 years!

About St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic School
St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic School is fully accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges and recognized as an award-winning Blue Ribbon School of Excellence. For nearly 100 years in the heart of downtown Fairfield, we have served a critical role in Fairfield County by providing a strong foundation for students in faith and knowledge at an affordable cost for students in pre k 3-8th grade.

St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic School is conveniently located at 1719 Post Road, Fairfield.

(For additional information please contact Barbara Turner, Director of Admissions, at 203.255.0556 x.225 or Barbara.turner@stasonline.net.)

FAIRFIELD—The St. Thomas 8th grade girls basketball team has qualified for this weekend’s New England Catholic Youth Organization Tournament in Manchester, N.H. The highest ranked teams from eight New England Catholic Dioceses will play in the quarter finals on Friday and Saturday. Semi-final games will be held Saturday afternoon, with the tournament champion crowned after the final game on Sunday, March 31.

St. Thomas Catholic School 8th grade girls had a record of 25-1 this season. They won their Sheehan Center League, as well as tournaments including St. Thomas, Our Lady of Fatima, St. Mark’s and St. Mary’s. Most recently they won the title of 2019 Bridgeport Diocesan Champions to earn a position in the NE CYO playoffs.

Coach Hyland commented, “We are very proud of these 12 young ladies. They really love the sport and have played together since the 4th grade. The same group of teammates won the NE CYO Tournament as 6th graders in 2017. They’ve all made a big commitment to the team—playing several games with multiple practices every week from October through March. More importantly, they are all very well-rounded—accomplished academically, are multi-sport players, and are really great girls.”

Two-thirds of the team are Junior National Honor Society members. Several serve on the student council, sing in the chamber choir, play instruments, have leads in the school play, and consistently make the honor role. Most of the players will continue to play basketball next year at their respective high schools—Lauralton Hall, Ludlowe and Notre Dame.

The team will be celebrated at a school-wide pep rally on Friday, March 29 at 8:30 am in the school gym. Congratulations to players Katie Fitzgerald, Lucy Hyland, Rory Kudzy, Janie Paulmann, Ellie Price, Catherine Bosse, Mia Christodero, Persephone Deeds, Nellie Kiernan, Chloe Byrd, Grace Patrignelli, Molly Keaveney, Coach Hyland, Assistant Coach Fitzgerald and Assistant Coach Paulmann.

About St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic School
St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic School is fully accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges and recognized as an award-winning Blue Ribbon School of Excellence. For nearly 100 years in the heart of downtown Fairfield, we have served a critical role in Fairfield County by providing a strong foundation for students in faith and knowledge at an affordable cost for students in pre-k 3-8th grade.

St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic School is conveniently located at 1719 Post Road, Fairfield.

(For additional information please contact Barbara Turner, Director of Admissions, at 203.255.0556 x.225 or Barbara.turner@stasonline.net.)

BRIDGEPORT—James J. O’Connell, M.D., president of the Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program, will be the featured speaker at the 26th White Mass honoring Health Care professionals on Sunday, April 7, 9:30 am at St. Augustine Cathedral, 399 Washington Avenue in Bridgeport.

Bishop Frank J. Caggiano will celebrate the annual Mass, which will be immediately followed by brunch at Brooklawn Country Club in Fairfield. The Mass is open to all healthcare workers and the general public.

“Lessons Learned Caring for Boston’s Rough Sleepers” will be the focus of the talk by Dr. O’Connell, assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, who has dedicated his medical career to caring for Boston’s homeless.

“Our Holy Father has urged us ‘to serve Jesus crucified’ in every person who is poor, marginalized and suffering, and to see the Lord in every excluded person who is hungry, thirsty and abandoned,” said Bishop Caggiano. “Dr. O’Connell has inspired us all with his urgent and sacrificial witness to those who often remain invisible in our lives, though they live in plain sight.”

“Throughout his 30 years at the helm, Dr. O’Connell has continued to serve on the team of doctors that meets patients on the streets, offering food and warm socks, medical treatment and the support of trusted friends. We have much to learn from him and we welcome his presence at the upcoming White Mass,” said the bishop.

Under Dr. O’Connell’s leadership, the Boston homeless program has become the country’s largest and most comprehensive program of its kind, serving more than 12,000 homeless people a year in two hospital-based clinics and more than 60 shelters and outreach sites.

During the White Mass, the bishop will present the Father Rufin Compassionate Care Award to one area healthcare professional and another to a healthcare volunteer. The recipients are traditionally drawn from the ranks of physicians, nurses, dentists, healthcare workers or healthcare volunteers in Fairfield County.

The Father Rufin Award is presented to those who exemplify compassionate and loving care for the sick. It is named after the late Father Rufin Kuveikis, a Capuchin Franciscan who served as chaplain at Norwalk Hospital for 18 years. He died in 2008 at age 86.

About Dr. James J. O’Connell, M.D.:  Dr. O’Connell graduated summa cum laude from the University of Notre Dame in 1970 and received his Master’s degree in Theology from Cambridge University in 1972. After graduating from Harvard Medical School in 1982, he completed a residency in Internal Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH). In 1985, Dr. O’Connell began fulltime clinical work with homeless individuals as the founding physician of the Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program. With his colleagues, Dr. O’Connell established the nation’s first medical respite program for homeless persons with 25 beds in the Lemuel Shattuck Shelter. This innovative program now provides acute and sub-acute, pre- and post-operative, and palliative and end-of-life care in the freestanding 104-bed Barbara McInnis House.

Dr. O’Connell has been featured on ABC’s Nightline and in the feature-length documentary “Give Me a Shot of Anything.” He has received numerous awards, including the Albert Schweitzer Humanitarian Award in 2012 and The Trustees’ Medal at the bicentennial celebration of MGH in 2011. Dr. O’Connell has collaborated with homeless programs in many cities in the USA and across the globe, including Los Angeles, London, and Sydney. Dr. O’Connell’s book, Stories from the Shadows: Reflections of a Street Doctor was published in 2015 in celebration of BHCHP’s 30th anniversary.

All healthcare workers and their guests are invited to attend the White Mass. The Mass is also open to the general public. Breakfast tickets are $35 per person. (Table of 8, $ 250. Sponsor: $100 includes 2 brunch reservations and name listed in the program.) Register online at: www.bridgeportdiocese.org/2019whitemass.

(For further information contact Elizabeth Auda at: 203.416.1636 or email at: 2019whitemass@diobpt.org.)

NORWALK- On March 20th, lay faithful joined seminarians, priests, permanent deacons and religious from the Diocese of Bridgeport to pray for Vocations at St. Matthew Church in Norwalk.

What a beautiful grace-filled night as so many came together to support those in formation and to pray for vocations,” said Msgr. Walter C. Orlowski, VF, KCHS, Dean and Pastor. “I was thinking to myself: what if tonight a man or woman is called to the priesthood or religious life? Or a married man might be called to the permanent diaconate? Our God does indeed work in wonderful ways. As Fr. John Connaughton, Director of Vocations, said so beautifully, ‘Let faith be your guide. Do not be afraid.’ ”

After the Holy Hour, a reception was held in the Masterpool Great Room, where some of the seminarians shared how they discovered their vocations, and how the road to the priesthood is not always a straight one.

Several years ago, seminarian Ferry Galbert was working as an RN at Stamford Hospital in the stroke unit. Through the discernment process, he realized that although you might think you know what you want to do with your life, sometimes God has other plans. “This is not someplace where I thought I’d be,” he offered with an engaging smile. “But I can tell you this: when you say ‘yes’ to what God has in store for you, there is peace. Where I am, is where there is peace.”

By Ann Yannetti

FAIRFIELD—The Murphy Center for Ignatian Spirituality Dinner & Award Ceremony Honoring Bishop Frank J. Caggiano will be held on April 12, 2019, in the Oak Room in the Barone Campus Center of Fairfield University. A reception is set for 6 pm with dinner to follow at 7 pm.

“Fairfield University’s Murphy Center for Ignatian Spirituality gratefully recognizes Bishop Frank Caggiano’s enthusiastic support of the Center from its very inception. Over the past years, it has been our privilege to collaborate with Bishop Caggiano in the mission entrusted to him,” said Father Gerry Blaszczak, S.J., director of the Murphy Center for Ignatian Spirituality of Fairfield University.

“We honor Bishop Caggiano for his unflagging commitment to the growth in Christ of the clergy, religious and laity of Diocese of Bridgeport, whom he has served with outstanding wisdom, courage, fidelity and compassion,” said Father Blaszczak.

Rev. Robert Kinnally, chancellor of the diocese and pastor St. Aloysius Parish, New Canaan and Deacon Patrick Toole, episcopal delegate for administration, Diocese of Bridgeport, are serving as co-chairs of the event.

The Murphy Center for Ignatian Spirituality offers spiritual direction in the Ignatian tradition to guide individuals and groups in their journey toward this encounter, as St. Ignatius did, by “finding God in all things.” As part of this outreach, we also train spiritual directors who can assist in the discernment of God’s direction in their lives.

The Center’s goals are to establish a lasting infrastructure to serve as a repository of the Jesuit values foundational to the culture of Fairfield University. The Center also promotes vibrant expressions of Ignatian spirituality at individual and group levels, both on campus and in parish settings in the Diocese of Bridgeport.

(To make a reservation for the dinner or to learn more, call 203.254.4000 ext.3468 or email mcis@fairfield.edu.)

ANAHEIM, CA—In his debut at America’s largest annual Catholic gathering, one of the rising stars of the U.S. hierarchy warned that full recovery from the clerical abuse scandals, including a new style of leadership in the Church, will be a “generational” task.

“We’ll be at this for a while,” said Bishop Frank Caggiano of Bridgeport, Connecticut, who made a splash at last fall’s Synod of Bishops in Rome with his blunt, forceful language on the abuse crisis.

“We have become a society that sees everything in terms of power, as an authority or force over you, rather than a service in support of you, which is what the Lord defines authority and power,” Caggiano said in a March 22 interview with Crux.

“That’s going to be a generational amount of work to get to,” he said. “You’re going to need the few saints to lead the rest of us to figure out how to do it.”

Caggiano was speaking on the margins of the Los Angeles Religious Education Congress, an annual gathering held at the Anaheim Convention Center that regularly attracts in excess of 30,000 youth, catechists, religion teachers and other leaders in the Church.

The Bridgeport prelate, who’s originally from Brooklyn, was on hand to deliver two talks on Friday, one to youth and another to catechists, before taking a red-eye flight back to his diocese on Saturday to preside over a confirmation ceremony.

In his conversation with Crux, Caggiano stressed the need not just for improved structures and procedures to combat clerical abuse, but also “spiritual conversion.”

“If the sexual abuse crisis is, in part, an abuse of power, there is no mandate, procedure or process on earth that can avoid an abuse of power unless there’s a change of heart, a change in priority, a change in the way we exercise leadership, and the spirit with which you exercise leadership,” he said.

“I mean episcopal leadership, pastoral, lay leadership, leadership in families … there has to be a change,” Caggiano said.

Right now, Caggiano said, reform is happening in fits and starts among communities that foster both hope and joy in the Christian life despite the pain, which he described as characteristic of how the Church works.

“Reforming the Church never happens when everyone does it simultaneously,” he said. “Reform always starts in certain places that begin to grow, whether it’s in the Patristic era, the Dark Ages, the Middle Ages, the Reformation, the same is happening here.”

“There are some places that are ahead, some places in the country that are ahead, some communities that are ahead,” Caggianno said. “The hope is that as they begin to heal and show a light, everyone else will begin to follow their example. That’s how renewal occurs.”

“For it to happen everyplace all at the same time, in the same way, never really works that way in the Church,” he said.

In terms of a spiritual response, Caggiano emphasized the centrality of the cross.

“It’s the cross that is both the symbol of our salvation and the hope to forgive sin, eventually to heal even the wounds of sin,” he said.

“We live in a time when many people have been wounded by the sins of those who were entrusted to care for them. They’re wounded, and they’re betrayed,” Caggiano said. “The cross is about a wounded Christ, a betrayed Christ, but a Christ who’s triumphant, a Christ who ultimately breaks the chains of sin and death.”

It’s the cross, he said, that justifies hope for recovery.

“When you stand before the cross, there’s no wound, there’s no hurt, there’s no suffering as profound as it can be, that cannot find healing,” Caggiano said. “Before the cross there’s no reason to give up hope, because the victory’s already ours.”

“We need to go back to that … we’ve got to get back to the basics because the moment demands it,” he said.

“It seems to me that in this period of life we’re living, in which there’s a lot of darkness but also the signs of the beginnings of real change and hope and grace and light, the cross is going to be the path we have to walk,” Caggiano said.

In that context, Caggiano advised those who teach the faith to focus on the core Christian proclamation, known by the Greek term kerygma.

“A catechist can get involved in a lot of stuff, but the kerygma is one sentence: ‘Christ has died, Christ is risen, Christ will come again,’” he said.

Acknowledging the anger many Catholics feel about the scandals, Caggiano said in some ways it’s a positive force.

“The anger is a righteous anger most of the time, because you’re seeing justice and that should not be diminished. Even Jesus was angry in the temple,” he said.

“Anger gives birth to two daughters, courage and hope – courage to change what’s wrong, and hope to believe it can be better,” Caggiano said. “I think the anger itself can be a gift, but you can’t stay there forever. You’ve got to move on to the courage and the hope, and that’s the cross in my mind.”

The 59-year-old prelate, who routinely figures on informal handicapping lists for bigger jobs someday, said the crisis has forced the Church to be more honest about itself.

“In my mind, we have veneers in life. The modern world is filled with them, and things are not what they appear to be,” he said.

“The abuse crisis, because it is so profound, so ugly, so humiliating, there are no veneers we can stand behind anymore,” Caggiano said. “It’s just the truth. When you do that, you can really begin to heal, you can begin to change.”

That part is what we bring to the equation. What they bring is everything else I’ve described, and then you can see real transformation.

He also emphasized the need to engage youth.

“There’s a tremendous sense of honesty, there’s a sense of wanting to make a difference, there’s still a tremendous sense of generosity among young people and young adults,” he said. “There’s also an activism, they know the world is not what it’s meant to be and they want to be able to change it for the better.”

“But in an age in which it’s only about what I want, we also have to help them understand that to truly unleash that power, it has to be in dialogue with a truth bigger than themselves – a truth from which they have nothing to fear, just like the glove has nothing to fear from the hand,” Caggiano said.

After his first experience of the Los Angeles Religious Education Congress, which dates to 1967, Caggiano described it as a “phenomenon.”

“This is a national religious congress, not an L.A. religious congress,” he said.

“Here there’s a microcosm of the whole Church. You have those who are very much in the apologetic mode, teaching the faith and the truth of the faith. There are others who are much more in the social justice and social gospel mode. You have others who are more into the liturgical and spirituality side,” Caggiano said.

“In a sense, it’s like highlighting the different pieces of who we are,” he said. “I think there’s something for everybody.”

By Elise Harris and John L. Allen Jr.   |   Crux

WASHINGTON D.C.—As multiple states consider assisted suicide legislation, disability activists are speaking out, saying the bills are slippery slopes that put the lives of people with disabilities at risk.

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BALTIMORE and BOSTON—Just weeks after the Vatican’s February summit on clergy sexual abuse, which left U.S. Catholics frustrated by Rome’s measured response to holding bishops accountable for sexual misconduct with adults and negligent supervision of predatory clerics, news from the Baltimore Archdiocese brings a glimmer of hope.

Following a Vatican-authorized investigation into allegations of sexual harassment, two retired U.S. Church leaders—West Virginia Bishop Michael Bransfield and Bishop Gordon Bennett—faced restrictions on their public ministry. And though naysayers had questioned whether bishops had the stomach for investigating brother bishops, or whether claims of sexual harassment against them would be taken seriously by Church authorities, the actions coming out of the Baltimore Archdiocese suggest otherwise.

A striking feature of this new inflection point is the role played by Archbishop William Lori, who completed his mission in five months and then provided the public with information about the charges and the investigation—an unusual and welcome level of transparency.

Archbishop Lori took action after Bishop Bransfield reached his 75th birthday and tendered his resignation in September. At that time, the Holy See named Archbishop Lori the apostolic administrator of the West Virginia diocese and authorized him to conduct an investigation into allegations of sexual harassment and financial improprieties against Bishop Bransfield.

Archbishop Lori tapped five lay experts to help with this work and contracted with an independent third-party reporting system founded in 2012, called EthicsPoint, to receive additional allegations against the accused.

The results of the investigation have been sent to Rome, and Pope Francis will make a final judgment. But when Archbishop Lori marked the completion of the preliminary investigation, he imposed immediate restrictions on Bishop Bransfield. “Pending the Holy See’s assessment of the findings,” read the statement, “Bishop Bransfield is not authorized to exercise any priestly or episcopal ministry either within the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston or within the Archdiocese of Baltimore.”

It was also confirmed that Bishop Bennett, a Jesuit, faced similar action for allegations that apparently dated back to 2006 but were only now coming to light. “[A]s part of recently announced protocols governing the conduct of bishops in the archdiocese, Archbishop Lori determined that similar restrictions were warranted in the case of former Auxiliary Bishop of Baltimore Gordon Bennett, S.J.,” read the announcement. “As a result of these restrictions, which the Holy See recently gave permission to the archbishop to announce, Bishop Bennett is prohibited from exercising any priestly or episcopal ministry in the Archdiocese of Baltimore and the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston.”

The statement noted that, in 2006, an allegation of harassment against the bishop that involved a young adult had been received by the archdiocese and was immediately forwarded to the nuncio. The bishop stepped down three months later. And though the Baltimore Archdiocese offered only a partial explanation for the delay in penalties, its announcement suggested that Church officials would now begin to take accusations of sexual harassment against bishops much more seriously. This, too, is a welcome development.

An auxiliary bishop in the Baltimore Archdiocese from 1998 to 2004, Bishop Bennett was subsequently appointed bishop of Mandeville, Jamaica. He remained in that post for two years.

At the time, unspecified health issues were offered as an explanation for his early retirement at the age of 60. But the Baltimore Archdiocese’s March 11 press release provided a very different explanation.

Bishop Bennett is a member of the Society of Jesus’ California province, now part of the Jesuits West Province, and he served from 2008 to 2018 at Loyola Marymount University. During his tenure there, he taught theology and led retreats, among other duties.

After Archbishop Lori’s announcement, Jesuits West issued a statement that sought to defend the actions of the Jesuit bishop’s religious superiors.

Jesuits West said the bishop had been cleared of the allegation in 2009, and the Congregation for Bishops had allowed him to return to “limited episcopal ministry subject to oversight.” But in August, Bishop Bennett’s case was “re-examined,” according to Jesuits West, and the Congregation for Bishops determined he “should not continue to exercise episcopal ministry.”

Archbishop Lori’s announcement made the Holy See’s judgment public. More importantly, the re-evaluation of Bishop Bennett’s case underscored the impact of the Theodore McCarrick scandal. The onetime cardinal and archbishop of Washington, D.C., was suspended from public ministry in June 2018, after an allegation of sexual abuse involving a minor was found to be credible. But the news quickly stirred criticism about the Vatican’s earlier failure to act after it received reports of his alleged sexual harassment and misconduct with adult seminarians.

Archbishop Lori’s actions adhered to the archdiocese’s new protocols for investigating allegations against a bishop that were unveiled in January.

The reforms authorize his Independent Review Board to investigate claims of sexual abuse, misconduct and negligence or cover-up against bishops of the archdiocese. Local bishops are also required to sign a “Code of Conduct,” which clearly prohibits misconduct involving adults.

The Baltimore Archdiocese uses EthicsPoint to receive claims and forward them to the relevant civil and Church authorities. Cardinal Seán O’Malley of Boston, the president of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, also announced this month that his archdiocese would use EthicsPoint to receive allegations against bishops in his archdiocese.

The news reassures the faithful that Church leaders understand the need for bishop accountability and transparency. But canonists have questioned how these new developments square with Church law governing the formal framework for investigating bishops and maintaining the rights of the accused.

Archbishop Lori “can restrict [Bishop Bransfield and Bishop Bennett] in certain ways, but I would question whether he can completely forbid them from exercising their episcopal ministry,” Dominican Father Pius Pietrzyk, a canonist at St. Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park, California, told the Register.

He noted that, for the present at least, the bishops only face restrictions within Baltimore and Wheeling-Charleston, “because that is the extent of Archbishop Lori’s power.”

The Baltimore Archdiocese’s spokesman, Sean Caine, defended Archbishop Lori’s actions: “Each diocesan bishop can decide which cleric (priest, deacon or bishop) can minister in his diocese,” he told the Register.

Canonists also sought more information about the precise role of an autonomous third-party reporting system like EthicsPoint. “A bishop cannot shed his responsibility,” said Dominican Father Joseph Fox, a canonist in Los Angeles. “He can get expert lay opinion, and he doesn’t have to oversee the investigation. But there needs to be a point at which it begins and when it concludes, and he has to decide.”

Cardinal O’Malley’s spokesman, Terrence Donilon, said the adoption of EthicsPoint accommodated Church law governing investigative procedures.

“The review board will forward to the nuncio reports from the two members who staff the anonymous reporting site,” said Donilon. “Once such a report is made, the archbishop will initiate the proper investigation when directed by the apostolic nuncio. This process provides for the archbishop to have the appropriate role in the formal canonical process once it is initiated.”

Donilon described the adoption of EthicsPoint as a “temporary and intermediate step that Cardinal Seán feels is necessary to implement now as decisions are made toward a more comprehensive metropolitan plan.”

There is a strong expectation that the U.S. bishops will adopt a more comprehensive and decisive response at their June meeting, when they are expected to act on proposals to strengthen bishop accountability, including an independent reporting system for claims and possibly a national board with the authority to conduct preliminary investigations.

But the news from Baltimore and Boston does, indeed, offer a little hope that, after many failures, missteps and delays, true accountability may be coming.

Editorial  |  National Catholic Register

FLORIDA—Father Emeric, Szlezak, OFM, a professed Franciscan friar for 79 years and a priest for 74, died on March 16 in St. Petersburg, where he had lived since 2005.

Father Szlezak was 101 years old and the longest living friar in the history of Holy Name Province. Father Szlezak was born on December 17, 1917, in Budapest, Hungary, to Kalman and Elizabeth (née Beck). He moved with his family to the United States in 1923. Father Szlezak attended Catholic grammar school in Brooklyn before enrolling in St. Joseph Seraphic Seminary in Callicoon, N.Y.

He was received into the Order of Friars Minor in 1938 at St. Bonaventure Friary in Paterson, N.J., where he professed his first vows in 1939. Fr. Szlezak made his solemn profession in 1942 and in 1944 was ordained to the priesthood by Archbishop Amleto Cicognani at the Franciscan Monastery of the Holy Land in Washington, D.C.

After completing theology in 1945, Fr. Szlezak’s first assignment was to St. Stephen of Hungary Parish on East 82nd Street in New York City, where he served for 42 years, until 1986. There, he ministered to the Hungarian immigrant community in New York City.

After World War II and again after the Hungarian Revolution in the 1950s, he assisted displaced persons, refugees and struggling immigrants. For 30 years, Fr. Szlezak gave weekly sermons in his native Hungarian language for a New York radio station that conducted a Hungarian broadcast. He also served as a chaplain to Catholic War Veterans on both the state and national levels and to local sheriff departments.

In 1986, he was assigned to St. Emery Parish in Fairfield, Conn., where he served for 19 years. In 2005, Fr. Szlezak retired to St. Anthony Friary in St. Petersburg, from which he traveled to Sarasota and Venice to celebrate Mass and offer pastoral care. He also served as chaplain to the Knights of Columbus, Council 2105, St. Petersburg.

A Funeral Mass will be celebrated on Friday, March 22, 2019 at 10 am at St. Mary’s Church in St. Petersburg. A Memorial Mass will be celebrated in his honor at St. Emery Church located at 838 Kings Highway East in Fairfield on Saturday, April 6, 2019 at 11 am. Father Emeric was assigned to St. Emery Parish in Fairfield in 1986 where he served for 19 years.

Please pray for the repose of the soul of Father Szlezak and for the consolation of his family.

TRUMBULL—St. Joseph High School, southern Connecticut’s premier college preparatory school, has partnered with the St. Baldrick’s Foundation for the school’s first annual Brave the Shave for Kids with Cancer fundraising event. Volunteers from St Joes’ student body, faculty, and staff will come together to show solidarity with childhood cancer sufferers by shaving their heads and donating to childhood cancer research.

St. Joseph High School will hold their Brave the Shave event immediately after their Spring Pep Rally on Friday, March 29 (approximately 2:15pm).

“In my lifetime, the survival rate for childhood cancer has gone from 20% to 80%,” remarked Carmen Pagliarella, SJ Faculty Member. “The St. Baldricks Foundation wants to make that number reach 100%. So in support of these children, we’re looking for volunteers from our St Joes community—men or women—to have their heads shaven in solidarity.”

All proceeds from the event will benefit the St. Baldrick’s Foundation—the largest private funder of childhood cancer research grants. Every two minutes a child is diagnosed with cancer worldwide, and in the United States, 1 in 5 of those children won’t survive. Monetary donations can be contributed to St. Joe’s team via the St Baldrick’s website.


About St. Joseph High School

St Joseph High School (SJHS) strives to be the premier college preparatory school in Southern Connecticut. The school provides a learning environment that embraces the Gospel values of the Roman Catholic faith and promotes a commitment to family and community. SJHS prepares young women and men to realize their potential, helps them to excel in higher education, and provides a foundation to guide them throughout their lives. St Joseph High School is a member of NCEA, NAIS, NEAS&C.

(For more information visit www.sjcadets.org.)

About St. Baldrick’s Foundation
As the largest private funder of childhood cancer research grants, the St. Baldrick’s Foundation believes that kids are special and deserve to be treated that way. St. Baldrick’s is leading the charge to take childhood back from cancer by funding some of the most brilliant childhood cancer research experts who are working to find cures and better treatments for all childhood cancers. Kids need treatments as unique as they are—and that starts with funding research just for them. Join us at StBaldricks.org to help support the best cancer treatments for kids.

As your diocesan Bishop, I am committed to hearing your concerns directly as we continue our healing journey together.

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BRIDGEPORT—The Diocese of Bridgeport has released an update to the list of credibly accused clergy and its ongoing response to the clerical sexual abuse crisis.

In a letter published today, March 22, 2019, Bishop Frank J. Caggiano provides information on the reorganization and addition of new names to the diocesan list of credibly accused clergy and a complete list of clergy on whose behalf settlements have been paid.

The Diocese has published information on its website regarding credibly accused clergy dating back to 2002. In October 2015, the Diocese organized this information into a single list of credibly accused priests on its website, which it has continued to update as new information becomes available.

The bishop’s letter includes a report by retired Connecticut Superior Court Justice Robert Holzberg, summarizing his work process to date on the investigation he is leading into clergy sexual abuse of minors in the diocese and the response of diocesan officials since its founding in 1953. The Judge’s letter is available online. His final report will be published no sooner than June 30 of this year.

Additionally, the bishop’s letter introduces a hotline for reporting information to Judge Holzberg and announces three upcoming listening sessions throughout the diocese, which will give people an opportunity express questions and concerns related to the crisis.

The main hotline number for English speakers is 833-990-0004, and for Spanish speaking: 800-216-1288.

The toll-free lines have been set up by the Judge’s investigative team for any person who wishes to provide information related to past incidents of abuse or their experience with the diocese in regards to such abuse. Survivors and witness are encouraged to call or report online: www.lighthouse-services.com/diobpt.

The updated list of credibly accused adds the names of ten additional priests, eight of whom are deceased diocesan priests; one visiting priest from a Venezuelan diocese who spent the summer of 1991 in the Diocese of Bridgeport, and one living diocesan priest who has not served in the Diocese since 1984.

“It is with much regret and concern for all those who are survivors of sexual abuse that I must announce that the following ten clergy who served in the Diocese of Bridgeport have been added to our list of Credibly Accused Clergy as of today.”

Added to the diocesan list of credibly accused are: Rev. James A Gay, a retired priest who served in the Diocese from 1959 to 1984; Rev. John Draper, ordained in 1953, died 1966; Rev. William Fletcher, ordained 1944, died 1988; Rev. Martin Hitchcock, ordained 1951, retired 1991, died 2014; Rev. James McCormick, ordained 1916, died 1965; Rev. Bartholomew Laurello, ordained in 1946, died 2004; Rev William R. Nagle, ordained 1927, died 1979 (It is important to note that this is not the priest of a similar name, Monsignor William Aloysius Nagle, a priest of the Diocese ordained in 1949 with a long-distinguished career at many parishes, who died in 2014 after serving as pastor of St. John in Stamford from 1973 to 1998.); Rev. Boleslaus “Bill” Rarus, ordained 1940, died 2005; Rev. Paul Spodnick, ordained 1927, died 1976; Rev. Jose Daniel Alberran a priest from the Diocese of Barcelona in Venezuela spent one summer at St Peter Parish in Bridgeport in 1991.

The Bishop notes that the list will continue to be updated as ongoing investigations continue into past allegations relating to deceased priests or as other matters come forward.

In his letter to the faithful the bishop reports that addition of names of priests to the List of Credibly accused is a result of three factors including 1. the expansion of Sexual Misconduct Review Board policy to consider allegations of abuse against deceased clergy; 2. the receiving of new allegations of sexual abuse of minors against clergy in the diocese dating back many years; and 3. the decision to re-review certain cases where new information has become available, or where further review was deemed necessary. These reviews included allegations against both living and deceased clergy.

In September 2018, in response to the revelations concerning Cardinal McCarrick and the Pennsylvania Grand Jury report, Bishop Caggiano issued a letter on the pastoral and administrative steps the diocese would take to provide full transparency and a comprehensive report.

“I am committed to remaining transparent and instituting whatever change is needed to better respond to those affected by abuse. I recognize that any restoration of trust will require a continued diligent effort on my part, as well as on the part of all of us who love the Church,” he wrote in his initial letter to the faithful.

The Diocesan Listening Sessions are set April 3, 7:30 pm at Notre Dame High School in Fairfield; April 9, 7:30 pm at St. Joseph High School in Trumbull; and May 1, 6:30 pm at Immaculate High School in Danbury. The bishop personally will answer questions and listen to concerns. All are welcome.

“I remain determined to move forward with whatever tangible steps are possible to address this grave matter here in the Diocese of Bridgeport. I encourage you to attend one of these listening sessions,” said bishop in his March letter.

To learn more or read the Bishop’s letter, please visit the Diocese of Bridgeport’s Pledge to Protect website.

Click to read the Bishop’s letter.

BRIDGEPORT—Bishop Frank J. Caggiano is excited to build upon the momentum established with the JPII Fund grant awards in 2018 by raising the bar with a deeper focus on Reimagining Faith Formation!

According to Bishop Caggiano, we will actively seek religious education and youth ministry programs that create “innovation so great we will be compelled to replicate it in other parishes.”

All parishes are welcome to apply for funding. The application due date has now been extended from April 1 to April 15.

Criteria: Grants may be used for projects in parishes within the Diocese of Bridgeport that strive to:

  • ·  Creatively energize faith formation
  • ·  Engage individuals/groups that have been underserved
  • ·  Enhance ministry to welcome extended family members

Funding: Grants in 2019 will range from $2,000 to $10,000

  • ·  April 15, 2019- Completed Applications are due (reflects two-week extension)
  • ·  June, 2019- Decisions about funding will be approved by the Foundations in Faith Board
  • ·  August 2019- Funding decisions will be announced and distributed to recipients
  • ·  September 25, 2019- Bishops Reception to congratulate all of the awardees
  • ·  January 15, 2020- Mid-year report due (template to be provided)
  • ·  May 1, 2020 -Final Report/survey due (template to be provided)

A small committee of Foundations in Faith board members and diocesan community representatives will review the submitted applications and make funding recommendations to the board at the annual meeting in June. Awardees will be notified once approved.

The new, improved and easy to use fillable form application can be found here: St. John Paul II Fund Application. Simply fill it out and click submit to send in your completed application. Application due date has been extended and are now due April 15, 2019.

(Please contact Kelly Weldon at Kelly.Weldon@diobpt.org with any questions.)

SHELTON—The Holy Trinity Catholic Academy Girls Junior Varsity Basketball team from Shelton, Conn. won the St. Ann’s Basketball League this past weekend.

The mostly sixth-grade HTCA girls team dominated the season and finished with a final record of 16-0 (12-0 regular season and 4-0 in the playoffs).

Offensively, the girls were a dual threat with a super-fast transition and three-pointer shooting accuracy.

Defensively, they stifled opponents with an aggressive man to man set up. They averaged 27 points per game while only allowing their opponents 13 points per game.

Holy Trinity Catholic Academy strives for academic excellence in a safe, faith-based Catholic environment. The Academy offers a challenging and inclusive program to meet the needs of the 21st century. Students are nurtured and educated to achieve their fullest potential as life-long learners. Guided by a moral compass that promotes strong values and a sense of integrity, each child is prepared to serve God and the community.

(For more information visit the website at: www.valley.newhavenindependent.org)

This article was originally published on the Valley Independent Sentinel.

BRIDGEPORT—Last night, hundreds of people around the diocese gathered in the Klein Memorial Auditorium in Bridgeport to view a sneak preview of Unplanned, the story of Abby Johnson’s journey from clinic director of Planned Parenthood to pro-life witness and activist.

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