All College
|
September 9, 2022
How many college students spend their summers acquiring proficiency building with traditional adobe? That鈥檚 just what the past months taught five 91黑料 students from both coasts. Paul Dinan (NE 鈥23), Casey Kirk (NE 鈥23), Paul Lessard (CA 鈥24), Jack Haggard (CA 鈥24), and Christopher McCann (NE 鈥24) were among 22 young Catholic men who traveled to Gallup, New Mexico, to volunteer their labor for the .
鈥淣ew Mexico as a whole has a really cool, old blend of cultures,鈥 says Mr. Lessard, 鈥渨ith strong Catholic roots that are intertwined with the Pueblo Indians.鈥 While life has been difficult for Native Americans in the Southwest, those Catholic roots have blossomed anew in response to Christ鈥檚 admonition that 鈥渁s you did it to one of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me鈥 (Matthew 25:40).
The , founded by a Franciscan priest in 1968, is committed to helping Native communities develop with dignity. Such dignity demands more than economic assistance, however: Prayer, and the beauty that refreshes the soul, are crucial factors. Recognizing these deeper needs, the Foundation, together with the Diocese of Gallup and the Knights of Columbus, sponsored the Saint Kateri Rosary Walk project. With a design provided by TAC alumnus architect Erik Bootsma (鈥01), and named for St. Kateri Tekakwitha, the 鈥淟ily of the Mohawks,鈥 the Rosary walk and accompanying Shrine will be a locus of prayer and pilgrimage for Native American Catholics 鈥 that is, when it is finished.
鈥淲e were building a garden with small shrines called nichos along a path, one for each mystery of the Rosary,鈥 says Mr. Lessard. Volunteers in summers past had focused on landscaping, but this year they began building the nichos themselves. 鈥淚t was mostly bricklaying with old-fashioned adobe 鈥 the real thing, which lasts around 500 years, longer with care,鈥 says Mr. Lessard. 鈥淭he work was hard in the best sense,鈥 adds Mr. Dinan. 鈥淎long with the sweat and grime came a great thrill, knowing that we would all come back in 20 years and show our families the same spots we worked and the same structures we built.鈥
But for these young men, the Rosary Walk was no ordinary building project. Just as the completed Shrine will provide a profound spiritual experience for pilgrims, the construction itself was an occasion for spiritual growth. The volunteers 鈥 or 鈥渕issionaries,鈥 as they called themselves 鈥 lived together in a diocesan retreat center, united by personal discipline and a shared spiritual life. 鈥淚t felt surreal at times,鈥 Mr. Dinan admits, 鈥渆veryone from a different part of the country together in the stark, barren desert of New Mexico, trying to find Christ and to show Him to others.鈥
For the missionaries 鈥 most of whom are college students, and prone to see summer as a time for relaxation 鈥 this lifestyle posed a challenge. But they were pleased to meet that challenge directly. 鈥淲hat stuck with me is that it鈥檚 a good skill to let go of your individual agenda and what you want to do. I had to learn patience,鈥 says Mr. Lessard. 鈥淏y the time I left, I had accepted it and was having a better time 鈥 you just have to surrender.鈥
Thanks to this common lifestyle, the missionaries found themselves opening up to each other in new ways. 鈥淚t fostered good conversation,鈥 Mr. Lessard recalls. 鈥淵ou could see the differences in the kinds of education people had, and it was refreshing to talk to other young Catholic men who were serious about the Faith and masculinity, but who see things in different ways.鈥
Of course, the missionaries at Saint Kateri Rosary Walk also availed themselves of the vast and rugged American Southwest. 鈥淲hen we weren't on top of a nicho laying bricks or layering stucco,鈥 Mr. Dinan says, 鈥渨e were traveling to the beautiful mountains and ridges for a weekend hike, or in downtown Gallup at the Cathedral for adoration or Mass.鈥 On their hikes, they ascended some of the sacred Navajo peaks, including Mts. Taylor and Hesperus, as well as a grueling 18 miles in the Grand Canyon 鈥 down and back up in the course of a single day!
Work continues on the Saint Kateri Rosary Walk and Shrine, and will likely extend into next summer. God willing, some of this year鈥檚 missionaries may get the chance to pray and work beneath the big sky once again.