Catholic News Around Indiana
            Compiled by  Brandon A. Evans
            Diocese of Evansville
            Town hall  meetings underway for strategic planning
            
By Paul  R. Leingang (Message editor)
              A small number  of people from several parishes attended the first of four Town Hall meetings,  as part of the Strategic Planning Process underway in the Diocese of  Evansville.
              No  registration was held, as part of the design to keep comments confidential. 
              Participants  sat together at three tables, each with a member of the diocesan Discernment  Team to record the comments made during the discussion, and to present a brief  summary afterwards.
              Two topics  were proposed: “Describe a situation in your life, where the Church has been  most meaningful to you,” and “Fast forward to the year 2015. What are your  hopes, dreams and vision for the diocese and/or your parish? Be as specific as  possible.” 
              The situation  described as most meaningful was variously described as “being welcomed,”  “being part of a small group,” “being part of a community,” “feeling at home”  and “being filled with the Holy Spirit.” Other comments included good homilies,  experiencing the sacraments, “participating in TEC (Teens Encounter Christ) or  CRHP (Christ Renews His Parish), and typically involving some kind of  “bonding.”
              Comments  gathered for the second topic, looking ahead to 2015, included “having a better  job descripiton for priests” so that more lay people could be involved in the  parish and the priest would be freed up for the sacraments; continuing  education and more opportunities for women in church leadership roles. 
              In his opening  remarks, Bishop Gerald A. Gettelfinger had noted that he just recently  celebrated his 74th birthday and would be submitting his resignation at age 75  – while pointing out that the pope might not accept his resignation for a year  or more, before allowing him to retire.
          Bishop  Gettelfinger has previously expressed an intent to live in the diocese after he  retires. At the end of the meeting, he said he hoped he would “be here in 2015  to see what happens to this diocese.”
            Photo caption: Table  discussions take place during a Town Hall meeting at Mater Dei High School in Evansville, Oct. 26.  (Message photo by Paul R. Leingang)
                       
          Book looks  at woman’s struggle with mental illness
           By Mary  Ann Hughes (Message staff writer)
            The book “My  Mother Marie” was born out of great love, and as the author tells it, “it was  accompanied by labor pains.”
            Patti Happel  Grannan of Evansville  is the author of the newly published book entitled “My Mother Marie: One  Woman’s Struggle with Mental Illness.” It’s the story of Marie Miller Happel, a  woman who struggled through the Great Depression and the Second World War, and  then with her own depression which eventually claimed her life.
  “My children  remember my mother as being basically an empty shell,” Patti said. “They didn’t  know her as the vibrant, fun-filled woman that I remembered.”
            Ideas for the  book rolled around in Patti’s head for years. The actual writing took nine  months “just as long as it would take to build a baby. I wrote the last words  on my manuscript on the 11th of January, 2009. That would have been my mother’s  ninety-eighth birthday. And I said with a big sigh, ‘Happy Birthday, Mom. I  hope this is the best gift you ever got.’”
            The book  recounts life on Evansville’s  west side during the twentieth century. The author begins her story with the  “Great Flood of 1937 because I was born at that time, when a doctor came in a  boat to deliver me in an attic apartment up by Reitz Hill.”
            She says that  some days writing the book was easy. Other days were harder. The biggest  setback occurred when she lost 192 pages on her computer. “That was really  difficult.”
            The book is  filled with her memories of family gardens, neighborhood gatherings to butcher  hogs, religious sisters dressed in black habits and white wimples, and living  as a Catholic in the 1940s when she was a young girl.
            She writes  about her mother’s struggle with mental illness which intensified during her  menopausal years. “It was a horrible thing. She went to doctor after doctor  after doctor.
  “With mental  illness, there is nothing you can do. It’s such a sad field. People just do not  understand. Unless you’ve been there, you don’t have a clue.”
          “My book is a testimony to my mother who never  really knew her own worth. I hope she knows what I tried to convey with this  book.”
(For these stories and more news from the  Diocese of Evansville,  log on to the website of The Message at www.themessageonline.org)
 
            Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend
            The  importance of the Catholic funeral Mass
            
By Karen  Clifford
              Death is a subject most people don’t usually wish  to talk about. But communicating final wishes to loved ones is vital.
              Father Michael Heintz, rector of St. Matthew  Cathedral in South Bend, Father Mark Gurtner, pastor of St. Anthony De Padua,  South Bend, and Pat McGann, director of McGann Hay Funeral Home and a St. Pius  X, Granger, parishioner, offer their views on the importance of preparing for a  Catholic funeral.
              Fathers Gurtner and Heintz point out that just as a will is important in  expressing a person’s desires after death, a written document specifying wishes  for a funeral can be made by Catholics as well. 
  “I think people should definitely prepare a  document with their funeral wishes,” says Father Gurtner. “You don’t know what  the situation will be in the future and where your family members are going to  be at in terms of the faith, so for family members to have something  specifically spelled out for you is very important.”
              When children leave the church, Father Gurtner  points out, they often do not realize the importance of the funeral Mass. “What we see  happening is people that are good faithful Catholics, who go to Mass every  week, sometimes everyday, are denied a funeral Mass because the children don’t  know their wishes.” 
              Father Heintz encourages parishioners to plan  their funeral rites and is happy to assist them. “This includes not only music  and readings for the Mass, but also the vigil service at the funeral home and  the committal service at the place of burial,” he says.
              Each priest in the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South  Bend is required by the bishop to keep a personal document specifying what  music, readings and liturgical ministries they wish family members, friends or  clergy to participate in during their funeral Mass. These documents are stored at the  chancery office.
              Father Gurtner recommends having several copies of  funeral arrangements in several places, such as filed with the will, in the  church office and with family members.
              When the death of a Catholic is near the priest  should be notified. “If you know the death is coming soon, you should call the  priest so they can hear their last confession, anoint the person and give  Communion,” says Father Gurtner.
          “There is often a misunderstanding by some that  a person will die and then the priest is called to give the last rites or  anointing of the sick. The anointing of the sick can only be given to the  living,” he continues.          
           
          
Samaritan’s  Feet reminds students to wash the feet of a child
                      FORT WAYNE — The sound of students’ feet echoing through  the hallways as they entered the gym and climbed the bleachers was especially  poignant during a recent assembly at Bishop   Dwenger High    School. Students and faculty gathered on Oct. 19  to make a presentation to the founder of Samaritan’s Feet, an international  humanitarian organization providing shoes to children and disadvantaged people  around the world. 
            Organized by  the school’s Social Justice Club, a shoe and fund drive was held, which  collected over 200 pairs of new shoes and more than $1,300 for the  organization. The shoes will be sent to Liberia to be distributed during  the Christmas season. 
            Founded in  2003 by Nigerian native Emmanuel (Manny) Ohonme, Samaritan’s Feet works to help  alleviate human suffering by providing a message of God’s hope and love,  brought home by the simple gift of shoes — something many children throughout  the world have to do without. 
            The program  began with a proclamation made by a representative of Mayor Tom Henry declaring  Oct. 19, 2009 “Bishop Dwenger Samaritan’s Feet Day,” which encouraged all  citizens to recognize and support the effort of the high school and the charity  organization.
          Samaritan’s  Feet does more than simply collect and send shoes to needy children. They make  the gift personal and life-changing. With every pair of shoes, someone —  Samaritan’s Feet staff, board members, volunteers or missionaries — gets on his  or her knees and washes the feet of each child. Then, the children are told God  loves them as new socks and shoes are placed on their feet. Over 3 million  pairs of shoes have been distributed to date, touching the lives of 3 million  individuals through God’s love.
          At the conclusion of his comments, Ohonme  challenged the students of Bishop Dwenger, saying, “What is God asking you to  do?”
            He reminded them that as Americans, they are in a position of power compared to  many children of the world. He asked them how much more each of them could do  to not only help his cause, but to end suffering throughout the world.
 
(For these stories and more news from the  Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend, log on to the website of Today’s Catholic at www.todayscatholicnews.org)
 
Diocese of Gary
No briefs  this week
(For news from the Diocese of Gary, log on to the website of the Northwest   Indiana Catholic at www.nwicatholic.com)
 
Diocese of Lafayette
Honduras orphanage draws Frankfort volunteer
By  Caroline B. Mooney
  FRANKFORT — “I envision  the next 27 months of my life to be challenging, simple and beautiful.”
  That is  Kristina Ramos’ expectation as she begins volunteer work at Farm of the Child,  an orphanage near Trujillo,   Honduras. The  23-year-old Frankfort  native and parishioner of St. Mary Church heard of it while in college and  started there Oct. 1.
  “God planted a  seed in me when I saw a DVD about the Farm after a daily Mass,” she said. “I  remember smiling with a friend of mine and we both said we really wanted to go  there. Little did I know that four years later I would be part of the Farm’s  mission.”
  Principles of  the Farm of the Child are service, simple living and spirituality. Volunteers  live in Christian community and share their lives and the Gospel with the poor  and the marginalized. Volunteer houseparents live in six family-style homes  that each accommodate six to eight children. Orphans, from age 1 to 16, are  grouped by age and developmental stage. The Farm compound has an elementary and  middle school as well as a medical clinic.
  About 15  single volunteers live in the same house, sharing bedrooms, with cold  mountain water showers. Their diet consists of beans, rice, some vegetables,  and some meat each week.
Ramos is a graduate of St. Mary’s College in  Notre Dame, Ind.,  with a major in sociology and a minor in Spanish. She brings a great love of  work with children to the Farm, several years of speaking Spanish, experience  working with different cultures, and, “as much as I am capable of, a heart  ready to serve and learn,” she said.
 
Doughnut  makers carry on a tasty parish tradition
By  Caroline B. Mooney
  OXFORD — What better way  to start your day than Mass and fresh doughnuts? Members of St. Patrick Church  are treated to the homemade delights after Sunday Masses, thanks to volunteers  and the parish LifeTeen group.
  The pastries,  along with coffee, juice and milk, are free, with donations gratefully  accepted. Those attending 7:30 a.m. Mass are the lucky ones who can eat  doughnuts hot from the fryer. 
  Father Fred  Gschwind, pastor of St. Patrick from 1958-69 and 1972-87, started the Sunday  morning doughnut-making as a way for the high school Catholic Youth  Organization “to give back to the church,” said parish secretary Nancy Brost.  “It’s a nice way to support the kids’ group while teaching them to help the  parish.” 
  Longtime  parishioner Wayne O’Neal, who enjoys staying after Mass for the snacks and  camaraderie, recalls that Father Gschwind started the doughnut-making in 1960. 
  CYO has given  way to today’s LifeTeen group, which buys the ingredients and any profit goes  to their group. The high school students make doughnuts most weekends, but  other parish groups, including a sewing group and a Mexico mission group, take over  occasionally.
  “We have three  crews of teenagers who make doughnuts each month,” Brost said. “The fourth  weekend we ask for a family of volunteers.”
  While warm,  the doughnuts are dipped in white icing or rolled in cinnamon and sugar. Some  volunteers also use chocolate icing and decorations for holidays, such as  special St. Patrick’s Day doughnuts, Brost said.
  Parishioner  Cliff Barnard has been making the doughnuts since high school. He and his wife,  Peggy, began doughnut making regularly for the parish about six years ago; they  now have the help of their five children.
  Parishioner  Joe Kult said he enjoys having the doughnuts after Mass, “especially when the  Barnards make them. When we don’t have them in the summer, a group of us go to  breakfast together in Pine   Village.” 
Photo caption: Sam  and Lane Barnard watch the dough mix as they help make doughnuts on a recent  Sunday morning. 
(For  these stories and more news from the Diocese of Lafayette, log on to the website of The  Catholic Moment at www.thecatholicmoment.org)