Catholic News Around Indiana
            Compiled by  Brandon A. Evans
            Diocese of Evansville
            Jasper army  veteran recalls horrors of Dachau Concentration Camp
          
By  MARY ANN HUGHES (Message staff writer)
              It’s been nearly 65 years, but Othmar “Ottie”  Mathias still can’t stop the memories of Dachau Concentration Camp from  flooding back — especially at bedtime when he closes his eyes.
  “I think about it every night,” he said. “I  can’t forget it.”
              He was a young man of 23 when his infantry  division arrived at Dachau, the first Nazi  concentration camp opened in Germany;  it was located near the medieval town of Dachau  in Bavaria.
              In total, over 200,000 prisoners from more  than 30 countries were housed in Dachau;  over 25,613 prisoners are believed to have died there.
              Ottie was raised on a farm near Loogootee,  one of the nine children born to Joseph and Barbara (Prechtel) Mathias. The  family attended St. Mary Church in Barr   Township.
              He was the first man from Martin County  to be called up for military service after the attack on Pearl   Harbor, and he left for the army on May 14, 1942.
              He remembers that the military training was  tough, but life on the farm had prepared him for it. The soldiers would often  hike 25 miles carrying 50 pounds on their backs. When they returned to their  barracks, many would collapse onto their cots. Not Ottie. He and a buddy would  take a shower and head for the USO Club.
              As his group moved through France and into Germany, he carried a prayer book  that his mother had given him. It gave him comfort as he said his prayers, and  it also saved his life — as it once stopped a bullet.
              It’s been almost 65 years since his unit  liberated Dachau,  and he still considers it the “most defining moment” of his life.
            Photo caption: Othmar  “Ottie” Mathias draws a sketch of Dachau, a Nazi  concentration camp in Bavaria, Germany,  that his army unit liberated in April of 1945. (Message photo by Mary Ann  Hughes) 
 
          
Will  Sievern named national finalist for high school Heisman awards
          
By  PAUL R. LEINGANG (Message editor)
            Will Sievern  looked pleased when he heard the announcement of state honors, but his  announcement as a national finalist knocked him backward a few inches.
            Sievern, a  senior at Memorial High School in Evansville,  was named one of 12 national finalists for the Wendy’s High School Heisman  Award. 
            The  announcement came on stage at Memorial’s auditorium from a Wendy’s  representative during a surprise school assembly Nov. 10. Principal Gwen Godsey  acknowledged Sievern and Susan Featherstone as the two school winners, but then  announced, “but there is more.”
            The state  award provided Sievern with a silver medal. The national finalist status will  provide him with a trip to New York  for the weekend of Dec. 10-12, for Heisman weekend activities including  participation in the nationally-televised awards ceremony broadcast on ESPN2. A  crew from ESPN was also scheduled to follow Sievern through his school day on  Nov. 13.
            His selection  for the honor also brings a $2,000 donation to Memorial High School. 
            Sievern was  one of some 50,000 applicants for the honor.
            His list of  achievements already numbers several pages. He is an Eagle Scout, a National  Merit Scholarship Commended Student, president of the school’s German club, and  Southwest Indiana Arts Council 2009 Young Artist of the Year, to name a few.
          (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
            Bishop  Kevin C. Rhoades named ninth bishop of the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend
            
Statement by Bishop John M. D’Arcy
              I am honored to announce, with great joy, that our  Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI, has appointed as ninth bishop of the Diocese of  Fort Wayne-South Bend the present Bishop of Harrisburg (Pennsylvania), Kevin C. Rhoades.
              Bishop Rhoades was ordained a priest for the  Diocese of Harrisburg in 1983. He has advanced degrees in canon law and  theology from the Gregorian University in Rome.
              He has served as rector of Mount Saint Mary’s  Seminary in Emmitsburg, Md. — one of the oldest seminaries in the United States.  I was privileged to visit there as part of the apostolic visitation of  seminaries in 2005. And even though Bishop Rhoades was no longer at the  seminary since he had been appointed as bishop of Harrisburg, one could see among faculty and  students great respect for his intelligence, holiness and priestly character.
              As a seminarian, he studied Spanish intensely and  is fluent in that language. This will be a great blessing, for the increasing  number of Hispanic Catholics in our diocese.
              There are two important points I would like to  make before Bishop Rhoades speaks.
              1. This appointment shows the great importance  Pope Benedict XVI places on this diocese. He has sent us a well-prepared  bishop, who has served five years as bishop of a diocese larger than ours — Harrisburg, Pa., which is  also the capital city of the Commonwealth   of Pennsylvania. I know  from other sources how beloved he is there, and this will be painful for them.  A gift for us. A loss for them.
              2. Bishop Rhoades is bishop of his home diocese —  a place where he grew up in the small town of Mahanoy City, Pa.  He probably presumed he would be bishop there for the rest of his life, and he  certainly was content there. Yet, he immediately accepted the request of Pope  Benedict XVI. Like the apostles in the fifth chapter of Luke, he left  everything to follow the call of Christ.
              I am pleased to tell you that his installation as  Bishop is scheduled to take place at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception  on Jan. 13, 2010.
          Pope Benedict XVI has kindly appointed me as apostolic administrator until the  installation on Jan. 13, 2010.
            Photo caption: Bishop John M. D’Arcy (left) stands with Bishop Kevin C. Rhoades. 
 
          
Twenty  years of Franciscan spirit celebrated at Franciscan Center
                      
By Tim Johnson
          
            FORT WAYNE — Who does  “Thanksgiving Tuesday,” Father Benedict Groeschel, community giving and serving  the poor have in common? They are all connected with The Franciscan Center in Fort Wayne with the  spirit of St. Francis all packaged in the line: “I come to bring love and peace  for all people.”
            The Franciscan Center is involved in a campaign to  provide a turkey or ham on Thanksgiving for its clientele which has grown  considerably during the economic downturn and unemployment. The Franciscan Center,  located in the former Sacred Heart School  in Fort Wayne,  operates a food pantry on Tuesdays and Thursdays, a Sack Lunch Ministry that  feeds 1,000 on Saturdays, and the Medicine Cabinet that offers medicines and  hygiene products on Tuesdays from 10-11 a.m.
            Executive  Director Jim Christie has a goal to distribute 1,500 turkeys or hams on  Tuesday, Nov. 24. Through the generosity of Tim Didier Meats, 200 turkeys were  donated to The Franciscan Center through the recent fall Redeemer Radio —  Catholic Radio 1450 AM — Sharathon. An additional 900 turkeys and hams were  purchased, “and now we need to pay for them,” Christie told Today’s Catholic.
            Christie hopes  to raise funds to cover these purchases, but the public is also invited to  purchase a turkey or ham on their own and deliver it to the center on Nov. 19,  20 or 23rd. The turkeys will be distributed Nov. 24 to those clients who have  obtained vouchers, which have been distributed during operational hours of the  food pantry. 
            The Franciscan Center  is celebrating its 20th anniversary this year, and on Oct. 24, a successful  dinner and auction fundraiser was held at the Marriott Ballroom in Fort Wayne with over 300 in  attendance. 
          Photo caption: Jim Christie, executive director of The Franciscan Center,  center, poses with food pantry volunteers John Matera, left, and Dave  Sensenich, right, on Nov. 5. The food pantry operates Tuesdays and Thursdays  from 9-11 a.m. in the basement of the Sacred  Heart School  in Fort Wayne  at 4643 Gaywood Dr. 
(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 stories  available this week
(For  more news from the  Diocese of Gary, log on to the website of the Northwest Indiana Catholic at www.nwicatholic.com)
 
Diocese of Lafayette
Carmel Deanery's Serra Club active once more
By  Caroline B. Mooney
  ZIONSVILLE —  Seminarians of the Local   Church are receiving more  spiritual aid with the re-chartering of the Serra Club of the Carmel Deanery. 
  Stu Baxter, a  parishioner of St. Alphonsus Church, Zionsville, was president of the old  Carmel Serra Club, and is a trustee of the new one. “The club started on Sept.  10, 1995, and due to a lack of members hasn’t been active for about the past  three years,” he said. 
  Encouraging,  promoting, fostering, developing and nurturing vocations is the primary goal of  the Serra Club. Serrans help promote the priesthood and religious life by  supporting not only priests, but also seminarians and novices in religious  communities through the diocesan vocations office. The Local Church  has 30 men in formation for the priesthood.
  Approximately  60 people commemorated the re-chartering with a Mass and dinner Oct. 29 at St.  Alphonsus Church. 
  Bishop William  L. Higi celebrated Mass, with concelebrants Father Douglas McCormack, former  pastor of St. Alphonsus, now retired, who helped start the first Carmel Deanery  Serra Club; Father Brian Doerr, diocesan vocations director; Father Joshua  Janko, associate pastor of St. Alphonsus and Serra Club chaplain; and Father  Dennis O’Keeffe, pastor of St. Alphonsus. 
  “It’s a good  thing we are getting the club re-chartered,” Father Janko said. “The Serrans  were such a help to me in my years as a seminarian — this is important work of  the Church.”
“I am thrilled that we have yet again a Serra  Club in the Carmel Deanery,” Bishop Higi said in his homily. “Please God it  will flourish. Please God it will provide a witness that proclaims loud and  clear that the call to serve the Church as a religious, a permanent deacon, a  priest and/or a bishop is something to be celebrated, affirmed, encouraged and  supported.
Photo caption: A           Mass and dinner on Oct. 29 celebrated the re-chartering of the Serra           Club of the Carmel Deanery. Bishop William L. Higi was principal           celebrant of the Mass; concelebrants included Father Dennis O’Keeffe,           Father Brian Doerr, Father Joshua Janko and Father Douglas McCormack.           (Photos by Caroline B. Mooney)
(For  this story and more news from the Diocese of Lafayette, log on to the website of The  Catholic Moment at www.thecatholicmoment.org)