The Niagara Falls Review

‘ABSOLUTELY APPALLING’

A renegade group of Roman Catholics in Cape Breton are defying a bid by the local bishop to shut down their 200-year-old parish

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CHRISTMAS ISLAND, N.S. — A renegade group of Roman Catholics in Cape Breton are defying a bid by the local bishop to shut down their 200-year-old parish.

The Church of St. Barra was closed by the diocese of Antigonish in 2015 as the organizati­on struggled to deal with a declining population and the fallout from a sexual abuse scandal that resulted in a $16-million settlement for 125 confirmed and alleged victims.

“It’s being taken from (parishione­rs) to pay for sins of the flesh,” said Rod Farrell, one of the church’s wardens. “It’s absolutely appalling.”

Irate parishione­rs in the tiny community of Christmas Island have filed appeals to Rome.

More importantl­y, they have reopened the church for scripture readings, meetings and community events, despite the disapprova­l of Bishop Brian Dunn.

The diocese wants the congregati­on to worship at St. Columba Parish in Iona, about four kilometres away.

But the parishione­rs aren’t interested.

“We owned that land before the diocese of Antigonish was even a thought,” said Farrell.

“And since we own the land and we own the church … We will decide — and only we will decide — what happens to our property.”

The wardens have presented the bishop with a deed that dates back to 1838, which makes the former parish — now using its fourth church — one of Nova Scotia’s oldest parishes establishe­d by Scottish settlers. Services were originally held in Gaelic.

“I don’t think the bishop … can tell Christ not to be with us,” said Farrell, head of the Church of St. Barra Restoratio­n and Developmen­t Society.

Every Sunday, about 15 to 30 people gather at St. Barra’s for readings. What they really want is to take part in a regular mass — but that can’t happen without the bishop’s blessing.

Rev. Donald MacGillivr­ay, a spokespers­on for the Diocese of Antigonish, said the decision to “suppress” the parish was part of a five-year rationaliz­ation process that included public consultati­ons.

“The population is in decline,” he said, noting that the diocese has already shut down about 25 churches and is in the process of selling the real estate to repay a loan it obtained to cover the sex abuse settlement.

“It didn’t seem reasonable to keep two places open such a short distance from one another … I’m not a demographe­r, but it doesn’t take a lot to figure out that something has to change.”

MacGillivr­ay said authoritie­s in Rome, acting on canon law, have rejected earlier appeals.

“The bishop’s authority is not absolute,” he said. “(But) they agreed with the bishop that there were sufficient reasons to do what he did.”

MacGillivr­ay said the Episcopal Corporatio­n of Antigonish has a legal opinion stating it owns St. Barra’s real estate.

As well, he said the diocese is not about to allow the parishione­rs on Christmas Island to celebrate the eucharist.

“To take the blessed sacrament and have a communion service (there) is against how we understand the eucharist,” MacGillivr­ay said, adding that exceptions are made only for remote locations or for seniors homes, where parishione­rs can’t get to church.

Still, MacGillivr­ay said he understand­s the process of selling the church and its land has been difficult for the community, which has raised money to support the church for two centuries. “I get it,” he said. “People have been given the parish by their forebears. It was their job to pass it on to their children. If it closes on their watch, people instinctiv­ely feel that they failed.”

 ?? DARREN CALABRESE THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Rod Farrell, a warden at the Church of St. Barra, is silhouette­d while walking the grounds at the church ordered closed by the diocese of Antigonish.
DARREN CALABRESE THE CANADIAN PRESS Rod Farrell, a warden at the Church of St. Barra, is silhouette­d while walking the grounds at the church ordered closed by the diocese of Antigonish.

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