Jamaica Gleaner

A silent worship revival at an Episcopal church for the deaf

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NEW YORK (AP):

THE LORD’S Prayer ended with the bang of dozens of fists that landed on open palms after a circular motion and a thumbs up in a joint ‘Amen!’

Not a voice could be heard inside the cavernous sanctuary of Holyrood Episcopal ChurchIgle­sia Santa Cruz in Manhattan. There was no need for words: From the altar, the deaf congregant­s led the hearing ones, who from the wooden pews repeated the silent movement of their hands.

Music, sermons, prayers, even confession­s make up much of the experience of a typical religious service. So, for the deaf, how does faith flourish in an environmen­t that so revolves around sound?

“The deaf worshipper­s at Holyrood Episcopal Church-Iglesia Santa Cruz in the northern edge of Manhattan say that what might be considered a limitation has strengthen­ed their sense of community, and expanded their understand­ing of God, and the sacred gift of silence in a noisy world.”

During a recent Sunday service, deaf and hearing worshipper­s sung and signed hymns, offered the sign of peace bringing palms together with a twisting motion – and joyfully waved their hands high in the air in a sign-language equivalent of applause.

“When I sign the music and the hymns to God, I actually feel the Holy spirit with me. I give my all to him,” said Lidia Martinez, 54, who spoke to the AP through her daughter, who is a sign language interprete­r.

Growing up in the Dominican Republic, Martinez felt alienated from her faith because she was deaf. When she moved to the US in 1993, she continued to feel like an outsider in a hearing church.

“I remember going to other churches and sitting in the benches and not knowing what they were saying because there were no interprete­rs available,” she said. “It was really hard to follow the Mass with just the readings.”

After visiting multiple churches, she walked into Holyrood last year. That’s when she saw the Reverend Maria Santiviago signing from the pulpit.

“It was heartwarmi­ng to have her interpret the Mass,” she said about Santiviago, a 77-yearold Paraguayan who came out of retirement to help lead the ministry for the deaf. “Before, I wasn’t understand­ing anything. This was like a Eureka moment.”

Now, her whole family is part of the Holyrood community. They recently walked into the church past the Nativity scene and a brightly lit Christmas tree and sat in the front pews, illuminate­d by sunlight from colourful stainedgla­ss windows. Her husband, Carlos Tirado, 54, who is also deaf, signed. Her daughter Leisha Martinez, 11, and her granddaugh­ters, Arly Gordon, 8, and Lyann Gordon, 4, who can hear, sang along.

Facing them – and all the deaf worshipper­s – stood her eldest daughter, Diely Martinez, an American sign language/Spanish medical interprete­r, who now volunteers at the Sunday Mass.

“I want (God) to touch their lives, she said. “So, it’s more than interpreti­ng. It’s a calling.”

 ?? AP ?? In this Sunday, December 15, 2019 photo, worshipper­s Carlos Tirado (left) and Lidia Martinez (second from left) sign in response to a sermon at Holyrood Episcopal Church-Iglesia Santa Cruz in New York. Tirado and Martinez, who are deaf, began attending the church last year after seeing the Rev Maria Santiviago give sermons in sign language.
AP In this Sunday, December 15, 2019 photo, worshipper­s Carlos Tirado (left) and Lidia Martinez (second from left) sign in response to a sermon at Holyrood Episcopal Church-Iglesia Santa Cruz in New York. Tirado and Martinez, who are deaf, began attending the church last year after seeing the Rev Maria Santiviago give sermons in sign language.

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