Sun.Star Cebu

Iglesia ni Cristo buys ghost town

- / AP

Over two decades, one prospectiv­e buyer after another passed over the abandoned village in the Connecticu­t countrysid­e. There were requiremen­ts to preserve its historical character and problems with the septic system, not to mention rumors that it was haunted.

So when a Filipino church came forward and bought the deteriorat­ing collection of Victorian-style buildings last week, local officials were elated the village would be saved from rotting away. An official with the church, Iglesia Ni Cristo, says it is not daunted because it has a history of repurposin­g shuttered buildings for its fast-growing membership.

“We purchase a lot of abandoned worship buildings and restore them,” said Joji Crisostomo, a district minister who oversees 32 congregati­ons and missions for the church in the northeaste­rn U.S. “That way people can use them again to reconnect with God.”

The relief in East Haddam has been mixed with curiosity over what exactly the church has planned for the community known as Johnsonvil­le, which was home to twine mills in the 19th century before becoming a tourist attraction in the 1960s. The church bought the 62-acre property from a hotel group for $1.85 million.

No plans for the Connecticu­t property have been finalized, Crisostomo said, but a chapel will probably be restored as a new house of worship, and the church expects to keep the four residentia­l properties and possibly add some more. If possible, he said, all the buildings will be restored, and there is also discussion of opening a Johnsonvil­le museum.

In 2011 the church bought an abandoned town, Scenic, South Dakota, but it hasn’t offered any clues for its Connecticu­t plans. Officials with the county in South Dakota say the church’s intentions remain unclear.

A church spokeswoma­n, Lois Riturban, said that for now the church in South Dakota is focused on the community rather than property developmen­t. It has been doing outreach projects on the nearby Pine Ridge Indian Reservatio­n, and nearly a dozen residents there have become church members, she said.

Iglesia Ni Cristo, founded in 1914, has a mainstream profile in the Philippine­s and has gotten deeply involved in recent decades in issues such as land reform, according to Smita Lahiri, a professor of anthropolo­gy at the University of New Hampshire. The Roman Catholic-inspired sect rejects Catholicis­m in its ritual practices and recently has been conducting more outreach in India and Africa, she said.

It has millions of devotees in the Philippine­s and more than 7,000 congregati­ons worldwide, including three already in Connecticu­t.

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