Los Angeles Times

O.C. auxiliary bishop is named

Thanh Thai Nguyen, a former war refugee, will help minister to 1.3 million Catholics.

- By Anh Do anh.do@latimes.com

They squeezed into the boat just before it slipped out of Cam Ranh Bay. Thanh Thai Nguyen joined 25 other people in reciting the rosary, night and day, and hoping they would not die before reaching the Philippine­s from Vietnam.

It was 1979, and after years of suffering religious persecutio­n, Nguyen, a seminary student, his family and relatives f led the communist rule of their homeland. They spent 18 days at sea, four without food or drinkable water and buffeted by a tropical storm.

When they arrived at their destinatio­n, Nguyen promised to dedicate his life to God.

As he stood Friday inside the glittering Christ Cathedral in Garden Grove, Nguyen recounted his journey, wiping his forehead as cameras whirred and an audience applauded. The Most Rev. Kevin Vann, bishop of Orange, had just introduced the lanky immigrant with the Boston-by-way-of-Vietnam accent as his new auxiliary bishop.

Nguyen, 64, is tasked with helping to minister to Orange County’s population of 1.3 million Catholics.

In late September, he received a call at his Florida parish from the papal nuncio — an ecclesiast­ical diplomat — telling Nguyen that Pope Francis had selected him to go to Orange County. The county is home to the largest population of Vietnamese outside Vietnam.

Nguyen said he needed half an hour that included prayer to digest his appointmen­t before calling back.

Bishop-elect Nguyen, the second Vietnamese American bishop in the county, will join auxiliary Bishop Timothy Freyer, who grew up in Huntington Beach and who was ordained in January.

“We need a leader who understand­s the soul of the Vietnamese,” said Tac Pham, an electrical engineer and a member of St. Cecilia Catholic Church in Tustin. “We need someone who will remind us of the respect for life” and who can unite the community “to be a model among Vietnamese Catholic communitie­s nationwide.”

Among his new responsibi­lities, Nguyen is expected to provide important pastoral care and leadership within the Vietnamese Catholic community in Orange County.

“Every one of us brings our different gifts, at different times, wherever it’s needed,” Vann said. “We are blessed as a diocese to welcome such an experience­d and passionate leader to journey with us in faith.” He expects Nguyen to begin in December.

Nguyen was born in Nha Trang, Vietnam, and is the second oldest of 11 children. He spent most of his elementary education in Catholic schools and in 1966, he enrolled at St. Joseph Seminary. But his education would be interrupte­d by the end of the Vietnam War in 1975 when the communist government took over. As a condition of continuing their studies, he and fellow seminarian­s were forced into hard labor in the rice fields, until Nguyen eventually escaped to the United States.

In the U.S., Nguyen worked at Catholic Charities in Connecticu­t before returning to academics at Merrimack College, where he earned a bachelor’s of arts degree. He soon began his novitiate year in Washington, D.C., and took his first vows with the La Salette order in 1987. He later headed to Massachuse­tts, where he graduated from the Weston Jesuit School of Theology and was ordained on May 11, 1991.

Nguyen will be leaving the St. Joseph parish in the Diocese of St. Augustine, Fla. There, he leads the faithful in a community where many people speak Spanish, Polish and Portuguese. He said he must begin a “process of letting go” of his flock as he prepares to move to California.

“I don’t think it’s important where they come from. I think it’s more important that they connect spirituall­y with the people where they come to,” said Elysabeth Nguyen, a member of Christ Cathedral who was appointed by Vann to a special committee to raise money for the Our Lady of La Vang Shrine at the church in celebratio­n of those of Vietnamese ancestry.

As a handful of Vietnamese American priests, among 50 Asian priests in the 10th-largest diocese in the nation, posed for photos at the meet-and-greet with the new bishop, Nguyen said she hopes the new leader will support the project. “His experience, his vision in leading through God, will be what we look forward to.”

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? BISHOP-ELECT Thanh Thai Nguyen, right, walks with the Most Rev. Kevin Vann on Friday.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times BISHOP-ELECT Thanh Thai Nguyen, right, walks with the Most Rev. Kevin Vann on Friday.

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