Los Angeles Times

Priest revives his nervous parish in city hit by virus

Sioux Falls pork workers, many Latino, take comfort in faith

- By Jaweed Kaleem

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — In all his years walking into homes with a little white bottle of holy water, the Rev. Kristopher Cowles had never received a request like the one he heard when a parishione­r led him to a basement and pointed to a bed near a poster of the Virgin Mary and a carton of Clorox wipes.

“Can you bless our quarantine room?” asked Ciriaco Barrera, a 64year-old pork worker who secluded himself in the spot earlier this year only to see the disease take hold of his wife and daughter. “We can’t let it get us again.”

Cowles whispered a prayer and made the sign of the cross. He walked upstairs back into the light. He said goodbye to Barrera and drove through a city — like countless

others across this land — that endured what even the faithful found almost impossible to bear.

The Smithfield hog processing plant where Barrera works sorting pigs for slaughter remains home to one of the worst single workplace outbreaks of COVID-19 in the nation. Two deaths and more than 900 infections in the spring led to a weeks-long closure, a backlog on pig farms and a crippling fear among the thousands of immigrants and war refugees from dozens of countries who dominate the workforce.

Through it all, Our Lady of Guadalupe and its husky pastor, who’s partial to the Gospel of John and composes homilies on the fly, have stayed resilient in a small, dimly lit, brick church with a bright turquoise ceiling northeast of downtown. It is the only Catholic Latino congregati­on in this half of South Dakota, and a third of its parishione­rs are plant workers; the others have jobs cleaning hospitals and hotels or in constructi­on and restaurant­s.

Most have gotten sick or know someone who has.

Cowles has knelt in their living rooms and stood on their porches. He has heard their sins and eased their burdens. He has his struggles, too, taking medication to battle depression and anxiety that would have otherwise flared up during the darkest days of the last months. But congregant and preacher are joined by devotion and pain, and by what the virus has taught them about themselves and their city — which, like much of the country, is desperate to reclaim what it was before the disease landed here last winter.

Cowles led the funeral for a community member who died and anointed another last month who recovered from the virus only to die of stomach cancer. He lit prayer candles when his secretary went into isolation as her parents became ill. For much of the flock, home visits, Facebook Live videos and phone calls replace Mass at the now half-empty church, where ropes block every other pew and hymnals are stacked away.

“We used to run out of space for everyone who wanted to come before the coronaviru­s tore through,” said Cowles, 36, with an overgrown buzz cut and thick red beard that is barely covered by his black mask. “Now, I don’t know when they will all be back.” “So I go to them.” Sioux Falls, the state’s biggest city, where Smithfield is among the biggest employers, appears in many ways to have moved beyond the virus.

Maskless bacheloret­tes jam downtown bars on Phillips Avenue on muggy weekends. Indoor rodeos, minor league baseball and high school wrestling tournament­s pack the summer season. New cases grow each day alongside statewide flare-ups, like a recent cluster that shut down a Christian summer camp by Mt. Rushmore that had ties to a Sioux Falls church. Still, the city boasts of consecutiv­e days with zero deaths, even as the virus surges in most corners of the nation.

Fewer workers call in sick now at Smithfield, where temperatur­e checks, masks and face shields became the norm after it joined dozens of meat factories in shutting down. A test site for workers in a high school parking lot has closed, and the corporatio­n, under investigat­ion by the federal government, has released only limited data on the virus at its properties. The company recently ran full-page ads in newspapers across the country, including The Times, criticizin­g “inaccurate media reports” about its handling of outbreaks and praising the “unsung heroes” it employs.

Yet for those reporting to the killing and processing floors on North Weber Avenue, the threat is real.

It’s a lurking, unwelcome guest, one that this community of new Americans, many of them Latino immigrants and Asian and African refugees, prays never returns.

“Our Lady will protect us,” said Barrera, who spent six days a week at the factory and ran a 102-degree temperatur­e in March before he was bedridden for a month.

He had worked in Department 1 at the plant for 18 years since moving his family from outside Fresno, where he and his wife picked cantaloupe­s and tomatoes after emigrating from San Salvador. A nephew who lived in Sioux Falls told them about the factory, where jobs paying double the minimum wage were plentiful, in a place with affordable houses and cheap gas.

Maria Barrera, who worked in Department 26, slicing fat from carcasses, followed her husband with a fever. Her cough lasted through May. Their 18-yearold daughter, Daisy, tested positive but quickly recovered.

Ciriaco and Maria are back to work, though some co-workers aren’t. Ciriaco, who lost most of his Saturday overtime, said “two people do the work of three” in his department now.

“I’d rather this whole thing just be over,” he said as he peeled off his mask after genuflecti­ng toward the tabernacle, passing Cowles and walking out of church on a recent Sunday.

Since it was built in 1926, just 17 years after the factory that now spreads over 45 acres northeast of downtown, Our Lady of Guadalupe has been a parish of factory workers.

Back then, the slaughterh­ouse was called John Morrell, and the employees were white men. Today, it’s Smithfield, a Chineseown­ed, Virginia-based company that produced 5% of the nation’s pork before the virus sent output plummeting. Its employees speak 80 languages and make up a large slice of the minority population of Sioux Falls, a city of 188,000 in which 82% are white.

The church started off as St. Therese, a name it held until 1996, after Guatemalan, Salvadoran and Mexican immigrants began arriving by the thousands in Sioux Falls. Many came from California as they sought cheaper rents and union wages at Smithfield.

The parish is today named after the 16th century apparition of a dark-skinned Virgin Mary in what is now Mexico City. The global church’s patroness of the Americas, she is revered by Catholics across borders. Most congregant­s are Latino, and Mass, once held only in English, is now largely in Spanish.

Cowles has led the church for six years, after attending seminary in St. Paul, Minn., a short assignment in the state capital of Pierre and two months training with priests in Guadalajar­a. A native South Dakotan who was raised in Yankton, by the Missouri River on the Nebraska border, he sticks out not only because of his vestments but with his pale, white skin.

He travels around town in an old Toyota Highlander. When he gets days off, Cowles, a former Eagle Scout, camps in the Black Hills National Forest. He collects Batman comics and prizes a beaten-up brassand-gold chalice gifted to him by the Knights of Columbus, a fraternity of Catholic men. He calls himself a nerd and notes that he has memorized parts of “The Lord of the Rings.”

Cowles is fluent in Spanish, but he’s still learning new words and speaks with a thick American accent. Parishione­rs poke fun at him for the time years ago when he confused the words “servicio” (service) and “cerveza” (beer) while

preaching. In a part of the country with few Latino priests who are native speakers, he is forgiven his shortcomin­gs. Cowles long ago stopped typing first drafts of homilies into Google Translate; he now delivers them in a kind of spiritual improvisat­ion.

Many these days give a nod to the virus, though often not by name.

“Beside the presence of God,” Cowles said recently, “that is the one stable thing we have.”

Of the nine Catholic churches in Sioux Falls, the coronaviru­s has rearranged life at Our Lady of Guadalupe in ways unknown at others. Like elsewhere in the nation, the virus has disproport­ionately hit Latinos in this community, who make up only 5% of the city’s population.

Some parishes are now packed on weekends, with no ropes cutting off pews. But Mass on Sunday evenings at Our Lady, where Cowles reminds spacedapar­t families to spray and wipe their seats before leaving, might draw a few dozen people at most. Like he did in the early days of the pandemic, Cowles sets up his iPhone on a tripod to broadcast on Facebook to those who stay home.

The priest has stopped wearing a mask at most services; some parishione­rs still do. He keeps a pump bottle of hand sanitizer next to the altar, in case he accidental­ly touches someone’s mouth as they kneel to receive Communion on their tongue.

Summer is usually packed with quinceañer­a Masses; he’s had only one small one so far this year. Some scoffed when he said recently that only immediate family could come to first communions. He offers premarriag­e counseling but has no ceremonies scheduled until 2021.

He tells parishione­rs to have “patience,” offering his own example of knowing the pain of being unable to pray with his mother. For months, Cowles could see her only through a closed window at her nursing home. Now they visit on a patio, wearing masks and sitting behind nets that keep them 10 feet apart. They shout to hear each other and end their reunions with air hugs.

“Church is open. And we’re not open,” Cowles said, noting that his bishop hasn’t reinstated the religious obligation to attend in person. “We have to respect those who want to come in. And those who don’t.”

The Barreras returned to

Our Lady together in June.

When the building wasn’t open for Mass, Ciriaco would stop by alone for adoration, where the Eucharist would be exposed each night for silent prayer. He would light candles for the family at a niche in front of a print of Our Lady in her turquoise tilma, or cloak. Maria, whose lingering cough and pulmonary hypertensi­on kept her away longer, won’t go in the

building without her disposable mask.

“I believe it was the prayers in church while I was gone that healed me,” said Maria, 50, on a recent Sunday. “I’m happy not being sick. But I’m happier being back in church.”

Ana Paulina Magaña, the parish secretary, is in the pews again, though her absence was shorter. The virus infected her parents, cousin and cousin’s husband — a Smithfield worker — earlier this year, and Magaña locked herself at home with her nieces and brother for weeks.

“I never got sick, but I know because of my family I can,” said Magaña, 36. Church is one of the few places she tolerates being in big groups without a mask. “I avoid Walmart because it has too many people.”

Esmeralda Rivas, whose family has gone to the parish for 12 years after moving from Washington state, is also back at Mass with her five kids and husband, who works in Department 8, slicing pork ribs. He dodged the sickness, though nearly everyone he ate lunch with in the break room wasn’t as lucky, and a worker in the next department over died.

“God, watch over us all,” said Rivas, 39, who believes it was a force bigger than her that spared her family.

As life returns to a new version of normal, Cowles has fielded applicatio­ns to the diocese’s relief fund, which took calls weekly for help from those who were sick or had lost jobs. The church has written dozens of $500 checks to cover rent and medical bills, making up a small part of unemployme­nt pay that applicants, many of them undocument­ed immigrants, can’t get. Most were non-Catholics or churchgoer­s from outside his parish.

But on occasion, he has seen familiar names among those needing help that listed the same workplace: Smithfield.

 ?? Photograph­s by Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? THE REV. KRISTOPHER COWLES offers a blessing to Doug Van Loh, 62, as his dog, Sadie, stands by. Cowles visits regularly with Van Loh, a longtime member of his church who is now housebound.
Photograph­s by Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times THE REV. KRISTOPHER COWLES offers a blessing to Doug Van Loh, 62, as his dog, Sadie, stands by. Cowles visits regularly with Van Loh, a longtime member of his church who is now housebound.
 ??  ?? OUR LADY OF GUADALUPE, the only Spanish-speaking Catho- lic church in Sioux Falls, S.D., is a parish of factory workers.
OUR LADY OF GUADALUPE, the only Spanish-speaking Catho- lic church in Sioux Falls, S.D., is a parish of factory workers.
 ?? Photograph­s by Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? THE CORONAVIRU­S nearly shut down the Our Lady of Guadalupe parish, where one-third of the congregant­s are employees of the Smithfield pork factory.
Photograph­s by Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times THE CORONAVIRU­S nearly shut down the Our Lady of Guadalupe parish, where one-third of the congregant­s are employees of the Smithfield pork factory.
 ??  ?? THE CENTENO FAMILY asked the Rev. Kristopher Cowles, who has led Our Lady of Guadalupe for six years, to bless their newly purchased home, hours after they closed escrow.
THE CENTENO FAMILY asked the Rev. Kristopher Cowles, who has led Our Lady of Guadalupe for six years, to bless their newly purchased home, hours after they closed escrow.
 ??  ?? ESMERALDA RIVAS, left, joins in prayer. “God, watch over us all,” said Rivas, 39, who believes a force bigger than her has spared her family from the virus.
ESMERALDA RIVAS, left, joins in prayer. “God, watch over us all,” said Rivas, 39, who believes a force bigger than her has spared her family from the virus.
 ??  ?? THE REV. KRISTOPHER COWLES said the church used to run out of room. “Now, I don’t know when they will all be back,” he said. “So I go to them.”
THE REV. KRISTOPHER COWLES said the church used to run out of room. “Now, I don’t know when they will all be back,” he said. “So I go to them.”
 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? SEATS are wiped, and the Rev. Kristopher Cowles has hand sanitizer in case he touches someone’s mouth as they receive Communion. “We have to respect those who want to come in,” he said. “And those who don’t.”
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times SEATS are wiped, and the Rev. Kristopher Cowles has hand sanitizer in case he touches someone’s mouth as they receive Communion. “We have to respect those who want to come in,” he said. “And those who don’t.”

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