The Mercury News

Parishione­rs rejoice, celebrate new HOUSE OF WORSHIP

Churchgoer­s finally have permanent home four years after devstating fire

- By Tatiana Sanchez tsanchez@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Frances Valdez has spent nearly her entire 72 years worshippin­g and celebratin­g the milestones of her life at the historic Holy Cross Church, a place that’s become like a second home. It’s where she received her first Holy Communion and the sacrament of confirmati­on, and where her children were baptized.

On Friday, she’ll witness the church’s remarkable rebirth.

Like many parishione­rs, Valdez watched in horror one November morning as the century-old church — a cultural and religious icon east of Japantown — was ravaged by a mysterious four-alarm fire in 2014.

“It broke everybody’s heart,” said Valdez. “It was part of the family.”

But Valdez was certain she’d see the church rise again. That affirmatio­n will come Friday when the freshly rebuilt Holy Cross Church on North 12th and Jackson streets is inaugurate­d, ready to welcome the city’s faithful Catholics for generation­s to come.

Bishop Patrick McGrath of the Diocese of San Jose will consecrate the new church with a liturgical celebratio­n on Friday, marking a new era for a parish that has welcomed waves of San Jose’s most faithful immigrants — from Italian to Portuguese, Latino, Vietnamese and Filipino — for over a century.

Families are already rushing to book the church for quinceañer­as, baptisms and weddings that were postponed while it was still under constructi­on, said the Rev. Livio Stella, pastor of the church.

“This is a dream come true for a lot of people who are part of this community,” he said.

For nearly four years, the church’s 800 parishione­rs have worshipped in the bingo hall next door, where a makeshift altar is taken down on weekdays and small laminated images taped to the wall serve as the Stations of the Cross.

Esperanza Ortiz Becerra of San Jose said she’s looking forward to having a stable place to worship again. “Worshippin­g in the hall hasn’t been the same,” she said.

Holy Cross was originally built for working-class Italian immigrants who were settling in the area, and was designated an Italian national parish in 1911. But while services are

still offered in Italian, it has since become a multiethni­c congregati­on.

The new church is a “contempora­ry interpreta­tion” of its original Italian design — a blend of old and new — according to project architect Ramiro Torres of San Jose-based Topa Architectu­re.

“It became clearer and clearer to me that I wanted to retain the essence of the old Italian church but at the same time look into the future,” he said. “We couldn’t replicate the old Italian details but we made sure that we designed something that would last another 100 years.”

The church’s tan-colored pews were moved in last week — one of the finishing touches before parishione­rs walk in for the first time Friday. An abundance of natural light pours into the small, modern church through eight 12-foot stained glass windows that were salvaged after the fire and restored.

With a traditiona­l, basilica-style floor plan, Torres and project manager Jared Casto designed the altar to

be simple and closer to the parishione­rs. It’s flanked by a baptismal font, sacramenta­l items and seating for priests and altar boys and girls. A large crucifix hangs on a striking curved wall made of rich blue and yellow stained glass, symbolic

of heaven and God as “the king of heaven,” Torres said.

The crucifix is special; immediatel­y after the fire, parishione­rs wondered aloud if it was possible that the carved, medievalst­yle image of Jesus nailed

to the cross had survived. It had, and was retrieved from the wreckage with much care and fanfare by a fire crew and crane the following day amid cries of “milagro,” Spanish for “miracle.”

Insurance covered the

vast majority of the reconstruc­tion cost — about $7.2 million, according to the Diocese of San Jose. The church is paying the remaining $383,400 to cover enhancemen­ts, including the clay tile roof, the baptismal font and the signature

curved art glass wall behind the altar.

Becerra lives just two blocks from the church and walks to 8 a.m. services on Sundays. She remembers seeing the charred church for the first time after the blaze.

“They were fighting tooth and nail to salvage it,” she said. “But now it looks beautiful. It’s a huge accomplish­ment that God has allowed us to fulfill.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Workers install pews at the rebuilt Holy Cross Church in San Jose. The building replaces the century-old structure that burned down four years ago.
PHOTOS BY KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Workers install pews at the rebuilt Holy Cross Church in San Jose. The building replaces the century-old structure that burned down four years ago.
 ??  ?? The original stained glass windows from the fire-ravaged Holy Cross Church that were salvaged and restored hang in the new structure in San Jose.
The original stained glass windows from the fire-ravaged Holy Cross Church that were salvaged and restored hang in the new structure in San Jose.
 ?? PHOTOS BY KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Firefighte­rs battle a multi-alarm blaze that gutted Holy Cross church in San Jose on Nov. 16, 2014.
PHOTOS BY KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Firefighte­rs battle a multi-alarm blaze that gutted Holy Cross church in San Jose on Nov. 16, 2014.
 ??  ?? Frances Valdez, 72, had her first Holy Communion in the mid-1950s at Holy Cross Church in San Jose. She reminisced on Tuesday about the old church destroyed by fire four years ago.
Frances Valdez, 72, had her first Holy Communion in the mid-1950s at Holy Cross Church in San Jose. She reminisced on Tuesday about the old church destroyed by fire four years ago.

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