Pope Francis

Sunday 4 August 2013

Indian migrants prepare for Nativity Feast

The celebration is expected to draw more than 3,000 migrant workers and pilgrims to Jaffa, Israel.

 
(Photo: franciscanaction.wordpress.com)               

“Mother Mary is revered with great devotion by the Indian community as a mother and a spiritual figure of maternal protection,” said Fr. Jayaseellan Pitchaimuthu OFM, head of the Indian Chaplaincy in Holy Land.

She is acknowledged as the “protector and patroness” of the Indian Chaplaincy in Holy Land because she is a “model” for the migrants, he said.

He noted that the Holy Family took refuge in Egypt for safety and settled for livelihood in Nazareth, and that Jesus carried out his apostolic mission in Judea, Galilee and Jerusalem.

Many Indian Catholic migrant workers “seek grace and invoke (Mary's) motherly protection,” he said.

The feast falls on Sunday, Sept. 8, which is a working day in Israel. Therefore, the feast is being celebrated this year the previous day, which is a weekend holiday.

According to the priest, the celebration is expected to draw more than 3,000 migrant workers and pilgrims to Jaffa, Israel.

Catholics from coastal part of western India popularly call the feast day “Monti Fest,” a time to celebrate the harvest with family and thank God for the fruits of the crops.

As part of the celebration, a novena will begin on Aug. 30, kicking off a week of meditations and intercessory prayers leading up to the feast day.

A large, colorful procession will begin at 5 p.m. in Jaffa, followed by Mass.

“There will then be blessing of harvested new grain, followed by a fellowship dinner,” said the priest.

The priest explained that the Marian feast day is particularly important in the Indian context because of its relation to other faiths.

Members of other religions, including Hindus and Muslims, “regard Marian devotions in esteem,” he said.

Thousands of devotees – both Catholics and non-Catholics – flock every week to the Marian apparition site at Velankanni, near Chennai in South India, and other shrines that have recorded various miracles, he said.

“In this way, Marian devotion also leads to a platform for inter-religious dialogue,” he added.
 

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