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Statue Honors Catholic
Indian
St. Francis
Cathedral to Add Indian Woman Statue
A
statue of Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha, a Catholic American Indian
who became known as the Lily of the Mohawks, has been erected
in front of Cathedral Church of St. Francis of Asissi in Santa
Fe.
The
new statue will join one of Archbishop Jean Baptiste Lamy, which
is currently the only statue that stands outside the cathedral.
Archbishop
Michael J. Sheehan chose Estella Loretto, a Jemez Pueblo sculptor,
to create the bronze statue. It was unveiled for the cathedral's
150th anniversary.
A
painting of Tekakwitha joins a number of other saints on the
church's alter screen.
"The
Archbishop would like a statue (of Kateri Tekakwitha) to honor
the Native American spirit," Father Jerome Martinez said.
Tekakwitha,
born in 1656, was brought up in the Mohawk community of Ossernenon,
now Auriesville, N.Y. A part of the turtle clan, she was orphaned
at age 4 when both parents and a brother died in a small pox
epidemic. The disease affected her eyesight and her health. Her
name, Tekakwitha, means "putting things in order."
She
was baptized in 1676, when she was 20 and died four years later.
After her death, Tekakwitha became known as the Lily of the Mohawks.
On
Jan. 3, 1943, Pope Pius XII declared her venerable, and Pope
John Paul II beatified her in 1980. Pope John Paul II also designated
Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha as the patroness for World Youth Day
2002 in Canada.
Copyright©2002 Estella
Loretto
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