Police evict protesters from two closed New Orleans churches
Imprimir Incrementar tamaño de fuente Disminuir tamaño de fuente

The interior of Our Lady of Good Counsel / Archbishop Hughes

.- Several Catholic parishioners in the Archdiocese of New Orleans who occupied two former churches to protest their closure were removed by police on Tuesday, with two being arrested.

The archdiocese had closed the churches as part of a parish consolidation and restructuring plan.

Protests centered upon the 152-year old St. Henry Church and the nearby Our Lady of Good Counsel Church. Following the uptown churches’ final Masses in late October, some parishioners occupied the churches in round-the-clock shifts, holding Sunday prayer services without a priest and claiming to be building steady support for their cause, the Times-Picayune reports.

Police evicted the parishioners on Tuesday. Accompanied by members of the archdiocese's property management office and lawyers from the city attorney’s office, they arrived at the churches at about 10:30 a.m.

At St. Henry, police reportedly knocked at the locked door and were allowed entry. The occupants, who included the widow of a former Police Superintendent, left peacefully.

At Our Lady of Good Counsel, police and church officials had to force entry by sawing through a side- door. Two parishioners, author Poppy Z. Brite and businessman Hunter Harris, were arrested.

Good Counsel parishioner Harold Baquet, who was also removed from the parish, had climbed out onto the church roof to try to avoid detection, the Times Picayune reports.

In a Tuesday statement, Archdiocese of New Orleans spokeswoman Sarah Comiskey commented on the incidents at the closed churches.

“It was necessary for the police to break-in to Our Lady of Good Counsel because those inside refused entrance to either archdiocesan representatives or the police.  Two occupants at Our Lady of Good Counsel received a summons and two were formally arrested.  At St. Henry Church, the occupants allowed representatives and police to enter.  Only one parishioner received a summons.  There were no arrests.  In both instances, the buildings were then secured.”

“It has always been the intention of the archdiocese to bring these vigils to a peaceful conclusion,” Comiskey said, saying police involvement resulted because of the actions of protesters at the former parishes.

“This decision was made reluctantly after exploring every possible alternative, including multiple attempts to persuade the people to leave the building on their own.  These initiatives are unfortunate but made necessary now to ensure the safety of the people and security of the buildings.”

Comiskey reported that parishioners had been asked to leave on Saturday. Those at St. Henry refused to leave, while at Our Lady of Good Counsel an occupying parishioner left, thus allowing officials to search and secure the building. 

“It was discovered later that day that protestors had regained access to the former church building and bolts placed in doors had been removed,” she said.

Archdiocesan representatives reportedly attempted to inspect Our Lady of Good Counsel on Monday, but were refused entry and protesters barricaded the doors. Also on Monday, it was discovered that St. Henry Church occupants had locked the church doors to prevent outside entry.

“These actions forced the difficult decision to bring these occupations to a close to be made,” Comiskey stated.

“It is our hope that the Catholic community may now heal and move forward together,” the archdiocese’s statement concluded. “Our prayers are with those experiencing anger and sadness at losing their home parishes.  We pray that they may find peace and a spiritual home in their new parish.  As we begin the new year, we must all work to center our faith on the Eucharist and to move forward as one community in Christ.”

Imprimir Incrementar tamaño de fuente Disminuir tamaño de fuente
Subscriber comments:
Published by: AUdubon5425
New Orleans, La, USA 01/09/2009 05:47 PM EST
These churches were closed because they are valuable pieces of real estate. Both parishes were financially solvent with long-time pastors and increasing memberships.
Published by: Ethel
Bismarck,ND 01/08/2009 08:10 PM EST
I'm not sure they are making the right decision. It is after all the local people whose familys sacrificed to build and support that church.A church is a great deal more than just the people or why is there St Peters and not an open field.
Published by: iluvourldy
America 01/07/2009 11:26 PM EST
The Archdiocease should keep those churches frankly, though the Ar.Bp. can give them to the FSSP if he wanted.
Published by: Greg
Michigan 01/07/2009 10:34 PM EST
My heart goes out to the parishoners who had to see their home parishes closed, especially as beautiful as they seem in the pictures above, but it seems extreme to hole themselves away in a church that has been closed, to protest against the authorities who are truly on their side in all matters, simply for a building. It is not the walls that make a church it is the people that fill the space between them. We need to trust that church authorities are doing the right thing and act like good catholic men and women. It couldn't have been easy for church authorities to make the decision to close the parishes in the first place.
ADD A COMMENT (Your e-mail will NOT be published):
NAME:
CITY/STATE/COUNTRY:
EMAIL:
COMMENT:
 
PLEASE ENTER THE SECURITY CODE DISPLAYED ABOVE:
Chars:
* Thanks for your comments. The number of messages that can be online is limited. Length should not exceed 1500 characters. CNA reserves the right to edit messages for content and tone. Comments and opinions expressed by users do not necessarily reflect the opinions or beliefs of CNA. CNA will not publish comments with abusive language, insults or links to other pages.
Latest news:
Get CNA News on your email:
Your E-mail:
Subscribe HTML
Unsubscribe Text only
Headlines
Resources
read this
First Reading:
rss
read this
podcast
audio
Gospel:
rss
read this
podcast
audio
Saint of the Day
podcast
audio
Homily of the day
ADVERTISING
Place your ad here
Resources:
Columns:
News:
Documents:
Tools:
ACI Group:
ACI Prensa