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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Relic of Hawaii saint will make many stops on its trip home


By Mary Vorsino
Advertiser Staff Writer

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

A specially made reliquary will hold the relic of Father Damien as it makes its way from Rome to Hawaii.

Catholic Diocese of Hawaii

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On Oct. 11, at the canonization of Father Damien in Saint Peter's Square, Pope Benedict XVI will give Honolulu Bishop Larry Silva a small box containing the right heel of Hawai'i's first saint.

In the three weeks that follow, the relic will be hand-carried by at least one priest or church official to celebration ceremonies in three Mainland cities and at least 26 Hawai'i communities before finally ending up on Nov. 1 at its permanent home at the Cathedral of Our Lady of Peace in Downtown Honolulu — the church where Damien was ordained in 1864.

For Catholics, the procession of the relic is a chance to honor Father Damien and share a spiritual and literal proximity with him.

Non-Catholics are also expected to come out for celebrations with the relic, especially for an inter-faith event planned for 'Iolani Palace on Nov. 1, to commemorate the return of a small piece of Damien to the place where he did his life's work.

"The relic is a reminder of this incredible person who is a hero to Catholics and non-Catholics," said Father Marc Alexander, Catholic Diocese of Honolulu vicar general and theologian. "It's a very intimate reminder of Father Damien and who and what he was."

The Damien relic is the second to come to the Islands from the Vatican. In 1995, Damien's right hand was re-interred at Kalaupapa after the Sacred Hearts priest was beatified, the last step before becoming a saint. A lock of Damien's hair, meanwhile, is kept at the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts headquarters in Kane'ohe.

Damien was buried in 1889 at Kalaupapa, where he ministered to Hansen's disease patients for 16 years before dying from the disease at age 49. In 1936, his body was moved to a tomb in Louvain, Belgium, just outside his hometown of Tremelo, at the request of the Belgian government.

FIRST-CLASS RELIC

In Catholicism, any part of a saint's body is called a first-class relic. (A second-class relic is an item the saint used in life).

Alexander said some non-Catholics might find the idea of a first-class relic foreign. But he pointed out many different religions and cultures consider bones sacred, including Native Hawaiians.

"There is a certain shock factor. For many people, they hear a body part is coming back and they say, 'That sounds weird,' " Alexander said. "But relics are not just a Catholic thing. I think if you look at it historically, other world religions, including Buddhism, respect very much the bones."

Alexander added that when Catholics honor relics, "we're really honoring the person that that person served, namely Jesus."

Honolulu diocesan officials say they're expecting big turnouts at events with the relic of Catholics and non-Catholics alike. Though most of the celebrations will take place at churches, there will also be gatherings at several schools, a gymnasium and a hospital.

The relic will arrive in Hilo, Hawai'i, on Oct. 20 with a motorcade. And on Oct. 27, it will be met at Manele Harbor on Lana'i, after a short ferry ride from Lahaina, with prayers and songs.

KALAUPAPA RETURN

On Oct. 31, after arriving in Moloka'i a day earlier, it will go to Kalaupapa. Rather than flying it in, Damien Memorial School students will carry it down the hourlong hike to the Hansen's disease settlement.

Parishes in three Mainland cities — San Francisco, Oakland and Detroit — are also preparing for big crowds when the relic makes its way to them before getting to the Islands.

The relic will stop in Detroit on Oct. 13, and will be in San Francisco two days later for an evening veneration at St. Mary's Cathedral.

The cathedral holds 3,000 people and church officials say they expect it to be packed.

"It's one of those wonderful opportunities," said Doug Benbow, liturgy director at St. Mary's Cathedral. "This is a person who has been held as a treasure, a wonderful example of our faith. He's been canonized in our hearts for a long time."

Benbow said it makes sense that the relic would stop in San Francisco before moving on to the Islands.

In 1936, Damien's remains were met with huge crowds in San Francisco, where it stopped on its way to Belgium. Benbow said a chip of wood from Damien's coffin, which somehow came loose during that 1936 stop, was preserved in the altar at St. Mary's Cathedral.

SPECIAL JOB

During much of the Hawai'i portion of the procession, Deacon Wallace Mitsui, coordinator of events surrounding the canonization, will be charged with safeguarding the relic.

He says the job is a special one because he'll get the chance to see people coming together in churches, schools and community halls to celebrate Damien's sainthood.

"It just might be the one and only time they have the opportunity" to see the relic, he said.

The relic will be held in a specially-made box crafted in Belgium. While on display, the relic will be placed in a larger koa box.

The diocese is still looking over design plans for the relic's permanent home at the Cathedral of Our Lady of Peace. Patrick Downes, spokesman for the Catholic Diocese of Honolulu, said the bishop wants the reliquary to be "approachable."

Mitsui said the logistics of getting the relic to all its stops are still being worked out. One thing is for certain, though. "There will always be someone with the relic," he said. "It will never be out of our sight."

• • •

RELIC INTINERARY

The Father Damien relic presented to Honolulu Bishop Larry Silva on Oct. 11 will make several stops before being placed permanently at the Cathedral of Our Lady of Peace in Downtown Honolulu. The dates below are the relic itinerary so far, and are tentative:

Oct. 11: Relic is received during canonization in Rome
Oct. 12: Mass in Rome
Oct. 13: Detroit
Oct. 15: St. Mary's Cathedral, San Francisco
Oct. 16: Oakland
Oct. 17: Events in South Kona
Oct. 18: Celebrations at Immaculate Conception Church, Holuoloa; St. Michael Church, Kailua, Kona
Oct. 19: Our Lady of Lourdes Church, Honoka'a; will then go to Waimea
Oct. 20: Hawi and Hilo
Oct. 24: Arrive Kahului: St. Theresa Parish, Kihei; Christ the King Parish, Kahului; St. Anthony Parish, Wailuku; St. Mary Parish, Hana
Oct. 25: Holy Rosary Parish, Pa'ia; St. Joseph Parish, Makawao; Maui War Memorial Gym
Oct. 26: Holy Ghost Mission, Kula; St. Ann Parish, Waihe'e; Maria Lanakila Parish, Lahaina
Oct. 27: Depart Lahaina by ferry, arrive at Manele Harbor on Lana'i
Oct. 28: Arrive in Lihu'e: Immaculate Conception Church, Lihu'e
Oct. 29: St. Catherine Parish and School, Kapa'a; St. Theresa Parish and School, Kekaha; Holy Cross Parish, Kalaheo; St. Raphael Parish, Koloa
Oct. 30: Arrive Moloka'i for celebrations at St. Joseph Church, Kamalo; Our Lady of Seven Sorrows, Kalua'aha; St. Sophia Church, Kaunakakai
Oct. 31: Arrive Kalaupapa, following procession down hiking trail
Nov. 1: Arrive Honolulu, with celebrations at 'Iolani Palace and Cathedral of Our Lady of Peace

Source: Catholic Diocese of Honolulu