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Mass unites Mexicans, Americans separated by border fence
November 07, 2011
By Joseph J. Kolb, Catholic News Service
Bishop Renato Ascencio Leon of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, celebrates Mass Nov. 2 during the annual Border Mass in Anapra, Mexico, on the outskirts of Ciudad Juarez. (CNS/Joseph Kolb)
Bishop Renato Ascencio Leon of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, celebrates Mass Nov. 2 during the annual Border Mass in Anapra, Mexico, on the outskirts of Ciudad Juarez. (CNS/Joseph Kolb)


ANAPRA, Mexico (CNS) -- The Mexican bishop often exchanged glances with his American counterpart as they celebrated the All Souls' Day Mass. But instead of embracing at the kiss of peace, they touched palms -- though the chain-link fence.

Hundreds of Mexicans and Americans joined their bishops for the Mass, enduring dusty wind that created a brown haze. On the Mexican side of the border, on a lot surrounded by trash, wandering dogs, and food vendors, a handful of the 200 attendees paid little attention to the Mass but clung to the fence and stared longingly at the congregation on the U.S. side.

Bishop Armando X. Ochoa of El Paso, Texas, Bishop Ricardo Ramirez of Las Cruces, New Mexico, and Bishop Renato Ascencio Leon of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, concelebrated the annual border Mass on either side of the fence. The theme for this year's Mass was Remembering Our Dead; Celebrating Life; Working for Justice.

Betty Hernandez, 30, a mother of three and a youth minister at Corpus Christi Church in Anapra, said the Mass helps unify El Paso and Ciudad Juarez in a common cause of remembering those who have died in the drug violence as well as those who died in the nearby deserts, hoping to immigrate to the United States. Making this Mass even more poignant for Hernandez was the death of her neighbor, who was gunned down at a nearby burrito stand the previous week.

"Where there is an abundance of pain and death is God's glory for us to hope," she said. Read Full Story >>
 
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