Sacred Heart Church in Island
Park is in an area of the Diocese of Rockville Centre among the most
devastated by Hurricane Sandy, but the pastor urged parishioners not to
fret about the material goods they have lost.
"Don't be angry. We lost stuff. We will get other stuff," Msgr. John
Tutone, pastor, told the congregation during his homily at Sunday Mass
Nov. 4. "We still have each other and the people we love. That's the
most important thing."
"There are people on your block that need you. Knock on their doors and
offer your help. We have to maintain our souls," he said. "We have to
maintain ourselves by helping others."
In the community of 10,000 people in the southwest corner of Nassau
County, Long Island, 80 percent of the homes were flooded. The church,
too, was flooded with about a foot of water, damaging the floor. Three
feet of water was pumped out of the parish center, which is now being
used for Masses.
As of Nov. 4, Island Park was still without electricity and the
village's mayor, James Ruzicka, announced at the end of Sunday Mass that
it would be at least another two weeks before power was restored.
Cellphones weren't working, Msgr. Tutone said. "(The) worst thing is not having communication."
He shared a story about a stranger's generosity. After the hurricane, a
man in his 70s whom the priest did not know, drove up to the church and
saw Msgr. Tutone outside. He was not wearing his clerical garb. The man
asked him if he was the parish priest. After Msgr. Tutone said he was,
the unidentified man handed him a bank envelope and told him to "rebuild
your church" before driving off.
When Msgr. Tutone later opened the envelope, he found $1,500 in cash inside.
In Long Beach, an island just south of Island Park that faces the
Atlantic Ocean, 35,000 residents also were devastated by the hurricane,
left without electricity and a working waste disposal system. Portable
toilets were spread throughout the city.
St. Ignatius Martyr is a sturdy 88-year-old Lombard Romanesque brick
church that sits a block from the ocean. The church survived the
hurricane of 1938, the worst storm to hit Long Island until Sandy, but
the super storm caused minimal damage to the church, though the rectory
basement was flooded to the ceiling.
Nearly 200 people gathered in the cold, dark church for the 10 a.m.
Sunday Mass Nov. 4, celebrated by Msgr. Donald Beckmann, pastor, wearing
tennis shoes. A 5 p.m. Mass was celebrated the Saturday evening before;
two other Sunday Masses were canceled.
Chris and Dawn Hagen attended with their children, son Gerrin, 7, and Tara, 5.
Going to Mass "was important to restore some routine to our lives. We
wanted to be with other people in a place that gives us comfort," Chris
said. "It's good to come together and pray with people. It's comforting
to see our church is here and we can worship."
"We're grateful we are alive and have each other," said Dawn. "We're
praying for our friends and our family and our own recovery."
Added Chris: "We'll be fine."
Msgr. Beckmann is a chaplain for the Long Beach Fire Department. When
the island was evacuated, he remained in the rectory, he said, because
"the fire department stays."
"It was a scary time, especially watching cars float up and down
Broadway, watching the water getting higher and higher before it
stopped," he told CNS.
"The support of the parishioners, the way they reached out to me, has been heartwarming."
He described his most important tasks after Sandy: "One is to continue
the sharing of the sacraments and preaching the Gospel in as normal a
way as possible. ... A couple of people said to me, 'It's nice to come
back here and see things as normal as possible.' To see the church
functioning is important to them. ... The second thing is to do whatever
the church can do to help the wider Long Beach community."
He said he was "praying a prayer of thanksgiving for all who have
survived. I'm also asking the Holy Spirit to show us the proper way to
move forward, our three parishes, the whole community and other
religious institutions."
The "three parishes" are St. Mary of the Isle and St. Ignatius Martyr in
Long Beach and Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal, which is in the Point
Lookout community on the island's east end.
Msgr. Beckmann has been sleeping at St. Agnes Cathedral rectory in
Rockville Centre, a six-mile drive, due north of Long Beach. He has been
returning to his parish every day, driving a Toyota Camry hybrid, which
comes in handy at a time when gas is scarce.
At St. Mary of the Isle Church, Bishop William F. Murphy of Rockville
Centre addressed parishioners of St. Mary and St. Ignatius during Sunday
Masses Nov. 4, celebrated in the parish auditorium next to the church,
which was flooded. Tables with prepared meals, donated clothing and
cleaning supplies were located near the folding chairs set up for Mass.
Bishop Murphy expressed his concern for the situation and pledged his
support, the support of the diocese's other parishes, and the support of
Catholic Charities.
Rockville Centre Auxiliary Bishop Robert J. Brennan is the former pastor
at St. Mary of the Isle and has made regular visits to the Island Park
and Long Beach parishes.
Father Brian Barr, the diocese's vocations director, was installed as St. Mary's pastor two weeks before Sandy.
"We have to address the spiritual and emotional needs of the people,
give them hope," he told CNS. "It's important for the church to be here,
to be with the people in their struggle. You have to be present. "We've
had Mass every day (since the hurricane)."
He said he has been impressed by people's gratitude "that they are
alive. You lose things and that's heartbreaking, but you still have your
life."
Episodes of looting and people cutting lines at the gas stations that have occurred are not surprising, he said.
"Events like this bring out the good and the bad. You see strangers
saying, 'I've got to help people in need.' You see much more of that
than the dark stuff."