Centralia is the spookiest and saddest place in Pennsylvania.
An
unquenchable 54-year-old underground coal fire compelled the relocation
of virtually the entire population of the borough through federal
government buyouts in the 1980s.
From a population of more than
1,000 in 1980, only a half-dozen holdouts remain in the Columbia County
community – residents who struck an agreement with the government
allowing them to stay until they die.
Improbably, however, there
is life beyond their scattered homes.
Assumption of the Blessed Virgin
Mary Ukrainian Catholic Church – perched on a hilltop just outside the
borough line – is still active, drawing congregants from afar on Sundays
and holy days.
Founded
in 1911, Assumption has about 50 parishioners.
Last year, Major
Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk, primate of the worldwide Ukrainian
Catholic Church, visited and marveled at how the congregation had
endured despite the desolation of the borough, which is essentially an
empty street grid slowly being reclaimed by nature.
Shevchuk
likened the jarring emptiness to that of Pripyat, a Ukrainian town of
49,000 abandoned in 1986 after the Chernobyl nuclear plant catastrophe.
But he saw a profound symbol of God’s presence in the persistence of the
church.
“He thought (Assumption) was so holy and spiritual, he
wanted to make it special,” said the Rev. John Fields, spokesman for the
Ukrainian Catholic Archeparchy of Philadelphia, explaining how the
isolated church earned its designation as a pilgrimage site.
“It’s
eerie,” Fields said. “There’s no town at all but there’s a viable
church, in a day and age when churches are being closed.”
The
people who left Centralia behind years ago “all went off in different
directions,” said the Rev. Michael Hutsko, Assumption’s pastor of six
years, “but the church remained the common denominator.”
The church is on North Paxton Street, two blocks north of Route 42.
For more information, contact the rectory at 570-339-0650.