Sunday, April 15, 2007

Among Catholic priests, Vietnamese are the new Irish
The refugee influx and a culture that exalts the vocation boost dwindling clerical ranks -- with a certain fervor.
By David Haldane and Mai Tran, Times Staff Writers
April 15, 2007

Crossing the Pacific in a dilapidated boat, 10-year-old Bich Vu had a face-off with God. "If you save me and my family," he promised nearly three decades ago, "my life will be yours."


The miracle happened, and Vu, now 39, kept his word by becoming a priest. "My experience on the ocean," he says, "made my faith grow stronger. It taught me that I was weak. I couldn't save myself; I had to depend on God."

Vu, known to parishioners at Anaheim's St. Boniface Catholic Church as Father Augustine, is part of a wave of immigrant Vietnamese priests helping ease a critical cleric shortage and changing the face of the Roman Catholic Church. the rest

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home