On the sunny afternoon of April 27, over 200 parishioners from St. Clement Parish fanned out across the city’s North and West sides volunteering their time at 13 sites as part of the parish’s annual service day. This was the 19th year for the event. Some of the service sites included Mission of Our Lady of the Angels, Well of Mercy, Lincoln Park Community Services, Above and Beyond Family Recovery Center and Marillac St. Vincent Family Services. The day began with a prayer service at the church and then teams carpooled to the different sites. Everyone returned to the church for 5 p.m. Mass followed by pizza and a discussion about the day. “I think that St. Clement has always been service-forward and outward-facing,” said Martina Ricci, director of young adult ministry and community outreach at the Lincoln Park parish. “We talk the talk and this is our way to walk the walk too.” People of all ages took part in the service day. “I think one of the fruits is learning about these different communities and recognizing how fortunate we are to be at such a vibrant and active and well-resourced parish and space,” Ricci said. “It’s also an opportunity to grow deeper in community together.” Helen Wargel has taken part in every service day since it began. “People are hungry to volunteer, and they don’t always know an easy way and this is super easy as long as you’re available on the day that we’re doing it,” she said. “It’s a joyful thing — all these people coming together to work and help others. And the agencies really appreciate it.” For Emily McCoy, volunteering during service day is affirming. “Especially in our community, we are so, so blessed, especially with the demographic that comes to St. Clement, and I think it’s really important that we recognize that and take every opportunity we can to share it back with the city of Chicago,” she said. “I think we try and do as many opportunities as we can at St. Clement to do that. I think it’s really affirming to have people take time out of their day-to-day life to do that, but when it’s a big day like this when the whole community comes together, I think it’s really affirming to people’s faith.” Aylice Toohey served as a co-captain of the team that volunteered at the Mission of Our Lady of the Angels. The volunteers weeded gardens in three lots and helped pack and organize items for the food pantry. Toohey and her son have taken part in the service day for the past five years. The number of parishioners who took part this year was exciting, she said. “People are working together who don’t know each other but are forging bonds today while helping another community,” Toohey said. “The vibrancy of St. Clement is pretty special.” That vibrancy has been there as long as she has been a parishioner, she said, but it was renewed following the pandemic. “This is a great way to bring our whole community together,” Toohey said. Serving others reminds her how fortunate she and her family are. And serving through her parish helps her also connect with her faith, she said. “But it also connects me to people that I don’t meet in the other spaces in my life,” she said. “I meet so many people who remind me, sometimes when I’m most down, how much good there is in the world and how much people want to do good.” This was Cyndy Vanina’s first service day, and she helped fill bags with food for distribution at the mission’s food pantry. She teaches healthy cooking in after school programs, so it was fitting she volunteered in the food pantry. She has supported the mission over the years through donations, but had never visited. The service day is a natural thing for a parish to do, she said. “I think it’s really what we’re here for as Catholics,” Vanina said. “It’s reaching out and helping people and getting out into the community and just not your own little group.”
Migrant families expected to move into former school in May The first of about 300 migrants are expected to move into the former St. Bartholomew school building in early May, according to Eric Wollan, chief capital assets officer of the Archdiocese of Chicago.
Melrose Park parish celebrates St. Joseph Table While many parishes in the archdiocese were celebrating St. Patrick on March 17, Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Melrose Park turned its attention to a figure important to Italians and Italian Americans: St. Joseph, whose feast day is March 19.
Former St. Edmund School to house migrant families in Oak Park More than 100 migrants who had been staying at the Carleton of Oak Park Hotel and West Cook YMCA were expected to move into a temporary transitional family shelter in the former St. Edmund School building at the end of February.