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AOS USA Maritime Updates 

The Professional Association of Catholic Mariners, Cruise Ship Priests and Catholic Maritime Ministers.

 

April 14, 2012
In This Issue
100 Years after the Titanic, do we care about the "steerage"
Mercy Sister was Titanic "Tourist Attraction"
AOS Bishop Promoter blesses rose petals heading to Titanic site
Fire engulf Azamara Engine Room
Cruise Ship Safety Expert Featured @ Annual Meeting
Resource Links
Upcoming Events
PrayingHands 

     Prayer Requests:

  

For Goya Aguilar, restaurant Manager at the Houston Int'l Seafarers' Center. Who has been with the Center for over 25 years. Goya has been diagnosed with Pancreatic Cancer.  The staff requests prayers from her AOS Family.

 

 

 

For Archbishop Joseph Fiorenza who will undergo surgery on is colon and bladder on March 23.

  

For the repose of the soul of the Mother of Fr. Robert Higgins, AOS Port Chaplain, Charleston, SC. 

 

 

 

 

 

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100 Years after the Titanic, are we still focused on the "wealthy" passengers, or do we care about the "steerage"?

  

As we commemorate the 100th Anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic this weekend, it is evident that the maritime industry has made many strides towards safety at sea.  Yet, by recent events not only with cruise ships, but with other vessels, it is evident that we still have man made vessels which are still at the mercies of God's awesome waters.

 

However, the events of the Titanic pose another question which we seem more reticent to face. That is, do we really care about all human life, or is any race, culture, or economic class deemed "more important"?

 

We've all seen the Titanic movies, and read actual acccounts which show the class discrimination. We've heard about those that were not allowed onto higher decks during the sinking because they were not allowed on those levels.  They were not of the "right" economic class.

 

We are rightfully outraged by the discrimination. We demand to know, "How could people do this to one another?"

 

And yet, in a sense, we discriminate over economic class, race, and culture quite often. 

 

Just yesterday, I got a call from a media person. I had been trying for over a month and a half to get the attention of our local media for a 100th Anniversary commemoration of the Titanic event at our local Seafarers' Center. No one seemed interested until yesterday. Now the phones were busy. I was trying to explain to one journalist how a catastrophe, or even just a "bad day" on a cruise ship hits the media with a frenzy, while we rarely hear of the merchant ships, ferries, fishing boats, and other vessels that sink nearly every day.  

 

While I was speaking with him on the phone, I received an email from Workboat.com entitled "Pushboat sinks in Mississippi; Liftboat sinks in New York".

 

He had not heard about these events. So the media, while working furiously to report on the sinking of a ship 100 years ago, took no notice of sinkings in their own time, that they could have related to this event.

 

But we can't blame the media.  After all. The media, like all things, is representative of society.  THEY ARE US.  If they sensationalize their stories, it is because WE devour that type of journalism.

 

So the real question for us is "Why does the media notice the sinking of the Costa Concordia; fires on the Azamara Quest; power outages on Carnival vessels; but the sinking of a third world ferry or of a workboat on the Mississippi, warrants hardly a blip on the news?" 

 

Could it be that WE place a lesser value on the working class work boat operator, and the foreign seafarer?

 

After 100 years, perhaps it's time that we realize that all human life is precious in God's eyes. It if it precious in His eyes.....who are we to think otherwise?

 

May Our Lady Star of the Sea watch over all those at sea on this day, and may the many souls who have lost their lives at sea, rest in Peace.

 

Doreen M. Badeaux

Secretary General

 

Mercy Sister was Titanic "Tourist Attraction" Telling her Story

Courtesy: The Catholic Free Press

By: William T. Crew

 

 

Sister Mary Patricia, a Religious Sister of Mercy, used to laughingly describe herself as a tourist attraction. 

She was sacristan at St. Paul Cathedral for 36 years and at the Mercy Sister's mother house on Barry Road. But many years before she came to Worcester she was involved in one of the great sea tragedies in history.

 

Her name was Ellen Mockler, before she became a nun, and her older sister lived in New York City. She said she decided to leave her native Galway in Ireland, and come to the United States "for the adventure of it," she could not have imagined the adventure, and the tragedy, she was about to experience.

 

She and four of her friends, three boys and a girl, boarded the RMS Titanic in April 1912, for its maiden voyage across the Atlantic Ocean. It was a smooth crossing until 11:40 p.m. April 14, 100 years ago tomorrow.

 

Then the Titanic, one of the biggest ships ever built, a ship that was called "unsinkable," scraped an iceberg that ripped a hole in its starboard (right) side. It later was said that if the damage had been confined to four or even five so-called watertight compartments, the ship might have survived.

 

But six compartments were torn open, and the Titanic was doomed. About 2 1/2 hours after the collision, the huge ship broke in half and sank. Of the 2,224 passengers and ship's crew on board, 1,513 drowned or died from exposure in the frigid water. Only 711 survived.

 

Ellen Mockler was one of them. She and her friends were cabin-class passengers.

 

This is the story she told The Catholic Free Press in an interview in 1953.

 

When the collision occurred, "I heard a slight noise above and a slight jar. Then there was a great deal of talking and shouting."

 

She and her friends, along with many others, went to a public room on the ship and satfor about an hour.

 

"Most people didn't know what had happened or, if they did, how extensive the damage was," she said.

 

"One of the boys scouted about and learned exactly what had happened and then took us to the first class deck where there was all sorts of confusion, and where they were trying to lower the lifeboats.

 

"This same boy then knelt down and started the rosary. Most of the people around joined in, then two priests who were aboard gave absolution.

 

(She did not identify the priests and perhaps there were several on board the Titanic. What is known is that there was a priest on board named Father John Montvilas. He was Lithuanian and was on his way from Rome to be pastor of a new parish in Athol which was to be opened for Lithuanian Catholics. He did not survive the sinking.

 

The opening of that parish was the next year, 1913, when Father Francis Meskauskas from Lithuania arrived in Athol be the founding pastor of that new parish, which was named St. Francis after his patron saint.)

 

"I remember that someone very excitedly announced that a boat was coming to our rescue, and that this friend from Galway said calmly 'we'll finish the rosary.'"

 

She said she didn't know how it happened, but she was put into the last lifeboat to leave the ship.

 

"They didn't let it down slowly by the pulley ropes, but cut the rope and let the boat fall into the water because there was so little time. We were in the water only 15 or 20 minutes when the Titanic sank out of sight."

 

Three of her four Galway friends, all the boys, were lost with it. She told The Catholic Free Press that the 10 or 15 passengers in the canvas lifeboat with her were afraid that they would be sucked under water and drowned when the Titanic sank. They rowed frantically to avoid that.

 

Then, after a while, their lifeboat began to leak. A woman on board stuffed her hat into the hole.

 

"Why she was wearing a hat, I don't know, but it probably saved our lives," she said.

 

They were in the lifeboat from about 1:30 a.m. to 9 a.m. when they were rescued by the passenger liner Carpathia, which had heard the Titanic's wireless calls for help, had steamed about 60 miles to the scene and pulled survivors from lifeboats and the water.

 

The wireless, invented by Guillermo Marconi, was in its infancy then and ships that had them did not keep their wireless rooms operational for 24 hours a day, and ships closer to the Titanic than the Carpathia did not respond to her CQD distress calls. CQ was code for "anyone listening," and the D was code for "distress." It later was replaced by the universal distress call, three dots, three dashes and three dots - SOS.

 

The fact that the Carpathia's wireless operator was on duty and heard the Titanic's CQD distress call was responsible for many lives being saved.

 

"They were wonderful to us on that ship," she said. "There wasn't nearly enough food to go around, they had picked up so many. But they shared everything with us."

 

The Carpathia arrived in New York four days later. She was taken to St. Vincent's Hospital in New York City and, two days later, was discharged. She said she never thought to let authorities know she survived the Titanic's sinking, so her parents in Ireland and her sister in New York were grief-stricken when her name appeared on a list of the missing.

 

She said her sister refused to believe she was dead. She enlisted the help of her parish priest and they went to the hospital several times until they were able to locate her and her one friend from Galway who had survived. They sent cable messages back to her family and friends in Galway, assuring them that she was alive. But her name continued to appear on lists of the missing for some time.

 

She worked for the National Biscuit Factory in New York for five years. Then a Jesuit from Worcester, Father Leo Butler, told her about the Sisters of Mercy in his hometown. She came to Worcester in 1917 and joined the Order. She died in 1984 at age 95 and is buried in St. Joseph's Cemetery, Leicester.

 

Mercy Sister Frances Carberry and Mercy Sister Mary Regis Reardon both knew Sister Mary Patricia. Both said she had a delightful sense of humor and was very popular in her community. They said she would talk about her Titanic experience but didn't dwell on it.


An article in The Mercy Word, a newsletter that was published by the Sisters of Mercy at Barry Road in 1979, said that "still full of life and joy, even in retirement, Sister Mary Patricia delights in her cup of tea and her regular Saturday trips to McDonald's. Little did she realize as she reluctantly climbed into that lifeboat in 1912 that an order of fries would bring her joy in her old age. We, her Sisters, thank God for this life - a true gift of the Lord to the Sisters of Mercy and to the total Church."


Titanic

Wreaths, Rose Petals Headed to

Titanic Site 

   Courtesy: ABC 40

 

 

BOSTON (AP) - A Coast Guard cutter is headed from Boston carrying donated wreaths and hundreds of thousands of rose petals to be placed at the site where the Titanic sank in the North Atlantic 100 years ago.

 

The Coast Guard base in Boston hosted a ceremony Tuesday that included Titanic historians and a blessing by Bishop J. Kevin Boland of the Apostleship of the Sea in the United States.

 

On Saturday, members of the International Ice Patrol will cast five wreaths into the sea from a Coast Guard plane in memory of the victims. Crewmembers of the Juniper will also spread 1.5 million rose petals that day.

The Titanic's April 1912 sinking led to the creation of the International Ice Patrol, which the U.S. Coast Guard has operated since 1913.

 

 

 

 

Fire Engulfs Engine Room on Azamara Cruise Ship Near Malaysia
(Editor's Note:  Fr. Austin Cribbin, AOS-USA Cruise Ship Priest was serving onboard the Quest at the time of the incident.  Fr. Cribbin spoke highly of how the company handled the incident, and kept everyone informed.  He also commended the passengers and crew who also remained calm. Only one passenger seemed to take advantage of the event, contacting media while onboard and reporting the "panic" onboard.  Indeed...there was no panic situation.  Fr Cribbin went on to say that the President of Azamara met the passengers once they got back to the port, boarded each bus, and apologized for the incident.  Passengers were very pleased at the care they received.)
Monday, April 2, 2012

 

Quest

An Azamara cruise ship has docked in Malaysia's port of Sandakan on Borneo after being left adrift at sea for 24 hours following a fire and repairs.

 

The Azamara Quest suffered a fire in one of the ship's engine rooms on Friday, just a day after leaving Manila for Malaysia. The ship was carrying 1,001 passengers - mainly tourists from America and Europe, as well as crewmembers. The ship's operator, Azamara Club Cruises, reported that no passengers were injured, but five members of the crew suffered smoke inhalation.

 

Upon entering Malaysian waters on Sunday, the luxury liner was escorted to the port by a Malaysian patrol boat. Police and alternative transportation were waiting on the passengers' arrival to take them to numerous hotels.

 

The cruise company has cancelled the remainder of the ship's voyage and will fly the passengers home, in addition to providing a refund. The United States and British embassies have sent their consular teams to the Sandakan port for assistance to their citizens.

 

The Royal Caribbean owned ship had the fire extinguished rapidly, and the power was restored to one of the engines by Saturday night. Of the five injured crew, one member is currently in serious, but improving condition. According to BBC, the Azamara Quest had been 75 nautical miles southwest of the Philippines' Tubbataha Reef when the Philippine coastguard heard of the incident.

 

Passengers recall that dinner was being served as the fire broke out. They remember seeing an oil-covered engineer running through the dining area, as smoke started to pour in. Immediately following, all passengers were evacuated and handed life jackets. The captain reported to the bridge. Passengers of the fire-damaged luxury cruise ship praised the captain and crew for keeping order and bringing them safely ashore.

 

 


Expert from USCG Cruise Ship National Center of Expertise to Speak on Cruise Ship Safety at AOS-USA Annual Conference on

May 17, 2012

Houston, Texas

 

AOS-USA is excited to announce the confirmation of Mr. Brad Schoenwald, Senior Marine Inspector and Lead Instructor at the Cruise Ship National Center of Expertise in Miami, Florida. 

   

With AOS-USA supplying more Catholic ministry on cruise ships than any other organization, having a knowledge of where cruise ship safety has come in the last 100 years since the loss of the RMS Titanic, and where cruise ship safety is going, is an important topic for the majority of our members.    

Brad maintains an active 100T Masters License, and is a 20 year veteran of the United States Coast Guard. He has specialized in
vessel operation, command, and vessel construction.

 

In addition to Brad, Daniel Strunk of Holland America has also been invited to be part of Thursday's activities. He will be able to address how AOS-USA cruise ship priests assist cruise lines with their passengers and crew, as well as some areas that AOS-USA's priests can improve their coordination with the cruise lines.

 

For more information and to register, please click the link below.

AOS USA Annual Conference Registration 

 

Other News Items  

 

2012 Easter Message from the Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerants 

 

Apostolatus Maris Bulletin December 2011 (110) 

 

Apostolatus Maris Bulletin Sept 2011 (109) 

 

Apostolatus Maris Bulletin July 2011 (108)   

 

Audio Report: No Pirates of the Caribbean - Vatican Radio (December 7, 2011) 

 

Piracy video from Lloyd's List 

 

 

Important Upcoming Events for
AOS USA Members

  

             

AOS-USA Annual Meeting

Houston, Texas

May 15-17, 2012

AOS-USA Annual Conference Registration

  

National Day of Remembrance and Prayer for Mariners and the People of the Sea

2012 Maritime Day Mass

10:00 a.m. 

Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Crypt Church 

400 Michigan Ave. N.E.

Washington, D.C.

For more information: 202-541-3225 or at www.usccb.org/aos 

 

National Maritime Day & National Day of Prayer and Remembrance for Mariners

May 22, 2012

 

 

XXIII World Congress of the Apostleship of the Sea
November 19-23, 2012 
@ The Vatican 

AOS World Congress Invitation 

 

May God Bless you with Smooth Sailing throughout your day!

Contact Info
Doreen M. Badeaux
Secretary General
Apostleship of the Sea of the United States of America
1500 Jefferson Drive
Port Arthur, TX  77642-0646
PH:  409-985-4545
FAX:  409-985-5945