AN OPEN LETTER TO THE YONKERS LANDMARK PRESERVATION BOARD
To the membership of the City of Yonkers Landmark Preservation Board:
"An intelligent person fights for lost causes, realizing that others are merely effects."
e.e. cummings
AN OPEN LETTER TO THE YONKERS LANDMARK PRESERVATION BOARD
To the membership of the City of Yonkers Landmark Preservation Board:
"The news about the latest round of forced fundraising about to hit the parishes will not be widely discussed and pastors will not take the case to their parish communities. “It is not going to be totally democratic,” acknowledged a pastor."
- Keith Kelly, The Spirit
"Instead, the archdiocese will be sending representatives to meet individually in the next few weeks to meet with pastors, the two lay trustees of each parish and the financial committee to determine how much each parish will be asked to contribute."
It sounds like these get togethers are going to be more like a vote than a consultation, given the presence of the lay trustees. I hope the trustee know that they are voting. It may not be formal.
Please read all about it at The Spirit. Mr. Kelly does a good job of placing this development in the context of archdiocesan finances and real estate transactions: Archdiocese to Pastors: Raise Millions for Sexual Abuse Victims or go Bankrupt
Every Sunday at St. Mary's I put some cash in the basket. Since Cardinal Dolan issued another decree on December 17th, St. Mary's is not a parish. I am not sure that my gift is being used to promote St. Mary's survival. My crumpled bills accompany the envelopes to St. Peter's Church, the parish church of St. Peter-St. Denis-St. Mary's Parish. I don't know what happens after that or where the money goes. Like the people sitting around me at Mass, the money I put in this basket is a prayer for the future of St. Mary's.
I do know that, despite St. Mary's shifting canonical status, the civil corporation called "Church of the Immaculate Conception" exists. I know this because, on November 14, 2024, the "Church of the Immaculate Conception" joined the Archdiocese of New York in suing the City of Yonkers to remove landmark status from St. Mary's.
The "Church of the Immaculate Conception" is the civil corporation that owns and manages the real assets of St. Mary's Parish. It sued the City of Yonkers to remove the landmark designation that parishioners sought, obtained and celebrated. There was never a ruling in the case. Attorneys representing the "Church of the Immaculate Conception" proposed a settlement that may make it easier to close the church. The City of Yonkers agreed to it.
Did our coins, bills and envelopes pay for a lawsuit that paves the way for the demolition of our church? Maybe. There is no transparency.
Today I was alerted to two articles stating that the Archdiocese of New York is asking parishes to fund reparations to abuse victims to prevent the Archdiocese from declaring bankruptcy:
Archdiocese of NY warns priests of bankruptcy — unless hundreds of millions are raised to pay sex abuse victims by Rich Calder of The New York Post“As is happening elsewhere, so-called national parishes, at one time established to serve the needs of a particular national or ethnic community, are being discontinued ..."
OK, first off, I object to "discontinued." It is a corporate, not a canonical term. Is the corporate mentality so entrenched in the Archdiocese that its spokesman spouts it like national parishes are a product line that is not putting enough value into the bottom line?
Second, I think identifying a class of parishes and blanket extinguishing them all for the same reason violates canon law. To the only surviving national parishes in the Archdiocese I can only say, "YO! Heads up! Maybe you're next."
Many national parishes are being "discontinued" a hundred years or more after they were established. They have a potent and unique charism grown from the foundation laid down by the founding parishioners and enriched by those who were later drawn to worship there. In the intervening years they retain their cultural characteristics but evolve to include diverse parishioners who are attracted to community values, the residual customs and the living examples of faith given by the old timers. When it closed 100 after years, St. Stanislaus Kostka's Mass was in English. Some Polish hymns were played on special occasions and potluck dinners had servings of kielbasi and pierogi which were enjoyed by all. All were welcomed into the community and people of all ethnicity were drawn to the simplicity and warmth of the parish. At one time we had 2 young choristers of African American/Filipino heritage singing heartily in phonetic Polish.
I am saying it again because not everyone knows that underlying your parish, there is a civil corporation. The corporate board consists of the Archbishop, the Vicar General, the Pastor and two lay trustees. When a church is closed and relegated to profane, but not sordid, use, this board votes on the disposition of the real property.
It was announced today that Bishop Edmund Whelan will succeed Joseph P. Lamorte as Vicar General, making him Archbishop Ronald Hicks' right hand man and giving him a seat on every parish corporate board in the archdiocese.
Read all about it on the Arch's Good Newsroom: Vicar General Monsignor LaMorte Retires, Bishop Whalen Appointed New Vicar General, Bishop Colacicco Vicar for Clergy
It began as an insurance concern/fraternal association for immigrants and evolved into a vibrant cultural center and gathering place. It has seen good and bad times but has survived and, in recent years, thrived.
Laima Mihailovich, Dainius Glinskis and a host of supporters crafted an application that won the SLA a place on the National Register of Historic Places in 2022. Today these prime movers can celebrate the designation of the SLA as an individual landmark by the New York City Council.
Read all about it: LPC Designates Three Buildings in Manhattan and Brooklyn Linked to New York City's Rich Immigration History
He had an opportunity that few pastors today will get: to lay a foundation for a parish's future. Msgr. Corrigan served St. Mary's for a total of 31 years, 26 as Pastor and 5 more as Administrator. He saw a lot of history in that time, writ large as world and national events and in fine detail through the lives of his parishioners.
He shared this history in his book, The Parish of St. Mary's of the Immaculate Conception, Yonkers, 1848-2016". He has a an easy, flowing style and produced a work that is a both historical document and a good story.
He was buried in St. Mary's Cemetery on September 25, 2025. The photo above was taken by Bob Lynn, who placed the palm cross on his grave during a St. Patrick's Day visit. Bob grew up in the parish, graduated from St. Mary's school and still drives in from Pennsylvania to pay respect and tend the graves of loved ones in St. Mary's cemetery.
That is the spirit of St. Mary's. Let us pray that this parish will have the future Msg. Corrigan envisioned.
A sample of his writing: A New York's priest's memories of an historic event in the civil rights struggle