Tsula-tsu Lay-sa-pik – Go with care, Bishop
By LAUREEN McMAHON
Two things become crystal clear when discussing the appointment of
Father Gary Gordon as Bishop of Whitehorse with members of First
Nations bands.
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Laureen McMahon / The B.C. Catholic
Bishop-elect Gary Gordon presents Chehalis Band
member and president of the
Coqualeetza Cultural Education Centre Laura Williams with an
artifact he discovered
while hiking in the mountains near Chilliwack five years ago. |
The first shared opinion is that he will make an outstanding bishop.
The second is that he will be sorely missed.
Bishop-elect Gordon was honoured by hundreds of his closest friends
on Feb. 15 at the Tzeachten Community Hall in Chilliwack.
The program featured entertainment, prayers, an open sharing session
and many opportunities for the aboriginal community to say goodbye
to Father Gordon.
Young and old, they came to wish their pastor and friend Godspeed
before he leaves to prepare for his ordination and installation
ceremonies in Whitehorse on March 22.
Shirley Leon, manager of the Coqualeetza Cultural Education Centre
in Chilliwack, told The B.C. Catholic that she is still “in shock”
at his imminent departure.
“This is like a loss in the family. Our experience in the mission
before he came was that the priest would say Mass and leave. Father
Gary taught us what it was like to have a resident-priest we could
call a friend.”
The centre, said Leon, exists mainly to archive the Sto:lo First
Nations language and history and develop usable educational
materials from the rich legacy. It was work wholeheartedly respected
and supported by Father Gordon.
When word went out about the farewell party, said Leon, calls began
coming in from reserves in Boothroyd, North of Hope; Boston Bar;
Mount Currie; Powell River; Vancouver and other areas. No formal
invitations were issued, just the “moccasin telegraph” word of mouth
to bring people together, she explained.
Leon has made Father Gordon promise to be a “skidoo” bishop not a
“flying” bishop, that is, to stay off the small planes that have
cost several priests their lives in accidents in past years.
“I also want him to use all the influence he has to bring us a
second Father Gary. We are honoured that his gifts and talents are
recognized, but we hope we are not going to have to start all over
again! We are praying very hard that we will be blessed by another
pastor just like him.”
One of Father Gordon’s best gifts, said Leon, was “just showing up.”
For instance, when she and her husband Rudy renewed their marriage
vows in Vernon on their 50th wedding anniversary, Father Gordon
promised he would be there.
“I was joking when I invited him but he asked, ‘What day is it?’
Sure enough, he showed up at St. Benedict’s Church on the Okanagan
Reserve on the right date! To top it off, he brought along Bishop
David Monroe, who had just been ordained for Kamloops.
“I have 12 siblings, so family took up three-quarters of the
reserve. Father Gary’s presence turned our anniversary into an
evangelization event!”
Elsie Paul from the Sliammon Band told The B.C. Catholic during a
telephone interview from Powell River of Father Gordon’s support for
the Archdiocesan First Nations Council organized several years ago
by Archbishop Emeritus Adam Exner, OMI.
“He was very open, warm and friendly and we could count on him to
listen. He took our concerns seriously which helped heal past hurts
and foster new understanding. He was never judgmental and always
tried to understand the issues.”
Paul, the mother of seven living children, 15 grandchildren and four
great-grandchildren, called the episcopal appointment “a great loss
for local native people, but wonderful for Whitehorse. Our prayers
and thoughts go with him.”
Linda Christensen, secretary at St. Joseph’s Church in Mission, and
a member of the Douglas Band, recalled that when Father Gordon was
first appointed Mission pastor, Emily Tomason, who now lives in Nova
Scotia, was his new secretary.
“Father Gary said to her, ‘Don’t worry, we’ll make mistakes and
learn together,’” said Christensen. “That put her at ease right
away.”
Father Gordon, she added, always knew the right thing to say to
native people in times of crisis or sorrow.
“I remember that, at the funeral of a young native lady from
Chilliwack, he told her family not to worry because a respected
elder who had also just died would take care of their relative in
heaven,” Christensen recalled.
Yvonne Peters, a member of the Samahquam Band in the Lillooet Valley
near Harrison Lake, spoke of the bishop-elect’s going to great
lengths to minister to native people.
“We really appreciated him taking the funeral Masses at the Church
of the Holy Cross in Skookumchuck and also doing the weddings and
baptisms whenever he could. It’s a long drive and it certainly must
have been difficult with his schedule.”
Peters said that Bishop-elect Gordon was a great comfort to her
family when they were torn apart by the loss of their father in an
accident in 1987.
“The family was so angry we had trouble accepting the flowers sent
by the other person in the accident. I will never forget Father
Gary’s beautiful homily on forgiveness and how it helped us begin
the healing process.”
The B.C. Catholic will provide additional coverage of the Feb. 15
aboriginal celebration in the upcoming special edition to mark the
ordination and installation of Bishop-elect Gordon on March 22.
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