Aug. 14, 2009.

Students participate in last night's service.
Ok, so maybe I threw you off a bit with the French title I have given this post. Let me explain.
Yesterday marked a great milestone for five of us: Guy and Viv Simonelli, Hope Carter, Jeff Frano, and I. At the invitation of the members of the Hospitalité de Notre Dame de Salut, the oldest such group associated with Lourdes, we made the commitment to continue to come to Lourdes for the rest of our lives (circumstances permitting). (The association began in 1874 to help organize the thousands of French pilgrims that were beginning to come to Lourdes.) We, along with about 38 other people, participated in an installation ceremony last night at 9 p.m. in the Chapelle de Bernadette.
We arrived for a rehearsal at 8 p.m. Now I have always thought that the French were organized people. That was not the case last night. After four attempts at seating us, they finally settled on a plan. (That took 20 minutes.) Next, we briefly rehearsed taking our place on the first step in front of the altar space. Part of the service included the head honcho calling out each of our names and our standing up and saying, “Me Voici” before taking the long walk to the front of the chapel. In French it means I am here. So, it’s safe to say that each of us wrote those words on our programs and practiced many times before uttering those words.
It’s also safe to say that the French know how to put on a good ecclesiastical show. And, for sure, they know how to sing – and sing well. The singing last night was very impressive.
Having said “Me Voici,” accepted our new cross, and recited the commitment prayer (in French), we processed out, each of us holding a candle presented to us by a dignitary. All 40 or so of us walked (and sang in French) to the Grotto, said a few prayers, and sang the Salve Regina. It was a very special moment. Then it was time for a little reception – non-alcoholic beverages and cookies.
It turns out that we made a bit of Lourdes history last night. We were the first American group be asked by the Hospitalité de Notre Dame de Salut to make this level of commitment. In fact, we may be the first Americans to have been asked. The jury is still out on that, however. The French are very serious when it comes to this French-American collaboration. They fall all over themselves every time they thank us for our 16 years of service. The new cross pin makes us full-fledged members of the Hospitalité de Notre Dame de Salut.
This afternoon I went to work in the baths. The French have taken over working the baths and usually have taken a dim view of Americans volunteers. (Earlier in the week the Italians ran the baths, and they are much more inclusive toward Americans.) Well, today, with my new pin, I just waltzed right in and took my place among the French volunteers. No questions asked. Actually, a few of them congratulated me.
This morning we did the Stations of the Cross along the Prairie. This afternoon, the students had the afternoon off. Some shopped, some slept, and ten of them hiked a mountain that provides extraordinary view of Lourdes. Tonight the students will participate in the candlelight procession, either by pulling a voiture or walking as part of our group.
Tomorrow is the Feast of the Assumption, the biggest day of the year in Lourdes. We will work pulling voitures. It will be an outdoor Mass with 25,000-30,000 people.
Anniversary Story
In an earlier post I wrote about Joe and Elisa Metz, the couple who had hosted my parents when they went to Lourdes as malades in 1997. I found out today that the Metzes and my parents share the same wedding anniversay, August 14. Coincidence?
Cross Story
I’ll make this story short. Three weeks ago via email, I invited my friend Marco, with whom I have work in the baths for several years, to be our guest at last night’s commitment service. I also asked him to take photos, and he agreed. When I arrived in Lourdes and saw him, I reiterated the invitation and told him that the ceremony began at 8:30. He then bemoaned the fact that even though he’s been coming to Lourdes for 20 years (and working with the French National Pilgrimage for the past 10), he had never been asked to receive a cross to mark his commitment to Lourdes. He’s not the complaining type, so he dropped the issue.
The next morning, I happened to run into him near our hotel and he said to me, “I will see you at 2:30, my friend.” I said, “No, the service begins at 8:30.” Again, he said, “I will see you at 2:30,” and he pointed to the cross pinned to my tee shirt. Then it dawned on me: he was going to be at the 2:30 “formation” meeting for those people who were going to receive the new cross. In short, somehow, perhaps by the power of the Holy Spirit (Our Lady of Lourdes? Bernardette?) he had been selected that morning to receive the cross that the day before he had bemoaned not receiving. So for members of our group, all of whom know Marco, and especially for me, the ceremony held more significance than it would have had Marco not received his cross.

Kate M. pulls a malade in a voiture to Mass this morning in the Pope Pius X (underground) Basilica.