Chicagoland

Arab Catholic community finds home at Our Lady of the Ridge

By Joyce Duriga | Editor
Thursday, December 14, 2023

Arab Catholic community finds home at Our Lady of the Ridge

Arab American Catholic Community of Chicago welcomed Father Wissam Mansour of Jordan during a Mass at Our Lady of the Ridge Church in Chicago Ridge on Dec. 3, 2023. Mansour will serve the community, which is a ministry of Our Lady of the Ridge and St. Linus Parish, for five years. Cardinal Cupich greeted the community at the end of Mass and said he welcomed their presence in the Archdiocese of Chicago. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
Father Wissam Mansour walks in the opening procession at the beginning of Mass at Our Lady of the Ridge Church in Chicago Ridge on Dec. 3, 2023. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
A young boy asks a member of his family questions before Mass begins. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
Father Mansour incenses the altar at the beginning of Mass. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
Father Mansour kisses the book after reading the Gospel. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
Members of the choir sing during Mass. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
Father Mansour kisses a rosary presented to him during Mass. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
Father Mansour blesses the gifts during Mass. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
Worshippers filled the church for Mass. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
Worshippers pray the Our Father during Mass. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
Father Mansour distributes Communion to those attending Mass. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
Arab Catholics listen to Father Mansour give the homily during Mass. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)
Cardinal Cupich greets the congregation. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)

On the First Sunday of Advent, the Arab American Catholic Community of Chicago held its first Mass with its new resident priest at Our Lady of the Ridge Church in Chicago Ridge.

The community has been gathering at the church for over a year with the Latin Patriarchate of the Holy Land sending priests for short periods. Now, Father Wissam Mansour of Jordan has been sent from the patriarchate to serve here for five years.

Cardinal Cupich greeted the community at the end of Mass, offered the final blessing and attended the celebration dinner afterward.

“I want to say to all of you here that I am honored, and the Archdiocese of Chicago is honored, to be able to make sure that you find a home here because you are the ancestors of the first church,” the cardinal said. “And we are a young church. We need to have the voices and the prayers of those Christians who were the disciples of Jesus at the very beginning. And so you have so much to offer us in that historical connection that ways in which we reach back in time and connect ourselves with this early church.”

Michael Bader, a native of Jordan and president of the community’s board, said he and other Arab Catholics have been trying to establish a community for over 20 years.

Bader has ties to the Latin Patriarchate in Jerusalem because he studied at a seminary in Bethlehem before moving to Chicago in the late 1990s.

“The past three patriarchs, all of them visited me here in Chicago, trying to get something going since 2002,” he said. “When the patriarch visited her last November, we agreed that we were going to move forward.”

New York and Los Angeles also have established Arab Catholic communities.

When Bader was introduced to Father Ryan Brady, associate pastor of Our Lady of the Ridge and St. Linus Parish, he found someone willing to help. Both Brady and Father Mark Walter, the pastor, welcomed them to the parish, Bader said.

“Little by little we started growing. We are about 150 families,” said Bader, adding that he believes there are about 500 other Arab Catholic families in the Chicago area that can be invited to join the community.

Mass is celebrated Sundays in English and Arabic; Friday evenings are family nights, when people pray the rosary and then play games or participate in other activities. There is also a youth group and a rosary group.

Named Our Lady of the Holy Land, the community is a group belonging to the parish and will not become a separate mission serving only Arab Catholics, Bader said.

“While we try to build bridges with our mother church in the Holy Land, we want to make sure all the world understands that we are a part of the body of the church and will remain under our Chicago archbishop’s obedience and jurisdiction,” Bader said. “We are here to love each other and live our faith together.”

Cardinal Cupich’s support has made a difference.

“Without his support, we would have never done anything,” Bader said. “He was supportive from day one.”

Having the Arab American Catholic Community at the parish has been positive, especially for the Our Lady of the Ridge worship site, Brady said.

“There’s a lot of beautiful cultural things that they do,” he said. “They will have processions each night during the Triduum. It brings life to the community. The neighborhood sees 50, 60, 70, 100, 200 people processing around the church again — they haven’t seen that in a long time — so it’s a good witness to the community and the public.”

It is also a good witness to the wider community that there are Arabic-speaking Catholics.

“There are Christians in the Holy Land,” he said. “There are Catholic Christians in the Holy Land.”

Topics:

  • parisjhes

Advertising