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28987: Ayiti Chanje (news) First Haitian-American bishop named to U.S. Catholic Church (fwd)




From: Ayiti Chanje <ayitichanje1804@hotmail.com>

First Haitian-American bishop named to U.S. Catholic Church
By SUZAN CLARKE
THE JOURNAL NEWS

http://www.thejournalnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060824/NEWS03/608240309/1028/NEWS12

The first Haitian-American bishop appointed to the Catholic Church in the United States has ties to Rockland.

Auxiliary Bishop Guy Sansaricq, 71, who was elevated to his position in the Diocese of Brooklyn in a ceremony on Tuesday, is the brother of the Rev. Carl Sansaricq of St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church in Spring Valley.

Carl Sansaricq served at St. Joseph's about a decade. Now in his 80s, he is retired and lives at the parish.

Guy Sansaricq has set a number of precedents. In addition to being the first Haitian-American bishop in the U.S. Catholic Church, he has also become the first black bishop in the Diocese of Brooklyn. The diocese encompasses the boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens.

"Everybody's elated," said Jocelyn McCalla, executive director of the National Coalition for Haitian Rights, a New York City-based human rights organization. "I mean, it's a major event for the Haitian community in New York."

Local Haitians like Jean L. Nicolas — a parishioner at St. Joseph's — were excited about the development.

"I think it's a great thing," said Nicolas, a Nanuet resident who was born in Haiti and came to America in the 1960s, "especially for the Haitian community around here."

Even though Bert Jean-Louis is not Catholic, the Haitian-born man was proud of Sansaricq.

"It's a great honor to have him promoted to a bishop," said Jean-Louis of Spring Valley. "It's not just that he's a black man, he's also a Haitian man and that's a first for us. ... He makes us, all Haitians, very proud."

The 2000 census counted 11,000 Haitians in Rockland, although community advocates said that estimate was low. Approximately 3,711 Haitians were counted in Westchester County.

Guy Sansaricq studied in Haiti and later at St. Paul Pontifical Seminary in Ottawa, Canada, where he received master's degrees in philosophy and theology. He also studied at the Gregorian University in Rome, receiving another master's degree in 1971.

Before he came to the United States in the early 1970s, Guy Sansaricq ministered to people in the Bahamas. He was parochial vicar of Sacred Heart parish in Cambria Heights, N.Y., before moving on to become pastor of St. Jerome's Church, a Flatbush congregation that has a large Creole-speaking population.

Sansaricq is known as an immigrant advocate. He co-founded Haitian Americans United for Progress, a service agency.

"I've known him for several years and he has always been a remarkable servant of the people of Haiti," McCalla said of Sansaricq. "That's where his heart is, that's where his heart lies, and he has done everything to make sure that the community continues to grow."

Two other auxiliary bishops, Octavio Cisneros and Frank J. Caggiano, were appointed in the ceremony.

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