Local9/16/2016

Sept. 11 victims honored in South Boston

byMark Labbe Pilot Staff

Father Steven Madden leads a prayer at the Fallen Heroes Memorial. Pilot photo/Mark Labbe

SOUTH BOSTON -- On the evening of the 15th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks, dozens of people holding brightly lit candles gathered around the Massachusetts Fallen Heroes Memorial in South Boston to pray and remember those lost in the attacks.

They had processed from the nearby Chapel of Our Lady of Good Voyage following a Mass for Peace, Healing, and Justice.

The Mass and prayer service were a collaborative effort by the South Boston-Seaport Catholic Collaborative's Good Samaritan Ministry; the Massachusetts 9/11 Fund; and the Massachusetts Fallen Heroes organization -- a group that memorializes fallen service members, assists families of the fallen, and provides returning veterans with aid.

The group was established in 2010 and is responsible for the memorial in South Boston, which was completed this year and serves as a tribute to those who died while in service to the United States.

Dozens of people attended the Mass and prayer service, including firefighters, police officers, members of the Massachusetts Fallen Heroes organization, and parishioners of the chapel.

The Mass was celebrated by pastor Father Steven Madden, while the homilist was Father John Connolly, a parochial vicar in Dorchester and a chaplain for the Boston Police Department.

In his homily, Father Connolly reflected upon the Gospel reading, which centered on the parable of the Prodigal Son, noting that the parable "provides context" to the Sept. 11 attacks.

"When people turn away from God and from one another, when people let fanatical ideology and corrupted creed get in the way... We turn away from life and love and turn to evil," he said.

"Evil was manifest here in Boston, Washington, D.C., New York City, and Somerset County, Pennsylvania 15 years ago on this day, and it struck our country and all of us, especially here of us in Boston who, arguably, suffered more personally than anywhere else except those in New York, in particularly terrible ways," Father Connolly continued.

He said that when faced with such a tragedy, people often question God, asking "Where is God in this? How did God let this happen?"

"For me, the answer is God doesn't let these things happen. People who abuse their free will choose to do that evil. But, where is God is a much more widely and complex answer. For on Sept. 11, 2001, God was everywhere in the midst of all that evil that was occurring," said Father Connolly.

"He certainly was there in the lives, in the hearts, and in the actions of those countless men and women in New York, Washington, and Pennsylvania who ran into those conflagrations at those various crash site and opened wide their arms to help their fellow sisters and brothers who were injured or killed, and he was there with the plane crew members, the passengers, and those who lost loved ones," he said.

After the Mass, a candlelight procession was made to the nearby Massachusetts Fallen Heroes Memorial, where Father Madden led the group in prayer.

Brian Cornell, a parishioner of the Chapel of Our Lady of Good Voyage, said the prayer service and the Mass tried to touch "the real source" of people's emotions about the Sept. 11 terrorist attack.

"It's good to remember," he said.

Elana Dekker, who helped with the music at the Mass, said the evening "was so beautiful, because it tied in together with the significance of the anniversary of 9/11 and all of our fallen heroes and that God has open arms for all of us and that he is ever present."

"It was really tied together beautifully," she said.