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Una Voce America Names Mary Kraychy Vice
President
ST CHARLES, MO -- Mary Kraychy, director of the Coalition
in Support of Ecclesia Dei, has been named Vice President of
Una Voce America, according to an announcement by the UVA board
of directors today.
The Coalition is one of several organizations that are affiliated
with UVA, a lay movement within the Catholic Church that seeks
to preserve and extend the traditional Latin Mass and Gregorian
chant. Una Voce was begun in Europe in 1964, and currently has
29 member associations in 26 countries around the world, including
the United States.
"Mary is one of the pioneers in the traditional Mass
movement," commented Fred Haehnel, a UVA director. "At
the same time, she is an articulate and balanced advocate for
the Latin Mass of the Roman Rite. She has the ability to see
beyond the personalities and emotions that often complicate this
apostolate, and to focus on the goal of actually getting the
Mass into parishes with the permission of the bishops."
Kraychy, who lives the Archdiocese of Chicago, has long been
active in church matters. In 1978 she and others helped to start
Aid for Women to help teens and women obtain counseling and services
when facing unplanned pregnancies. Ten years later, when Pope
John Paul II issued his apostolic letter "Ecclesia Dei",
which urged bishops to make the pre-Vatican II form of Mass more
widely available to Catholics who desired it, Kraychysaw another
pressing need that required her help.
"We read the letter and thought something wonderful would
happen, but nothing did," she reflected.
She and other devotees of the Latin Mass were hoping the U.S.
bishops would form a plan to implement the papal directive. They
were disappointed when Rev. James Downey, O.S.B., of the Institute
on Religious Life, returned from the November 1988 bishops' meeting
to report that the bishops had no plan.
Before the year was out, the Coalition in Support of Ecclesia
Dei had been formed. Its purpose was to encourage petitions to
local bishops, locate priests willing to say the Latin Mass,
and distribute sacramentaries, handmissals and other necessary
Mass supplies. The Coalition eventually published its own Latin-English
Booklet Missal, and has distributed over 180,000 of them to laypeople,
clergy and parish communities. They have since printed a Latin-Spanish
Booklet Missal and specialized missals for weddings and funerals.
Since 1988, the number of traditional Latin Masses being offered
each Sunday throughout the United States has expanded from six
to over 200. These Masses are now offered in 120 different dioceses,
about two-thirds of the U.S. total.
In 1996, Kraychy was named to the board of directors of Una
Voce America. She was a speaker at the association's first Leadership
Conference, held in Cooperstown, New York in 1997. In addition
to serving on the UVA board of advisors, and fulfilling her new
duties as Vice President, she maintains a busy schedule at the
Coalition's headquarters in Glenview, Illinois.
In an telephone interview, Kraychy commented on her vision
and the relationship between the Coalition and Una Voce: "Una
Voce and the Coalition work well together," she said. "Our
mutual goal is to see at least one Latin Mass of the Roman Rite
in every parish every Sunday. We let people know that the Holy
Father has allowed the Latin Mass of the Roman Rite to be offered,
that it is an effective means of converting people, that it brings
people back to the Mass and sacraments of the Church.
"Una Voce, as an umbrella group, coordinates our efforts
with those of over 60 chapters and affiliates, providing contacts
and advice at the grass roots," she said. "I'm honored
to be named Vice President of the association."
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