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Easter, at least, for St. Ann flock

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  • Easter, at least, for St. Ann flock

    New York Daily News, NY
    March 29 2004


    Easter, at least, for St. Ann flock

    By RALPH R. ORTEGA
    DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

    A 157-year-old Manhattan church in danger of closing will be open for
    at least one more Easter celebration.
    The 50 faithful who attend the sole Sunday Mass at St. Ann's on E.
    12th St. learned yesterday that Palm Sunday and Easter services would
    still be held in their beloved church.

    Ushers distributed flyers directing them to other churches for all
    other Holy Week Masses.

    It was a welcome reprieve for those who fear the worst as the
    Archdiocese of New York mulls whether to sell the aging church.
    Everyone except St. Ann's English-speaking worshipers were relocated
    to other churches last month.

    "We'll be praying that it continues to stay open," said Michael
    Krzyzanowski, 61, who kissed the sooty facade of the Gothic church as
    he walked inside.

    St. Ann's is the latest Catholic church to face closure. Two others
    have shut their doors since Edward Cardinal Egan took over in 2001
    and began work that eliminated a $20 million annual operating
    deficit.

    Archdiocese spokesman Joseph Zwilling said St. Ann's fate will be
    determined as part of a "realignment" effort to close and consolidate
    churches based on usage. "Selling the building is a possibility,"
    Zwilling said.

    St. Ann's has not had enough congregants to be considered a parish
    for more than 20 years. Still, Masses have been celebrated there in
    English, Latin and Spanish. It also has allowed a rite of Armenian
    Catholics to use the church as its North American headquarters since
    1983.

    There are signs that church leaders are preparing for a final
    celebration. A statue of Our Lady of Quinche, an image of the Virgin
    Mary honored by Ecuadorans, was removed when the Spanish Masses
    ended.

    "This is a surprise," said Taco Guillermo, a painter who was born in
    Ecuador and lives in Jamaica, Queens. "We never expected not to find
    her here."
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