Archive for the 'The Dead' Category

Shafted, If You Ask Me

March 3rd, 2008

Shafted. That's the term that came to mind when I stumbled across the grave of James Pas Hankston at a small, unmarked church and cemetery off the River Road (Hwy. 405) in White Castle, Louisiana.

The small, Iberville Parish graveyard, I later learned, was Asbury Independent Methodist Church Cemetery and its almost centurion occupant caught my eye from the get-go.

I suppose after years of poking around burial grounds, you get a keen eye for the interesting graves. Something about Mr. Hankston's tomb stood out and I snapped it - but it wasn't until I got home and was uploading his memorial to Find A Grave, that I realized just why his marker was unique.

James Hankston, I realized, died just seven days short of his 100th birthday! Born on December 12, 1900, the elderly man was headed towards making the laudable century mark but was cut short only a few days shy - on December 5, 2000. Oh, the irony! The cruel, bitter irony - to make it so far and then,...not make it.

As I left a virtual flower for the poor soul, I couldn't help but think how unfair it all seemed. Shafted, indeed.

Brothers’ Last Christmas

February 23rd, 2008

While out snapping photos in a small church's cemetery this morning, I came across the graves of two young men, brothers, who shared more than a family connection.

On Christmas Day, 1974, thirteen year-old Rex Thomas, and his brother, ten year-old, Carey Thomas, both lost their lives. Buried alongside one another in Rising Star Baptist Church Cemetery, there is no other indication of what tragedy befell the two, young brothers.

The church, and its small cemetery, sit along the bayou on Hwy. 76 in Ramah, Louisiana. It is located down the road from the on and off-ramps for Interstate 10, just before it rises up onto the stretch of I-10 known as the Atchafalaya Basin. The old whitewashed, wooden church sits alone facing miles of sugar cane fields; at its back is the meandering, murky bayou. Embedded in cement, a stone plaque sits in front of the church telling of its founding in January 1893 by Rev. F. Jones.

Though the small cemetery holds around fifty graves, only forty-one of these are marked; some down by hand and carved into rough stone, barely legible - others with text nearly invisible from years of whitewashing and the bleaching of the sun's rays. It is likely there are even more petitioners buried in Rising Star's little cemetery; the locations and names lost to time or sitting veiled and unknown, except to those in possession of the church's record books.

It is evident that this small, Southern Baptist church has survived the years through the love and caring preservation of its members; a devoted few whose families contain generations of devout parishioners. The names etched onto the legible stones in the graveyard all bear similar surnames - Butler, Thomas, Chaney, Royal, and Lane - with few exceptions. This is a church whose members are like - or likely are - family.

This community is not rich; their church is small and humble, made of plain wood rather than strong brick or elaborate stone. The church sign is small, green; the white text unevenly spaced and not done by a professional hand. Sometimes I think such Christians must feel much more close to Jesus Christ is such simple, unpretentious buildings and surroundings - much more so than those praising Him in glittering, gymnasium-sized cathedrals and watching a sermon on video screens and through top-of-the-line sound systems.

The Thomas family, it appears, were not a wealthy clan. Young Rex's grave, according to his stone, was donated by his eighth grade class; something I found - at once - touching and heartbreaking. Just below his name it reads:

Donated by the 8th Gr. Class of T.A. Levy School
R.I.P.

How sweet and touching is that?

What tragedy, then, one wonders, befell the two young men, part of such a small but powerful, little community, on a Christmas Day thirty-four years ago? I have found nothing to confirm my suspicions and naught to solve the mystery; though I intend to keep searching.

A Sacred Grave

February 21st, 2008

In the small, unassuming town of Eunice, Louisiana in Acadia Parish, rests a brave, little girl that triumphed over the cancer that took her life by using her suffering to end that of others'.

Though you may have not heard of Charlene Marie Richard or her sacred and oft-visited grave in Saint Edwards Catholic Church Cemetery in Eunice, the twelve year-old cancer victim is more than just a local celebrity - an appeal for her canonization has been sent to the Pope in 2006 by the Friends of Charlene Association.

The fact that such an association even exists should give you some idea just how important this young woman - known as the "Little Cajun Saint" - is to thousands of believers around the world.

Charlene was born on January 13, 1947 to Joseph Elvin and Mary Alice Richard in Acadia Parish. In 1959, her young life was cut short by acute lymphatic leukemia only a few days after she was diagnosed with it. The poor child suffered for thirteen days at the Our Lady of Lourdes hospital in Lafayette, Louisiana in agonizing pain. At the suggestion of the hospital chaplain, Father Joseph Brennan, Charlene made the decision to "offer her pain for others". It was simply another way the remarkable young girl faced a slow, painful death with love, acceptance, and tranquility with a maturity and serenity beyond her years.

Always a pious child, Charlene was comfortable with her dying and going to be with God. She passed peacefully on August 11, 1959.

Since Charlene's death, a number of miracles have been reported by those praying for the intercession of Charlene Richard, and by praying at and leaving tokens or written petitions at her grave. People the world over are convinced that Charlene was a saint, and that her tomb - and any relics related to her - are sacred.

Next to her grave is a wooden, altar rail, a sun-bleached white church pew, and a plastic box with a lifting lid for petitioners to leave notes, prayers, and requests for Charlene. The grave is constantly cluttered with rosaries, fresh flowers, and small candles. A cement statue of the Virgin Mary looks down upon it all. (Click here for an excellent photograph of Charlene's grave).

The process of canonization takes years to complete, and though Charlene is not yet a recognized saint by the Roman Catholic Church's standards, her holy status is unquestioned in the minds of her fans and followers. Her grave has become a mecca for those seeking a miracle cure for terminal illness for themselves and loved ones, and people, literally the world over, have made the pilgrimage to her final resting place.

Charlene's grave has become more than just a tomb for her final remains; it has become an object of love, hope, and devotion for hundreds - the holy holding ground of a true saint and a tangible mark of the Almighty.

« Prev - Next »