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Giant
Arch Would Honor Mary's Immaculate Heart
By
TIM DRAKE, Register Features Correspondent
[Reprinted
from National Catholic Register: Dec. 2, 2001, Page One]
Buffalo,
N.Y. – On a clear day, Buffalo attorney
Laurence Behr has a fine view from his downtown law office of
Buffalo’s City
Hall. He can picture the image
above its main entrance, a bas-relief sculptural
frieze whose central figure is a powerful queen upon a throne –
her finger in a large book, her foot crushing the head of a serpent.
The image, modeled after Michelangelo's painting of the Prophet Isaiah, reflects
Buffalo’s nickname "Queen City of the Great Lakes," earned
by its early dominance in the Midwest flour trade. For Behr, however,
the image can also represent the Mother of God.
Last June 23, the feast of the
Immaculate Heart of Mary, Behr, president of Western New York
Lawyers for Life, announced the creation of a non-profit association
formed to build a $100 million pro-life shrine and towering gold arch
dedicated to Mary, the Mother of Christ, adjacent to downtown Buffalo
on the Lake Erie shoreline. The project, featuring a 700-foot-tall ascendable
arch topped by a golden cross, overshadowing a shrine, would be known
as "The Arch of the Triumph of the Immaculate Heart of Mary and
the International Shrine of the Holy Innocents." When the organization’s
plans succeed, the Arch will replace the St. Louis Gateway Arch as the world’s
tallest monument.
Franciscan Father James Goode,
president of the National Black Catholic Apostolate for Life, is an
Arch of Triumph advisory board member.
"The purpose of the Arch of Triumph and the Shrine of
the Holy Innocents is to tell our story of God’s love," he said.
"We want to tell the world about our devotion to the Blessed
Virgin Mary and her Son Jesus Christ. We wish to tell the world by
deed and example that we affirm that all human life is a unique gift
from God."
The project has already won support
from many other national Catholic pro-life leaders, including Fr.
Thomas Euteneuer, Fr. Matthew Habiger OSB, Fr. Richard John Neuhaus,
and Fr. Robert Fox. "We
need to stir the attention of the public to pro-life issues whether
they want to hear about them or not," commented Fr. Frank Pavone,
co-founder of Priests for Life, adding, "A sign as public and
visible as the proposed arch and shrine will certainly serve this
purpose."
The project has even drawn support
from unlikely places. Buffalo evangelical writer, Rick Kern, noted
that while many local Protestants have difficulty with the project’s
"glorification of Mary," he described it as "rich with
meaning and symbolism" and asserted that it "cannot help
but capture the imagination of anyone who takes a second look at it."
"[A] memorial to victims of
abortion runs counter across pro-choice philosophy like nails across
a chalkboard," Kern wrote in the July 29 issue of The Word.
"Memorials by nature exist for people as opposed to formless
blobs of fetal tissue. Consequently, this memorial in a way revives
the status of abortion as a moral crime against humanity."
A Golden Dream The idea
for the arch came to Behr in an extraordinary dream he had after reading
an article in September 2000 about the pastoral significance of Marian
shrines. He dreamt he was on a bridge overlooking a valley. To his
left sat a group of unsightly and dilapidated buildings; on his right,
sat a stone church in a beautiful green setting with a golden statue
of Our Lady set in a niche in its front. Approaching the church
he met a woman who said to him, "This is the shrine of the Golden
Arch of St. Mary." He saw a golden statuary grouping of the Holy
Family, and awoke asking himself, "why a golden arch for St.
Mary?"
Thinking of Mary’s titles, Gate
of Heaven and House of Gold, Behr decided that a golden monumental
arch would be an appropriate tribute to Mary. Later, he recognized
that such a structure would necessarily be a triumphal arch honoring
the triumph of Mary’s Immaculate Heart predicted during her appearance
at Fatima on July 13, 1917.
Why Buffalo? It’s a mystery,"
remarks Behr, asked why such a shrine would be built in Buffalo, "but
I am here and I cannot run a project anywhere else." He added,
"One could as well ask, why Buffalo for the National Shrine of
Our Lady of Victory?" referring to the beautiful Basilica built
by Buffalo native Venerable Father Nelson Baker, in the Buffalo suburb
of Lackawanna.
The question "Why Buffalo?"
has been addressed before – in the life of Father Baker. After assisting
at mass at the Shrine of Our Lady of Victory in Paris in 1874,
Father Baker began a lifelong devotion to Our Lady under that title.
Later, back in Buffalo, he dedicated
himself to the care of orphans, showing a zeal for unwanted babies
that, many feel, makes him a pioneer of the pro-Life movement. Finally,
in 1921 at age 80, he asked his Association of Our Lady of Victory
members to consider contributing $10 to "buy a block of marble
for Our Lady." Donors responded, and the Lackawanna Basilica
was erected in just a few years.
Supporters of the Triumph Arch
understandably draw inspiration from Venerable Nelson Baker’s story.
The association asks donors to consider contributing $100, entitling
their names to be engraved on the Arch of Triumph. Behr notes that
such an amount is equivalent to Fr. Baker's $10 request in 1921. Behr
also points out that there are practical reasons why the arch should
be built in Buffalo, including its location only 20 miles south of
Niagara Falls, itself a world-famous attraction. Supporters believe
that the arch will draw at least as many visitors annually as the
Gateway Arch, with 4 million visitors per year. The shrine would also
be within a day’s drive of 60% of the population of the U.S. and Canada.
Behr would seem justified in calling
it "a global signal call
to repentance and conversion."
The Project has been receiving donations from states all around
the country, and already has won the support of Catholics in other
countries as well, including Jordan, Australia and Russia.
Donations are being received on the Web site, www.ArchofTriumph.org,
and information is offered by calling toll-free, 1-866-205-6512.
The Association’s immediate goal
is to raise $3 to $5 million to acquire the proposed site,
an available private waterfront parcel that Behr believes matches
the scene of his dream. In addition, the Association is seeking now
to recruit capable Regional Directors and to establish local chapters,
to oversee fundraising in as many cities, counties and towns around
the world as they are able. To date, Regional Directors have signed
on in San Francisco and Edmonton, Alberta.
Behr is firmly convinced that God
intends to use Our Lady to bring about the end of abortion and the
renewal of society, as well as the return of our separated brethren
to the fold of the one, true Church. He sees as primarily responsible
for the slaughter of the unborn, the severing of Christ's Mystical
Body the Church, allowing leeway to the "serpent" of Revelations
12 in his "war on the rest of her offspring" (v. 17), a
reference to all faithful Christians as Mary's true children.
Not All Applaud Not all
of the local reaction to the proposed arch has been positive. Following
Behr’s announcement, the Buffalo News ran both pro and con
letters for weeks. "Behr and his ilk are not only interested
in advocating against abortion," wrote Norm Allen Jr., assistant
director for the Council for Secular Humanists in Amherst. "They
are also trying to promote anti-atheist propaganda." Others, such as Lynda Suchman
and Diane London, suggested that the money would be better used to
create jobs or to educate people.
Behr argues, however, that those willing to donate to the arch
will continue donating to other charitable causes. In addition, he
says, "When the Shrine is operational and, we hope, generating
excess revenues, money will come from it to the needy in our community
and other worthy Catholic causes, as promised in our Prospectus.
It is reported that the St. Louis Gateway Arch brought an
estimated 2.32 billion dollars into that region in 1999 alone."
"The reaction of the local
Catholic and Christian faithful has been tremendous," said Behr.
Behr mentions that the Bishop has expressed appreciation for his pro-life
work and looks forward to hearing more definite plans about the project.
Behr believes that the project could be completed in as few as four
years. "The Arch of Triumph and Holy Innocents Shrine will be
built quickly once the faithful people of this country are awakened
to the greatness of this project, and form a common will to support
it," he said.
Project advisor Father Robert Fox
agreed: "Pope John Paul II once said that Shrines today are doing
for people what monasteries of earlier centuries accomplished for
the good of souls."
For more information on the Arch of Triumph or to
make a donation, visit: www.ArchofTriumph.org or call
toll free 1.866.205.6512. To
donate by mail, send checks payable to Arch of Triumph of the IHM
to P.O.
Box 3396, Buffalo NY 14240.
All contributions are fully tax-deductible.
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