Metro and State
Prayers of thanks: Annual service unites people of different faiths
By John Gutierrez-Mier
Express-News Staff Writer
Web Posted : 11/23/2000 12:00 AM
The ancient chants of the Mohawk tribe of the Iroquois nation mixed easily with mariachi music as hundreds of people
representing a variety of faiths gathered at San Fernando Cathedral for a Thanksgiving service Thursday morning.
Mark Standingeagle Bae of the New York-area Mohawk tribe and his children, Megan
Dancing Girl, 8, and Calvin Littleeagle, 3, lead the Prayer of the Four Directions at an interfaith service Thursday at
San Fernando Cathedral. Photos by Maria J. Avila/Express-News Photographer
Vietnamese Commuity
Church members Mihn-Phan Dinh and wife Anchi wait for the Thanksgiving service to begin.
Raymond Balderas
Jr., 4, enters San Fernado Cathedral as Teresa Champion waits to dance Thursday at the interfaith service. |
Buddhists, Christians, Hindus, Bahai'is, Jews and Native Americans each gave thanks for their own blessings
and also prayed for the poor and the weary. "It's a tradition that we gather here in the oldest church in the city
where people have prayed for hundreds of years," said Father David Garcia, rector of the downtown cathedral. "We
pray that God will continue to bless our community. We also come together to celebrate all of our differences."
This was the 10th year the interfaith service has taken place, and it has become an event that Mihn-Phan Dinh and his wife,
Anchi, always enjoy attending. Both said they were especially touched by the service last year and recalled arriving in
San Antonio in 1975 with nothing more than the clothes they were wearing. "We each may have very different beliefs,
but it's good to come together and give thanks for what we have," said Mihn-Phan Dinh, a pilot in the South Vietnamese
air force during the 1970s. He and his wife fled to the United States when the North Vietnamese overthrew the South
Vietnamese government. Today, the couple have four children. They were especially proud to be representing the city's
Vietnamese Catholic community. "If I could live 100 more years, I would still not have enough time to thank God for
all of my blessings," said Dinh, who along with his wife was dressed in a traditional Vietnamese silk robe used for
celebrations. He later offered a prayer of thanks in Vietnamese during the service. The Dinhs weren't the only ones
wearing traditional ethnic garb. Worshippers also were treated to flamenco dancers wearing dazzling red outfits and
glistening gold earrings. The Rev. Louis Zbinden, pastor of First Presbyterian Church, told worshippers that Thanksgiving
is a uniquely American holiday. "This is a day when you don't have to buy presents or cards. It's set apart so that
we can simply say thanks and express our gratitude," Zbinden said during the service. "We should give thanks for
the chance to heal the pain of loved ones. For a child's eyes during his or her birthday. Sometime today, why don't you make
your own list." Michael Williams and his younger brother Robert were there to hear their mother sing. She is a member
of the choir at Abiding Presence Lutheran Church, which sang several songs during the service. Both said they were touched
by the different messages the various speakers shared. "It's good to see that we can all come together. I was
impressed," said Michael, a sophomore at Southwest Texas State University in San Marcos. Robert, a junior at Clemens
High School, was equally elated and was looking forward to a Thanksgiving dinner with all the trimmings. After the service,
their mother, Barbara, was in a rush to get home. She still needed to put the family's turkey in the oven. But, she said,
having a late Thanksgiving dinner was a small price to pay in exchange for the joy she and her family received from the
service. "The diversity and the celebration of it was wonderful," said Barbara, who lives with her husband and
children in Schertz. "We're originally from Ohio. This was really great."
jgmier@express-news.net11/23/2000
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