Today we spent a wonderful day at the National Shrine of Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha.
We attended Mass in the morning with some new friends and then toured the beautiful grounds of this lovely, peaceful shrine.
Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha lived most of her life at this location in NY along the Mohawk River.
Luke praying the Glory Be prayer.....it is the prayer we learned this past week and he prayed it so reverently, I know his prayers were heard.
It is a church restored in the Mohawk tradition and just beautiful. Although a bit cold this morning....the Chapel closes next week because it is unheated and our central New York winters are very harsh. In fact, this morning I believe we could see our breath during Mass.
Luke at the altar railing.
The log beams across the ceiling of the church were carved with scenes of the life of Blessed Kateri.
The carving depicting Blessed Kateri's baptism, which took place at this location.
The altar
A symbol of the Turtle Clan inside the chapel
This rosary is amazing. It is made out of slices of wood along with beads. It was very unique.
This is an cornhusk doll made in 1938.
(This isn't how our cornhusk dolls look)
a dreamcatcher
Kimmy getting "into" history.
I love this crucifix
The painting below is decribe above.
Amazingly, this was painted in 1681, a year after Blessed Kateri died.
The leaves are all on the ground now, but it was still gorgeous.
There have been many miracles associated with this spring.
This is where the water came from with which Blessed Kateri was baptised on April 5, 1676
The grotto at the spring
The Shrine and grounds are lovingly taken care of by the Conventual Franciscans.
Words to live by.....
Words to live by.....
Wonderful post! My daughter is going to be Blessed Kateri for our All Saints Day party this year so I shared this post with her too!
ReplyDeleteHow beautiful.
ReplyDeleteGreat post! Blessed Kateri is special to me and I really want to go to the shrine! I love the picturers!
ReplyDeleteTHank you for posting this. We are doing a unit study on The American Indians and Have covered Blessed Kateri. My dd enjoyed looking at this very much
ReplyDeleteThanks for posting the pix. My Confirmation saint and my oldest daughter's namesake is Blessed Kateri. I visited her shrine while at the U. of Scranton years ago. I was just telling my kids that we need to go there in the next few years... maybe we can go there a little bit through your pix! :)
ReplyDeleteI'm from Quebec...
ReplyDeleteI'm happy to see that! I hope to visit that place with my chliden.
(soory for my bad english)
Thank you for sharing these beautiful photos of the Shrine!
ReplyDelete