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CNN Special Report
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Latinos may be 'future' of U.S. Catholic Church
ST. LOUIS,
Missouri (CNN) -- "I'll take two chili,
uh..." a hungry customer stammers at the front of a two-hour-long line.
"Chile rellenos," the money-handler trills back in perfect Spanish. This
is not a trendy Tex-Mex restaurant; and it's more than 1,000 miles from
the Mexican border.
St.
Cecilia's nearly closed. After it was designated
the parish home for Latinos, the congregation
quadrupled.

Chile rellenos have
replaced fish as the main draw during Lent at St.
Cecilia's Catholic Church in St. Louis, Missouri

Separate Sunday morning Masses in English and Spanish at
Holy Trinity has created divisions among the devout.
The stuffed pepper causing the stutter is the
hottest menu item at
St. Cecilia's Lenten fish fry in St. Louis,
Missouri.
Chile rellenos, a traditional Mexican dish, have replaced fish
as the main draw for Catholics giving up meat on Fridays. This
century-old parish founded by German immigrants has turned 85 percent
Hispanic.
"It's the browning of the Catholic Church in the United States," says
Pedro Moreno Garcia, who until last month led the Hispanic ministry for
the Archdiocese of St. Louis. Moreno Garcia points to
St. Cecilia's
Spanish-dominant Mass
schedule as a sign of the times.
"Hispanics are the present and Hispanics are the future of the Catholic
Church in the United States," says Moreno Garcia.
One-third of all Catholics in the United States are
now Latinos thanks to immigration and higher fertility rates, according
to the Pew Forum on
Religion and Public Life. While St. Cecilia's parish has relished
the growth, elsewhere, the Latino population boom has rocked the pews.
"Instead of screaming out, 'The British are coming!'
" Moreno Garcia says some people are screaming, " 'The Hispanics are
coming! The Hispanics are coming! Run, run.' "
A self-described Nuyorican or Puerto Rican from New
York, Moreno Garcia says even he gets mislabeled.
"They still confuse every Hispanic as being from Mexico, and that
everyone is here illegally," says Moreno Garcia.
'Latino in America'
The Latino population is set to nearly triple by
2050. CNN's Soledad O'Brien journeys into the
homes and hearts of a group destined to change
the U.S.
Tonight, 9 p.m. ET
After more than 15 years working for the Catholic
Church in majority-Hispanic areas of Texas, Moreno Garcia spent the last
year tackling the challenges of a community where Latinos, although
growing, are still the minority.
He recalls a few heated phone calls after the
archdiocese newspaper, the St. Louis Review, added a page in Spanish. He
fights prejudice with thought-provoking questions.
"When you go to heaven, and you're in front of St. Peter, what would you
want to have in your hand, your baptismal certificate or your passport?"
Moreno Garcia asks.
One archdiocese parish that is struggling with the
Latino influx is Holy Trinity in St. Ann, Missouri, a suburban
community with an affordable housing stock that has prompted a
population shift in the last decade.
Pedro Moreno Garcia is working
to bridge
language barriers, divisions »
Separate Sunday morning Masses
in English and in Spanish at Holy Trinity are creating division among
the devout.
"We're two separate parishes operating under one
roof," says Parish Council President Gina Shocklee.
"I refer to it as Holy Trinity Catholic Church, and
then there's Holy Trinity Hispanic Church," says council member Jody
Tedeschi, who worries the separate Masses promote segregation.
Holy Trinity's parish council has spent the past
year looking for ways to bridge the divide with limited success.
Part of that complicated picture is the family of
Mexican-born Angelica Garcia, the new face of Holy Trinity. She has
lived in the United States for 18 years; Holy Trinity has been her
parish for the last four.
"When I come to Mass at noon, the Anglos leave, and
[Latinos] go in and we don't even say 'hi' to each other, not even
'hi,'" says Garcia. "Sometimes I think there is a wall, but that wall
exists only because we don't have enough faith."
She takes her 7-year-old son, Jose Miguel, to summer
classes to improve his English.
"I would really like if we could all be together,
because we all worship the same God. We are all God's children," Garcia
says, "but the problem is the language."
A majority of Latino churchgoers in the United
States attend Mass with mostly Latinos in the pew and Spanish-speaking
clergy at the pulpit, according to a 2006 Pew Forum
survey. Today, 15 percent of priests ordained in the United States
are Latinos, according to the
United
States Conference of Catholic Bishops.
"It's like a wedding, and you have two families
coming together," says Moreno Garcia, "And they're two distinct and
different families. And we're not asking any family to cease being who
they are. But we are saying, 'Let's learn to be a bigger family.' "
St. Cecilia's has learned to be a bigger family. The
parish pastor, the Rev. William Vatterott, is a cheery 33-year-old St.
Louis native who jokes his young parish will one day have a
strong
soccer team.
Vatterott studied Spanish in Mexico and now officiates
bilingual baptisms -- as many as 10 at a time -- all of them Latinos.
The Latino-packed pews and the chile relleno craze
belie
St. Cecilia's once uncertain future. In late 2004, church leaders
considered closing its doors as the congregation dwindled and debt
mounted.
Instead, the archbishop designated
St. Cecilia's the
parish home for area Latinos, and the congregation quadrupled.
"It was a God-send," says long-time parishioner
Gloria Dowling of the Latino newcomers. "It's generating a lot of
energy, which is what we needed because the old people passed away, went
in the nursing home, and the young ones moved away, so that left a
skeleton crew here."
"Heaven on Earth is all kinds of
people," Dowling says, "We don't have to wait 'til we get up there. It's
all right here."
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