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What
is it like to ‘hear’ a hand? You have to be deaf to
understand!” Thus begins a poem written by deaf poet Willard J.
Madsen. It was given to me when I visited Fr. Guy Blair, SCJ, who was
recently assigned to San Francesco di Paola Church in San Antonio to
work with the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Ministry.
[He began his ministry there last summer] The poem offers hearing
people an insight into the everyday lives of those who cannot hear.
Although he is not deaf, Fr. Blair has dedicated his years in the priesthood
to trying to bridge the gap between the hearing community and the deaf
community in the Catholic Church. But the inspiration he gains from
deaf people began long before his seminary days. A tale of two women Fr. Blair grew up in
Connecticut. When he was 10, a neighbor beckoned him to her porch and
asked him to explain the term “resurrection.” He could not
understand why this grown woman, whom he saw in church all the time, did
not know the meaning of such a basic tenet of the church. Then she
told him she was deaf, that she had never heard a sermon, a song or a
prayer in church. Young Guy Blair and his neighbor began a friendship
that would last until the woman died. He admired and was inspired by
her. Another childhood encounter
was not as pleasant. Fr. Blair remembers an elderly woman who always
dressed in black and sat on the steps of city hall. Neighborhood
children called her “crazy” and often chased her or threw stones at
her. Yet she too often sat in church. “I was struck by her
isolation,” Fr. Blair said. Knowing these two women
helped shape Father Blair’s ministry. While in the seminary, he took
classes at night and learned sign language. He then went on to minister
to deaf communities in Toronto, Canada; Madison, Wis. and Chicago. Sobering numbers There are approximately
23 million deaf persons in the United States. Yet of this number, only 5
percent attend any church. According to Fr. Blair,
this is because most churches do not have interpreters or people skilled
in sign language who would make the church accessible to the deaf
community. He is one of nine priests in the United States whose
full-time ministry is largely working with deaf people. A need
for understanding Fr. Blair hopes to
promote an understanding and acceptance between hearing and deaf people.
“Deaf people do not want to become hearing people,” he said.
“Unlike, say, Hispanic people who learn English to be able to
communicate with English speaking people, deaf people cannot ‘learn’
to hear. They just want to be accepted. They are not sick people needing
a cure.” Shaping the liturgy Fr. Blair plans to
continue some of the activities currently available to deaf Catholics at
San Francesco di Paola. These include a weekly Bible study; weekly
adoration, meditation and prayer; Sunday liturgy (an 11:15 a.m. Mass
which will now be “symcommed”—spoken and signed—by Fr.
Blair) and an active CCD program. He also sees a need for lector
training. “All privileges should be
open to deaf Catholics,” he said. “They should be included as full
members of the Body of Christ. This includes involving them in
services as lectors, Eucharistic ministers, greeters and ushers.”
Fr. Blair also envisions starting a summer camp for deaf
children. But before making any changes or additions to the program, Fr.
Blair plans a meeting with the Catholic deaf community. He wants their
members to help shape the liturgy and define his role as they envision.
“Deaf people are always being ‘done to’ or ‘done
for,”’ he explains. “But this is their church, and I am here to
serve them.”
Fr. Blair appreciates the Archdiocese of San Antonio being
enlightened in seeing the value of our deaf and hard of hearing
parishioners. He also appreciates the support and contributions of the
Knights of Columbus to the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Ministry. He looks
forward to continuing here the ministry he began so long ago.
“I love working with
deaf people,” he said. “When I first started, I thought I would
bring God to them. But what has happened is that they have shown me God
— a very patient God.”
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