Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Vietnamese Martyrs; Died: 1745–1862, present-day Vietnam: ... one of the largest of which is located in Arlington, Texas, in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. [7] ...
Pope Francis named Olson as bishop of Fort Worth on November 19, 2013. He was consecrated on January 29, 2014, by Archbishop Gustavo García-Siller. Archbishop Emeritus Fiorenza and Bishop Kevin Vann acted as the co-consecrators. [3] The liturgy was celebrated in the Fort Worth Convention Center. [3]
Their memorial in the current General Roman Calendar is on November 24 as Saint Andrew Dung-Lac and Companions (Vietnamese: Anrê Dũng-Lạc và các bạn tử đạo), although many of these saints have a second memorial, having been beatified and inscribed on the local calendar prior to the canonization of the group.
Vietnamese-Americans immigrated to the United States in different waves. The first wave of Vietnamese from just before or after the Fall of Saigon/the last day of the Vietnam War, April 30, 1975. They consisted of mostly educated, white collar public servants, senior military officers, and upper and middle class Vietnamese and their families.
The 103 Sainted Korean Martyrs (1984, North Korea and South Korea) Lorenzo Ruiz and fifteen companions, martyrs (1987, Japan and Philippines) The 117 Vietnamese Martyrs (1988, Vietnam) John Gabriel Perboyre, priest of the Congregation of the Mission and martyr (1996, China) The 120 Martyr Saints of China (2000, China)
Thomas Toán (c.1764-1840), Vietnamese catechist, one of the Vietnamese Martyrs; Jacobo Kyushei Tomonaga (c.1582-1633), Japanese priest, one of the 16 Martyrs of Japan. Dominic Trạch Đoài (c.1792-1840), Vietnamese priest, one of the Vietnamese Martyrs; Joseph Tuân (c.1821-1861), Vietnamese priest, one of the Vietnamese Martyrs
Near the north end of the boulevard, alongside Fort Wadsworth's Father Capodanno Memorial Chapel, stands a 1977 statue of the chaplain praying for a fallen corpsman during their final battle. [22] The nearby South Beach neighborhood is the location of Father Vincent Capodanno Catholic Academy, formed by the merger of two parish elementary ...
He was born Trần An Dũng in Vietnam in 1795. He took the name Andrew at his baptism (Anrê Dũng) and was ordained a priest on 15 March 1823. [2] During persecution, Andrew Dũng changed his name to Lạc to avoid capture, and thus he is memorialised as Andrew Dũng-Lạc (Anrê Dũng Lạc). [3]