|
|
History of Our Lady Of La Vang
Our Lady of La Vang is the central and national shrine of Vietnam, approximately 60
kilometers from the former capital Hue. The name is derived from a type of ferm
which used to grow in great quantities in the region. During the great persecution
(1798-1801) many Catholics took refuge in the jungle situated in proximity of Quang
Tri, a village in central Vietnam, where they experienced hunger and sickness, and
prepared themselves for martyrdom. One day, as the community was assembled in prayer,
the figure of a lady surrounded by many lights, appeared to them. She presented
herself as the Mother of God, encouraged and consoled them, and gave them a special
sign of her loving care. She advised the people to use the leaves of the fern to
treat their ailments, and promised them to receive their prayers with maternal
generosity. All who would congregate on this site to pray would be heard and their
petitions granted. Mary appeared on several occasions at the same site. After the
persecution in 1802, the Catholics left their jungle hiding place and returned to
their villages.
|
|
However, the story of the apparition and its message was passed on. In 1820 a chapel
was built at the apparition site. From 1820-1885 still another wave of persecution
decimated the Catholics population. More than 100,000 Vietnamese Catholics died as
martyrs. In 1885 the chapel in honor of Our Lady of La Vang was destroyed by a fanatic.
A new chapel was built between 1886 and 1901 (consecration). Soon it was no longer able
to hold the many pilgrims to La Vang, and in 1923 a new and bigger church was erected.
It was consecrated in 1928 (August 22) in the presence of 20,000 pilgrims. Every three
years a national pilgrimage was organized for the whole country which was to have a
special meaning even after the separation of South and North. In 1959 La Vang was
officially declared a national shrine, marking the 300 years of the Church's presence
in Vietnam (AAS 51 (1959) 84-86). The Church of La Vang was made a basilica minor
in 1961.
|
The Holy Father recently said, "In visiting the shrine of Our Lady of La Vang,
who is so loved by the Vietnamese faithful, pilgrims come to entrust to her their joys
and sorrows, their hopes and sufferings. In this way, they call on God and become
intercessors for their families and nation, asking the Lord to infuse in the heart
of all people feelings of peace, fraternity and solidarity, so that all the Vietnamese
will be more united every day in the construction of a world based on essential spiritual
and moral values, where each one will be recognized because of his dignity as a son of
God, and be able go in freedom and as a son toward the Father of Heaven, 'rich in mercy' ".
From the Marian Library/International Marian Research Institute
|
|
Untitled

Weekday Masses / Lễ Ngày Thường / Misas Diarias
8:30 am — Thứ Hai, Thứ Tư, và Thứ Sáu — Vietnamese
8:30 am — Martes y Jueves — Spanish
Saturday Masses / Lễ Thứ Bảy/ Misa del Sábado
8:00 am — Vietnamese
6:00 pm — (Vigil) Vietnamese & English
8:00 pm — (Vigilia) Neo-Catechumenal Spanish
Sunday Masses / Lễ Chúa Nhật / Misas Dominicales
6:30 am — Vietnamese
8:30 am — Vietnamese
10:30 am — Vietnamese
12:30 am — Spanish
4:30 pm — English - Lifeteen
6:30 am — Vietnamese

Monday-Friday
9:00 AM - 7:00 PM
Saturday
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Sunday
8:00 AM - 2:00 PM
288 South Harbor Blvd.
Santa Ana, CA 92704
Tel:(714)775-6200
Fax:(714)775-6226
parish@ourladyoflavang.org
Map To Church
|
|
|
|