Monks party at Halloween

-30/10/03

The Dominican House of Studies in Washington DC will be making a special effort this year to celebrate Halloween,

Monks party at Halloween

-30/10/03

The Dominican House of Studies in Washington DC will be making a special effort this year to celebrate Halloween, including organising a service and party, to point to the festivalís Christian roots as All Hallow’s Eve.

Instead of trick-or-treating, hundreds will gather with the Dominican religious for the Vigil of the Saints – celebrated on the eve of All Saints’ Day.

The vigil centres on readings from the writings and lives of the saints, followed by Gregorian and Russian chant by the Dominican Schola Cantorum. There is also a universal call to holiness, night prayer, and a candlelight procession to the cloister’s reliquary while chanting the Litany of the Saints.

Afterward, the 60-some Dominican priests and brothers host a party for their guests.

“I particularly love the idea of giving saints a public ‘voice’ to speak to us today – and it’s clearly meeting a need,” Dominican Brother Nicholas Lombardo said to the Zenit news agency. “People of all ages, but a lot of young adults particularly, have been drawn to it in a way that has surprised even us.”

This year’s event is expected to draw close to 300.

“For this vigil, we’ve had the most people in our house chapel that have been there for anything that anybody can remember, with people crammed in ad hoc seating,” Brother Lombardo said.

The concept came from the Dominican Priory of St. Albert in Oakland, California, which started holding a similar event in 1998. This year a similar liturgical service for the All Saints vigil will begin at Providence College in Rhode Island.

Dominican Brother Dominic Langevin, one of the head coordinators of this year’s vigil in Washington, has seen the positive effect of the celebration.

Monks party at Halloween

-30/10/03

The Dominican House of Studies in Washington DC will be making a special effort this year to celebrate Halloween, including organising a service and party, to point to the festivalís Christian roots as All Hallow’s Eve.

Instead of trick-or-treating, hundreds will gather with the Dominican religious for the Vigil of the Saints – celebrated on the eve of All Saints’ Day.

The vigil centres on readings from the writings and lives of the saints, followed by Gregorian and Russian chant by the Dominican Schola Cantorum. There is also a universal call to holiness, night prayer, and a candlelight procession to the cloister’s reliquary while chanting the Litany of the Saints.

Afterward, the 60-some Dominican priests and brothers host a party for their guests.

“I particularly love the idea of giving saints a public ‘voice’ to speak to us today – and it’s clearly meeting a need,” Dominican Brother Nicholas Lombardo said to the Zenit news agency. “People of all ages, but a lot of young adults particularly, have been drawn to it in a way that has surprised even us.”

This year’s event is expected to draw close to 300.

“For this vigil, we’ve had the most people in our house chapel that have been there for anything that anybody can remember, with people crammed in ad hoc seating,” Brother Lombardo said.

The concept came from the Dominican Priory of St. Albert in Oakland, California, which started holding a similar event in 1998. This year a similar liturgical service for the All Saints vigil will begin at Providence College in Rhode Island.

Dominican Brother Dominic Langevin, one of the head coordinators of this year’s vigil in Washington, has seen the positive effect of the celebration.