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2531: San Ignacio,
Montserrat, Buenos Aires, Argentina |
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Photo:
© Leandro Kibisz and used under license
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Mystery
Worshipper: Augustine the Aleut.
The church:
San
Ignacio, Montserrat, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Denomination:
Roman Catholic,
Archdiocese
of Buenos Aires.
The building:
This is one of the oldest churches in Argentina, first built
in adobe by the Jesuits in 1675. The current building dates
from 1686 and was the first brick building in the city. The
Jesuits retook possession of the place in 1836 after the order’s
re-establishment and have been turfed out of it at least once
since. In any case, they’re back. It is one of the great historical
churches of the country, where a mass of thanksgiving was said
for the reconquest of the city from the British in 1806, and
where the University of Buenos Aires was inaugurated. It also
served for a while as the cathedral. It has two great square
towers in the front and its whitewashed exterior dominates the
street. The blue and gold high altar features Our Lady of Montserrat
sitting in front of the jagged mountain in Catalonia.
The church:
It has the character of a university church, serving its college
to the south and the four small universities in the neighbourhood
(Buenos Aires has almost 50 universities). Apparently a centre
for charismatics, it maintains a ministry to the deaf, as well
as to latchkey children.
The neighbourhood:
San Ignacio is on the western end of the Montserrat district,
and it is the less prosperous end, with offices and apartments
from 70 years ago. Its restaurants cater to a poorer clientele.
It is in the Manzana de las Luces zone, the centre of intellectual
ferment during the enlightenment of Carlos III and the independence
era. Argentines continue to be proud of this period: I was twice
propelled by acquaintances into an extraordinary bookstore across
the street, which was the powerhouse of writing, history, science,
and poetry for a century. Students artfully drape themselves
over benches and steps outside the church with the languid insouciance
and coiled energy of the young folk of Buenos Aires.
The cast:
As well as the officiating priest (the rector, Padre Francisco
Baigorria?), there was a deacon, as well as another priest in
mufti, and two women lectors.
The date & time:
Wednesday, February 20, 2013, 7.00pm. [Editor's note: This report
was filed on April 24, 2013.]
What was the name of the service?
Mass.
How full was the building?
It could seat about 400; I counted 48 women and 35 men.
Did anyone welcome you personally?
Welcomers are not part of church culture here, but as I made
my way to my pew, two students stopped me, one to shake my hand
and the other to hug me and kiss me on the cheek (a universal
practice here, even among police constables greeting each other)
and ask me where I was from. One of the mufti priests stopped
by my pew and said hello with a more restrained handshake and
shoulder-pat. I got nods of greeting from other parishioners
as they came in.
Was your pew comfortable?
Worshippers at Jesuit churches seem to benefit from comfortable
pews, although the kneelers looked rather spartan.
How would you describe the pre-service
atmosphere?
The warm weather had broken with a downpour, turning the insubstantially-dressed
porteños into very drenched folk. One worshipper provided
another one with a light sweater so that she did not look as
much like a refugee from a wet t-shirt contest.
What were the exact opening words of the
service?
The usual invocation of the Holy Trinity.
What books did the congregation use during the
service?
There were some parish leaflets with the week’s propers and
notices, and New Testaments about, but no missals. Everyone
seems to know it by heart here.
What musical instruments were played?
There was an a cappella hymn as the gospel book was
brought into our midst for the reading by one of the women lectors.
Did anything distract you?
Three young women students sitting in front of me, whose liveliness
made me feel my years.
Was the worship stiff-upper-lip, happy clappy, or
what?
San Ignacio is apparently the centre for the charismatic movement
here; about a dozen worshippers had their hands in the orans
position during the consecration prayers.
Exactly how long was the sermon?
8 minutes.
On a scale of 1-10, how good was the preacher?
8 I score him thus as he cast his voice well, not using
the microphone, and with a modulated tone. Everyone seemed to
pay close attention to what he was saying.
In a nutshell, what was the sermon
about?
Given that he spoke well, I was able to catch stray words and phrases, but not enough to report on this.
Which part of the service was like being in
heaven?
Trying to figure out the protocol for the collection, as the
(women) ushers went up and down and around the pews with their
little collection sacks.
And which part was like being in... er... the other place?
I was only moderately dampened by the downpour, but it was a
bit chilly. Given that the day had been in the high 20s C. and
quite humid, I should not complain.
What happened when you hung around after the service looking lost?
The young couple who had greeted me previously came up to me
again and we spoke in a mixture of English and Castilian. They
were both students and were to be married in May. Like many
other students in this troubled country, they soon asked me
about the availability of work in Canada ("Is it true that
there are jobs for young people who want to work?"). This
conversation was interrupted for a minute as they gave some
coins to a mendicant parishioner doing the rounds of those left
in the church.
How would you describe the after-service
coffee?
At 8.30, the restaurants were opening for dinner, so I headed
to an outdoor café near the legendary statue of Mafalda for
the justly legendary beef of Argentina.
How would you feel about making this church your regular (where 10 = ecstatic, 0 = terminal)?
9 For its friendliness. I can see that this would be
a good place to meet people and so perhaps I would have been
sensible to have gone there more frequently.
Did the service make you feel glad to be a
Christian?
The intensity of Buenos Aires somehow is reflected in one’s
perceptions of everything about one, including church services.
What one thing will you remember about all this in seven days' time?
How, for two students worried about their future, their first
reaction was to help someone poorer than they were. |
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