Blog Archives

St. Greg’s on the Camino

SGA Camino Pilgrims crossing the Alps 2010

It has been a long standing tradition of St. Gregory’s Academy to send the boys on pilgrimage.  On some years the boys made a pilgrimage in Auriesville to the Shrine of our Lady of Martyrs.  While Fr. Stemler was chaplain he helped to start the tradition of making the Chartres Pilgrimage (which I almost did a year ago, but wedding season is a pilgrimage of its own).  I hope one day to do the Chartres pilgrimage, and at this point I’m thinking 2013.  We can start planning that in the fall.  But the most incredible and fantastic pilgrimage that St. Greg’s boys go on is the Camino de Santiago.  When the boys do this pilgrimage they usually do it after the school year in the summer time and they go with no money.  They bike all across Spain and juggle and sing for their daily needs.  This is not only an amazing act of faith, but also an incredible adventure.  Read John Sercer’s reflections on the pilgrimage told with wit and wisdom: https://adraughtofvintage.com/2010/07/15/viva-espana/.

The lads singing (notice their Pilgrims garb) on the Camino

The boys encounter on their journeys generous folk who are amazed by their juggling and singing and joy.  It is not uncommon for the boys to wake up a small village and bring them out to the town square to dance and sing and enjoy their juggling.  Mr. Bill McCarthy wrote up his reflections and experiences travelling with the boys for a few days on the Camino, and what his account reveals about the boys and their pilgrimage has made me seriously reflect on my own life and how I can try to live up to the great feats of faith, strength and joy that the boys are doing on a daily basis in Spain right now.

Read Bill McCarthy’s “News from the Camino 2012” here at the Gregory the Great website.

Bill with his son John on the Camino

Blessings,

Peter Bloch

SGA 2005

John Owen juggling on the Camino 2010

The trick called ‘Tower’ mesmerizes Spaniards

Bagpipes! Camino 2011

Alex Garbarino does fire poi on the Camino 2011

Last Blog Post as an Atheist

Here’s something edifying, entertaining, and enlightening.

It’s a blog post by an atheist blogger who finally converted.  Her writing is witty and intellectual (to fill our pedantry quota).

https://www.patheos.com/blogs/unequallyyoked/2012/06/this-is-my-last-post-for-the-patheos-atheist-portal.html

Enjoy,

PB

 

 

Auld Lang Syne

Dearest Friends,

I want to share this with you; it is a recording of the faculty of Glendale Preparatory Academy 2012 singing Auld Lang Syne at the Spring Concert.  I helped to organize this group, but could not have done it without the help of Tracy Peterson, who really whipped us into shape for the Spring concert.  Also, special thanks to the wonderful accompaniment from Cara and Erin, who did such a wonderful job and helped to make us sound even better.  Finally, thanks to the friends that sang alongside of me, it was a wonderful expression of our friendship and I will never forget it.

Singers

William Bertain – Baritone

Peter Bloch – Tenor

Stefano Coaloa – Tenor

Tracy Peterson  – Director/Alto

John-Paul Poppleton – Bass

Alison Roberts – Soprano

Rachel Ulrich – Alto

Zach Weisse – Bass

Travis Wilson – Bass

Accompaniment

Cara Valle – Violin

Erin Zoutendam – Cello


To listen, click on the link below

To download it right click and choose ‘Save Link As’

Auld Lang Syne

Note this recording is from one of our practices, and so it isn’t as polished as it was by the concert.  The song is called ‘Auld Lang Syne.’  It is a traditional Scottish folk song.  It is a poem written by the father of Romanticism Robert Burns.  The title can be translated as ‘for old time sake’ or long time since.  It is usually sung at departures and on New Years Eve.  I thought it a fitting song, both as a departure song, but also as a true expression of the friendship among the faculty at Glendale Prep, which has always had a strong and wonderful faculty culture (may it continue).

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