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Angelus News | August 2-9, 2019 | Vol. 4 No. 27

A nationwide trend pushing to remove tributes to certain historical figures of U.S. history has seized on a new, unlikely target: the bells lining California’s iconic El Camino Real. The reason? The belief that Spanish missionaries — among them St. Junípero Serra — were oppressors, captors, and even murderers of California’s first peoples. On Page 10, renowned historian Gregory Orfalea examines the most common critiques of the Spanish evangelization of California and makes the case for why the bells represent a legacy of love, not oppression.

A nationwide trend pushing to remove tributes to certain historical figures of U.S. history has seized on a new, unlikely target: the bells lining California’s iconic El Camino Real. The reason? The belief that Spanish missionaries — among them St. Junípero Serra — were oppressors, captors, and even murderers of California’s first peoples. On Page 10, renowned historian Gregory Orfalea examines the most common critiques of the Spanish evangelization of California and makes the case for why the bells represent a legacy of love, not oppression.

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Authorities inspect St. Madeleine Sophie Barat Church in Trona, California.<br />

DIOCESE OF SAN BERNARDINO<br />

A ‘moment of fear<br />

and uncertainty’<br />

The recent series of earthquakes near Ridgecrest may have<br />

damaged a tiny town’s only Catholic church beyond repair<br />

BY NATALIE ROMANO / ANGELUS<br />

Patricia Scyrkels was one of the<br />

first parishioners to set foot in<br />

Trona’s Catholic church after<br />

the earthquake that struck the<br />

California desert July 4-5.<br />

She could be one of the last.<br />

Scyrkels was part of a small group to<br />

inspect St. Madeleine Sophie Barat<br />

Church following the first temblor,<br />

centered between Trona and Ridgecrest<br />

in San Bernardino County.<br />

When she looked around her<br />

church, she was devastated by what<br />

she saw. Split walls, buckled floors,<br />

and broken statues all stemming from<br />

the 6.4 shaker. San Bernardino County<br />

officials determined that, pending<br />

further inspection, St. Madeleine is<br />

no longer safe for services.<br />

The small 300-seat church, built<br />

in 1958, is a mission of St. Joseph<br />

Church in Barstow. Priests from the<br />

parish make the 100-mile trip to<br />

Trona twice a month to offer Mass. If<br />

22 • ANGELUS • <strong>August</strong> 2-9, <strong>2019</strong>

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