SEATTLE – On the first Saturday of each month, voices of parishioners weave together as they pray the rosary and attend Mass and Holy Hour at Our Lady of Fatima Church.

“I find it a beautiful moment of talking to the Lord in silence and listening to what he wants to tell us,” said parishioner Carmen Pelayre.

The first Saturdays — along with adoration, special speakers, a parish mission this fall and a new parish lending library — are part of the Seattle parish’s yearlong celebration of the 100th anniversary of the Virgin Mary’s apparitions in Fatima, Portugal. In July, the traveling International Pilgrim Virgin Statue of Our Lady of Fatima tour will come to the parish and visit five other parishes in the archdiocese (see sidebar). The year will conclude with a parish banquet in October, marking Mary’s final appearance in Fatima.

Father Phil Raether, Our Lady of Fatima’s pastor, said he hopes parishioners increase their love of the rosary and devotion to Mary during this year of celebration. “For us, Mary is a model for when you turn your life over to the Lord and how he wants to come into our lives,” Father Raether said.

Parishioner Harry Coveny, who has visited Fatima twice with his wife, Pauline, helped organize the parish events. Coveny said he hoped the events would help fellow parishioners learn more about Mary’s appearances to three shepherd children in Fatima. “Many people didn’t understand the parish statements about the origins of Fatima,” he said.

Mary appeared to the children — Lucia dos Santos, and Jacinta and Francisco Marto — in 1917 as World War I raged throughout Europe, North Africa and the Middle East. “Mary … asked people to pray the rosary for peace and the end of the war,” said Barb Ernster, communications manager for the World Apostolate of Fatima.

As part of the local parish’s anniversary celebrations, the Covenys loaned their Our Lady of Fatima statue and two glow-in-the-dark rosaries to their parish school. Pauline Coveny said she received the statue as a gift 55 years ago and had it blessed at Fatima. It’s encased in a wooden box for safety.

Beginning with the kindergarten class, students in grades K–2 at Our Lady of Fatima School were able to take the statue and rosaries home overnight. (Students in other grades will have the opportunity this fall).

“Hopefully when the kids brought the statue home, it motivated their parents to join them in saying the rosary,” Pauline Coveny said.

Parish families are also invited to borrow the statue of Mary that is present at the parish’s first Saturday gatherings. The events, including a meal after Mass, are hosted by the parish’s Filipino community, which in the past has held similar gatherings at parishioners’ homes. 

“We love being in the church because more people can participate,” Pelayre said. “We want more people to have this devotion to the Blessed Mother.”

The International Pilgrim Virgin Statue, carved in 1947, will visit five parishes in the Archdiocese of Seattle during July