A long journey delivering peace
Michele Marr
As a child Tang Wo Ping attended the Phoenix Chinese School in Arizona
with his six siblings.
The children of Chinese immigrants, they went to the Phoenix school in
the evening after a full day at St. Mary’s Catholic school to learn their
parents’ native tongue and culture.
Late last year Tang, now Father Emery, was the keynote speaker at the
school’s 60th anniversary reunion. He is a Franciscan monk, the author of
a book titled “China Connection” -- a book that recounts his pilgrimage
to the land of his forefathers -- and a Roman Catholic priest.
On Sunday, June 9, at the age 74, Tang celebrated another milestone
anniversary -- the 50th anniversary of his ordination. The festive Mass
and reception was held at Sts. Simon and Jude Church in Huntington Beach.
Tang designed the invitation and addressed hundreds of them by hand,
as he recovered from surgery to remove a malignant tumor from one of his
lungs.
“I owe it to these people who have been my friends through all these
years,” he said.
Tang entered the Franciscan Seminary in Santa Barbara at the age of
13. He was one of 14 boys from his eighth-grade class at St. Mary’s
school who did.
“My mom was swept off her feet by the decision. My dad said I was too
young to know what I was doing -- and he was right,” Tang said and
laughed.
Yet he was the only one of those 14 boys who continued at the seminary
year after year. A piece of him broke off, he said, each time someone
left and went home. After 12 years of study and a one-year internship
Tang was ordained. He served as an administrative educator in Northern
California until 1965. Then for 14 years he worked at the Franciscan
Communications Center in Los Angeles. He is an accomplished photographer
and artist. In 1983 he produced an inspirational book with his friend and
fellow Franciscan, Hugh Noonan. Tang was the photographer for “Listen,
the Clams Are Talking.” Noonan was the writer. Tang describes his stories
of human nature and the human condition as “timely and timeless.”
Tang also developed and still produces a line of greeting cards called
Care-n-Share cards. Each card features one of his photographs and a
written message that he hopes will, “build bridges of understanding and
bring peace to damaged lives.” He describes his ministry as flowing, with
one thing leading to the next. He came from the Serra Retreat Center in
Malibu to Sts. Simon and Jude in 1994 to direct its retreats and parish
missions. On the Saturday morning before his anniversary celebration,
Tang sat at the desk in his bright, airy office. He rested a hand on a
neat stack of opened greetings.
“I ask myself, in what way have you affected people,” he said.
Scores of handwritten messages in as many greeting cards answer him.
It is clear that this man who is often affectionately, simply called E.T.
has touched countless lives.
“Because of your teachings and pounding it into my heart and head I
also will celebrate 50 years of marriage,” a man named Peter wrote Tang.
“You’ve changed our lives and made them better. It’s going on four
generations of our family that your love has affected,” penned a woman
named Mary.
“You are the sunshine in our garden of life and we love you,” the note
from a couple, Bud and Caryl, read.
On the front of program for his anniversary Mass was the prayer of St.
Francis of Assisi in classical Chinese. In English its first lines would
read, “Lord, make me an instrument of your peace. Where there is hatred
let me sow love.”
On the back of the program was a note to Tang from the congregation of
Sts. Simon and Jude Church, “You have taught us well about the mercy and
love of Jesus. For this you will always have a fond and lasting place in
our hearts.”
In the minutes before the Mass, the pews in the sanctuary filled with
members of the church, members of Tang’s family, old friends and
colleagues. Tang stood quietly and looked out at them.
“Please, give me a moment to savor this,” he asked them. Soft,
agreeable laughter rippled across the room.
* MICHELE MARR is a freelance writer and graphic designer from
Huntington Beach. She has been interested in religion and ethics for as
long as she can remember. She can be reached at o7
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