The History

OF

ST. JUDE PARISH

In 1924, the Diocese of Tucson received about an acre of land in Tuba City to be used only for Catholic Mission purposes. No priest was available to care for this remote western section of the Reservation until a group of Catholic people from Tuba City, both Native and non-native in 1951 journeyed to St. Joseph’s Mission in Keams Canyon seeking the priest to offer them Mass at regular intervals.

The present day St. Jude Church in Tuba City, Arizona was built in 1961.Offering witness to the Gospel through service to the larger Tuba City community pastored by Father Faustinus Ibebuike.

The history of St. Jude Parish of the Gallup Diocese

begins much earlier than 1924...

...when an acre of land was received on the Navajo Reservation intended solely for use by Catholics. Nearly 100 years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock, the Spanish explorer and Franciscan friar, Marcos de Niza, arrived in the area of Zuni after a journey of more than two months from Mexico City. At a point about 40 miles south of present day Gallup, New Mexico, this adventuresome padre on May 23, 1539, built a large mound of stone with a cross on top and dedicated the region to Saint Francis of Assisi.

Scores of other Spanish explorers, friars, conquistadors and settlers would establish these new Mexican colonies throughout present-day Arizona and New Mexico and the early Franciscan mission activities had the support of the King of Spain. Directly to the East of our church is a memorial to the Dominguez-Escalante Expedition conducted in 1776 to find an overland route from Santa Fe to the Spanish missions in California.

Two Franciscan priests traveled with a cartographer and eight men and though they were not successful reaching California, their expedition aided future travelers. But over the years, the natives were subjected to harsh treatment at the hands of the Spanish colonists who placed heavy demands on them, suppressing native customs and culture, especially their native practices of religion, eventually turning to the natives for their slave labor in building up the Spanish rule. Frequently, the missionaries were on the side of the Natives trying to get better treatment for them, but the resentment of the Natives and numerous revolts proved the only means of escaping this dehumanizing treatment, and the very word ‘Christian’ became synonymous with someone who came to kill and plunder, seize the women and sell them into slavery.

After 300 years of Spanish rule, Mexico was able to win its independence from Spain in 1821 and in May, 1848, the Mexican era ended with New Mexico and Arizona becoming part of the United States. By 1875, the Diocese of Santa Fe became an archdiocese and Bishop John Baptist Lamy its first archbishop.With the completion of the railroad lines crisscrossing the West in the late 1800s, settlers began to arrive and the first Catholic church in Gallup was built in 1899.

Also in the late 1890s, Mother Katherine Drexel, founder of the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament and canonized a Saint in 1988, became interested in building a school on the Navajo Reservation to provide a Catholic education for the native children. She purchased land on the edge of the Reservation and began plans for a school. She also sought the assistance of priests to serve the school and area Catholics, and again it was the Franciscan Fathers, this time from Cincinnati, Ohio, who responded to her call and founded St. Michael Mission in what is now St. Michael, Arizona. Their work among the Navajo grew and the friars by 1921 had established four other missions on the Reservation at Fort Defiance, Chinle, Lukachukai and Tohatchi.

In 1936, Pope Pius XII, then Cardinal Pacelli, visited the Southwest portion of the United States by air. He saw the vast expanse to be served from Santa Fe and wondered how the scattered Natives in that area would be adequately evangelized. Soon after, when he was named Pope, he directed the future of the missions on the Reservation to be planned by the Archbishop of Santa Fe and the Bishop of Tucson. After much discussion and consultation, the Diocese of Gallup, New Mexico was erected on July 20, 1940, with Father Bernard T. Espelage, O.F.M., named its first bishop.

The Diocese of Gallup, within the boundaries of two states, New Mexico and Arizona, covers the entire Navajo Reservation, an area of 55,468 square miles, roughly the size of West Virginia. They are called Navajos, but they call themselves Dine.’ They are the largest indigenous people in North America with the Dine’ Bike’yah, the Navajo country, the land they call home.As mentioned, in 1924, the Diocese of Tucson received about an acre of land in Tuba City to be used only for Catholic Mission purposes.

No priest was available to care for this remote western section of the Reservation until a group of Catholic people from Tuba City, both Native and non-native in 1951 journeyed to St. Joseph’s Mission in Keams Canyon seeking the priest to offer them Mass at regular intervals. In 1956, the first resident priest was assigned to Tuba City, Father Flann O’Neil, OFM, who lived in a small house trailer while formulating plans for the construction of a church and rectory.

After a trade of property with the owners of our present location, a church was constructed and dedicated in 1961 under the patronage of St. Jude Thaddeus the Apostle. The rectory was completed in 1965 and a parish hall/gymnasium was built in 1971 by the Franciscan Brothers work crew.The Franciscan Friars continued their service to the parish as pastors until 1994 when the Vincentian Fathers, Congregation of the Mission, founded by St. Vincent de Paul, agreed to enter the diocese and serve in Tuba City, Page and Keams Canyon.

Father Godden Menard, C.M. pastored the parish community beginning in November of 1995 and followed by Father Jay Jung, C.M., who served from August of 2012 to September 2022. The parish had also been blessed by the arrival of the Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul from August 1996 to June 2023, serving as parish administrators, pastoral associates, religious education directors and organizers of the St. Jude Food Bank.

GRATIDUDE

June 12, 2023

Dear Friends,   

Everytime I think of you, I thank God for you.   You were supportive, challenging and delightful!   Keep on being Christ to others!  Your faith has enabled you to be the cornerstone of ST. Jude's.

I will never forget my time with you for it was a blessing!   Be assured of my prayers, and love as you grow and journey together with God as your leader and guide.  Special prayers too for your new pastor, all the way from Africa.   

Sister Mary Rogers, DC

June 16, 2023

Dear Friends,

My heart is filled with gratitude to God  for the wonderful blessing to be with you and  journey with you since November of 2022.  I thank you for your love, friendship and your example of generous service to Christ and to others. You have a very special place in my heart. 

May God's abundant blessings be with you always and  your loving ministries to others. United with you in prayers and in the Eucharist,

With love, gratitude and prayers,

Sr. Trang Truong, DC

June 20, 2023

Dear St. Jude parishioners and community members of Tuba City,

 I am grateful to have had the opportunity to know you and to serve you.  It gave me a better understanding of the life and culture of the Navajo and Hopi people.  I have learned so much from you.  You will always be a part of who I am as a person and as a Daughter of Charity.  My experience of living on the Navajo Reservation has helped me to better serve other tribes and other indigenous communities.  I hope that the presence of the Sisters in your midst helped each one of you in some way.  May that be by getting involved in the parish life or attending to the physical, spiritual, and material needs of your neighbors.  I pray and hope that you will continue to do this because ultimately, as baptized Christians, we are all called by God to love and serve one another as He did. 

 Let me close with a quote from Helen Keller.  “When one door of happiness closes, another opens; but often we look so long at the closed door that we do not see the one which has been opened for us”.

 So “Thank you” and let us continue to remember the good times and the hard times we all have experienced as pilgrims on the journey.  

Sister Frances Vista

Daughter of Charity

June 22, 2023

Dear St. Jude Friends,

          Farewells bring new beginnings. A heartfelt thanks to all the Daughters who have made a lasting impression on St. Jude parish. Their dedication and perseverance has been an example to all of us. I know that you, the parishioners of St Jude, will continue your commitment to serving your neighbors, especially those that may be struggling through difficult times. 

         During my 42 years on the Navajo reservation, 22 in Tuba City, I learned so much from the Navajo people. As part of St. Jude parish, I grew stronger in my faith because of you. I made lasting friendships that I still treasure today. Continue to help St. Jude grow and thrive making a strong church for your children and grandchildren. My heart will always remain with the native people.

                                                                                                       Karen Hockins

June 23, 2023

Dear Everybody,

Many blessings to you as I recall my thirteen wonderful years from 1998 to 2011 at St. Jude's.  In the beginning I was serving in the Food Bank and the Soup Kitchen.  Then the most challenging for me was organizing the Society of St. Vincent de Paul.   The most memorable was the Jail Ministry where I was able to bring in volunteers for AA, share spiritually with the inmates, and sing in Navajo with them. Home visiting in Tuba City and Moenkopi brought me even closer to the people. I always felt welcome. Wish I could be there still. Thank You! 

Love and Prayers,

Sister Elizabeth Racko