ISRAEL AT WAR - DAY 60

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Holy camel!

Priests bless parade of pets at New York cathedral

Manhattan Episcopal church invites four-legged — and some no-legged — guests to mark feast of St. Francis of Assisi, known as patron saint of pets and animals

  • People take part in the Procession of Animals before the Blessing of the Animals during the St. Francis Day Service at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City on October 1, 2023. (Leonardo Munoz/AFP)
    People take part in the Procession of Animals before the Blessing of the Animals during the St. Francis Day Service at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City on October 1, 2023. (Leonardo Munoz/AFP)
  • A person holds their pet for the Blessing of the Animals during the St. Francis Day Service at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City on October 01, 2023. (Leonardo Munoz / AFP)
    A person holds their pet for the Blessing of the Animals during the St. Francis Day Service at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City on October 01, 2023. (Leonardo Munoz / AFP)
  • People take part in the Procession of Animals before the Blessing of the Animals during the St. Francis Day Service at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City on October 01, 2023. (Photo by Leonardo Munoz / AFP)
    People take part in the Procession of Animals before the Blessing of the Animals during the St. Francis Day Service at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City on October 01, 2023. (Photo by Leonardo Munoz / AFP)
  • A priest blesses a pet during the Blessing of the Animals after the St. Francis Day Service at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City on October 01, 2023. (Leonardo Munoz / AFP)
    A priest blesses a pet during the Blessing of the Animals after the St. Francis Day Service at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City on October 01, 2023. (Leonardo Munoz / AFP)
  • People take part in the Procession of Animals before the Blessing of the Animals during the St. Francis Day Service at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City on October 01, 2023. (Leonardo Munoz / AFP)
    People take part in the Procession of Animals before the Blessing of the Animals during the St. Francis Day Service at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City on October 01, 2023. (Leonardo Munoz / AFP)
  • A priest blesses a pet dogduring the Blessing of the Animals after the St. Francis Day Service at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City on October 01, 2023. (Photo by Leonardo Munoz / AFP)
    A priest blesses a pet dogduring the Blessing of the Animals after the St. Francis Day Service at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City on October 01, 2023. (Photo by Leonardo Munoz / AFP)

NEW YORK — New York worshipers celebrated mass at St. John the Divine Cathedral on Sunday alongside hundreds of animals — including a camel, a pony, snakes, ostriches, geese, cats and dogs — which all queued up for blessings of their own.

The Manhattan Episcopal church invited its four-legged guests — or no-legged, in the case of the snakes — to mark the feast of St. Francis of Assisi, known as the patron saint of pets and animals.

Sunday’s ceremony was a special milestone for the parish, which has not held a traditional first-weekend-of-October animal blessing since 2018, due to a fire and then the COVID-19 pandemic.

Animal lovers of many faiths brought their furry friends to receive a little extra grace, including Jon Shweky, who is Jewish, and Christine Cookman, who is Catholic. They brought their black labrador, who is training to become a guide for the blind starting in November.

“We wanted to bring him for a blessing before he went in [to become a guide dog], for a good health and good luck,” Cookman told AFP.

“It’s such a spiritual [and] amazing thing to be involved with a church that recognizes the soul of animals,” she added.

The cavernous interior of the neogothic cathedral — whose construction began in 1892 — allowed space for around 1,500 human attendees to join in on the $15 service, which was presided over by New York Episcopal Bishop Andrew Dietsche.

Most of the critters — the majority of them dogs — did their best to quietly endure the Mass, though some did become agitated when the camel processed down the aisle.

One creature did cause a small incident when it urinated on one of the stone columns helping to hold the weight of the building, whose dome was designed by Spanish architect Rafael Guastavino.

Kristin Portecella, 62, and her mother Dagmar brought in their dog Sadie for a blessing, happy to catch the one day a year when pets are permitted in church.

“They are part of our… unconditional love,” she said of her pup.

Also filling the pews at St. John’s were an alligator, an owl, bunnies, goats, a lemur, a duck — along with several other species.

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