Wednesday, December 16, 2009

More Bells! This Time, East to West!

Our first posting of bellringing stories took us from Vancouver Island to Central Nova Scotia. This time we'll go the other way round -- and we're still waiting to hear from Newfoundland, Prince Edward Island, and New Brunswick! And how about Nunavut, NWT, and Yukon?

Everyone at Resurrection Lutheran church Halifax, NS, was given a jingle bell during worship and encouraged, wherever they were at 3pm on Sunday, to stop and ring their bell.

Over in Truro, First United has a BIG bell ...


And a lot of kids to ring it!


A loyal friend helps with counting the rings in Milford, NS.



Canine involvement seems to be a recurring them in the bellringing. Shades of Pavlov? Togo the dog helps Philippe Gaillard, Susan Gardner and Angela Gaillard at St Francis Assisi Roman Catholic parish in the Diocese of St Jean-Longueil.


It takes a lot of effort to ring this bell at St. John's United in Tweed, Ontario.



In Orillia, the congregation from St. John's United wrote of how moved they were to be part of a world wide initiative, and how disappointed they were when the bell-ringing was finished! John Amesbury from the Peterborough area sent us this colourful report:

WE BROKE THE BELL! St. John's Church, Ida, sits on the brow of a hill overlooking pastoral, rural Ontario near Peterborough. It was mild, but raining with snow mixed in. 20+ people had stayed behind after our annual Christmas pot luck lunch to ring the bell for climate action. Because the church tower is in need of some major repairs, it was decided to ring the tower bell only 4 times during our "action"(each time being rung 15 peals). In between, our ringers stood on the front steps of the church and rang a school yard bell by hand (15 times each).This gave an opportunity for our event to be truly intergenerational.

At any rate we came to the last ringing of the tower bell. The ringer gave a huge pull on the rope, pulling it off its pulley -- the rope extended on the floor and the bell continuing to ring on its own until it ran out of steam! Now someone has the unpleasant taask of climbing into the unheated tower to set it all right again. Some, I'm sure, wondered who would hear our ringing efforts, but I like to think in Scriptural terms. Their sound is gone out to all lands.


At Beach United in Toronto, they drummed as part of the service and then out in the rain:



In Beamsville, ON, ringers from age 7 to their late 80s showed up to ring the bell at Trinity United. The young woman below took the lead and rang the bell 150 times herself, others chipping in for the remaining 200 chimes. Trinity reports that "It took only about 20 minutes to ring the bell in our church tower 350 times ... it may have been more because the kids really got into it! Not only did it support the KAIROS initiative, it was tons of fun to get folks together who had never had the opportunity to ring the bell."


The Dufferin KAIROS group rang the bells in Shelburne.


And a lot of joy was had at Richmond Hill United! St. Mary's Anglican also took part, providing hot chocolate for the curious.


Methodical ringing --and recordkeeping!-- at St. Jude's in Oakville. They say "we're quite ready to keep ringing people's bells, so to speak, as more initiatives are created in this vital effort."



In London, Ontario, cold weather kept them inside at Good News Church:


In Thunder Bay, Knox Pruden and St. Paul's United Churches rang their bells, while the Unitarian Fellowship banged pots and pans. At St. Andrew's United in Sioux Lookout, they played the carillon and beat tambourines 350 times. Winnipeg was busy. Here are a few shots from St. Benedict's Monastery and St. Andrews River Heights United Church.




More bells in Nelson, BC -- this time from the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate:


At St. Matthew's Anglican in South Slocan, they turned out from age 14 months to 94 years, and everyone took a turn ringing the bell. Church warden Sharon Speirs writes, "The villagers were curious, and began to talk about what it meant, so it worked!"

A little further down the road, it was nothing but handbells at Castlegar United!


KAIROS Salmon Arm activist Anne Williams Morris rings the bells at St. Mary's Anglican-United in Sorrento, BC. Verna Nitsche writes that "First we had to clear this event with our local volunteer fire department--saying that this would not be a distress call as in maybe the church burning down, but rather a distress call for our planet Earth."


In Hope, BC, candles were lit in a vigil for the crucified earth before the bells rang out at Christ Church Anglican.


Everyone crowded around the doorway to help at All Saints Anglican in Mission:


The Quaker Meeting House in Vancouver gave your blogger her favourite story (so far!): "Quakers don't normally ring church bells, so it was quite a revelation to get out the ladder and ascend the old (used to be Baptist) bell tower for the first time in God knows how many decades, only to find a very old church bell there which we rung 350 times for climate justice. We're going to be doing more of that now that we know how wonderful it sounds! Thanks to KAIROS for inspiring us to make this discovery!"


Here's the Green Team at St. John's Anglican Church in Squamish:


Saltspring Island must have been a wall of sound, with the United Church, Unitarian Fellowship, and All Saints By-the-Sea Anglican in Ganges, and St. Paul's Roman Catholic Church in Fulford Harbour all making a noise or ringing bells.





Parksville-Qualicum Beach was just as busy. Bells were rung 60 times at St. Mark's in Qualicum Beach in the morning, and then 350 times at at 3:00 pm at St. Anne's in Parksville, Ascension in French Creek, and St. Mary's in Nanoose Bay.


All in all -- a holy racket!

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