Manitoba

Hundreds mark Good Friday with procession, prayers at University of Manitoba

Hundreds gathered at the University of Manitoba campus on Friday morning to take part in an yearly Good Friday tradition.

Way of the Cross march 'our chance to show to the Manitoba community that we're here': St. Paul's rector

Two people carry a wooden cross on their shoulder as they walk.
This year's Public Way of the Cross began at Christ the King Chapel at St. Paul's College. The procession was led by Archbishop Richard Gagnon. (Ian Froese/CBC)

Hundreds gathered at the University of Manitoba campus on Friday morning to take part in an yearly Good Friday tradition.

The 35th annual Public Way of the Cross — a two-kilometre procession hosted by a different parish in the Catholic archdiocese of Winnipeg each year — was held at St. Paul's College. It's the first time the event has been held at a university campus, one of its organizers said.

"It's our chance to show to the Manitoba community that we're here," said Christopher Adams, the rector of St. Paul's College, a Catholic higher educational institution located at the U of M, on Thursday.

The event, which the archdiocese estimated drew approximately 2,000 people, started with song, prayer and speeches in front of a crowd at a packed Christ the King Chapel at the college.

Worshippers then began the walk, led by Archbishop of Winnipeg Richard Gagnon, who helped carry the roughly two-metre-long wooden cross for the first portion of the procession. They stopped to pray at different stations, each representing a different part of Jesus's journey to his crucifixion and being laid in a tomb.

Catholic parishes around the world mark Good Friday with Stations of the Cross, where people can stop and pray, Adams said.

"There's a little bit of a feeling of a pilgrimage, that you're walking to a destination," he said.

"There's a sense of community."

Johnny Ortizo, who is with the Catholic organization Knights of Columbus, said he's been going to the public Way of the Cross marches for about five years.

"We commemorate the passion, the sacrifice of Jesus Christ," he said during the walk.

"It's one way of sharing our Christian faith."

WATCH | Hundreds mark Good Friday with procession:

Hundreds mark Good Friday in Winnipeg with procession, prayers

9 months ago
Duration 2:05
An estimated 2,000 people joined the Way of the Cross procession at the University of Manitoba Friday, stopping to pray at different stations that commemorate Jesus's crucifixion.

Father Mark Filips, the chaplain at St. Paul's College, said the school has organized Way of the Cross walks for its students before, "but nothing of this scale."

"It's an incredible feeling," he said.

"So many people come here to learn, to discover who they are, to make a difference in the world, and it's just nice to be able to be in a place where a man who walked this Earth so many years ago did all that."

A crowd of people stand outside to pray.
The march is hosted by a parish in the archdiocese of Winnipeg each year to mark Jesus's carrying of the Cross before he was crucified. (Ian Froese/CBC)

Joanne Barzaga, who invited her friend, Grace Brucal, to walk with her, said the procession reminded her of growing up in the Philippines. 

"Back home we used to do it barefoot, but we cannot do it here," she said, while more appropriately bundled for slightly sub-zero conditions in Winnipeg. 

Jaime Galang, who attended along with her family, said the event was a chance to reflect on her faith.

"We're here ... just to reflect on Jesus and how he suffered for all of us."

"For me, it's a reflection of how he died on the Cross for all of us."

Galang's two-year-old daughter was sitting on her father's shoulders.

"It's been a bit of a yearly tradition," Jamie Galang said. "I would love to keep it that way for my children."

People walk on a road behind two people carrying a cross on their shoulder.
Worshippers stopped to pray at different stations around the campus. Each station represents a different part of Jesus's journey to being laid in a tomb after dying on the Cross. (Ian Froese/CBC)

Clarifications

  • An earlier version of this story indicated the event drew upwards of 2,000. In fact, the archdiocese estimated approximately 2,000 people attended.
    Mar 29, 2024 6:42 PM EDT

With files from Chloe Friesen and Ian Froese