hello there, you are welcome.
and tanks for sharing your familiy story.

best regards!


2008/12/17 Mary Bordi <[email protected]>

>
> On Dec 17, 2008, at 1:27 AM, yolanda wrote:
>
> We, in azores,  keep doing this with the holy spirit, kiss the crown and
> the ceptro and then the ceptro touch us in the forehead.
>
> i guess its a sign of bonding, of keeping our conection with the holy
> sipirit, and when thew Ceptro touch us, is like a blessing to us from the
> divinity.
>
> Its a ritual, and a very pretty one.
>
>
> Thank you Yolanda! As I was looking further into the baptisms that year I
> saw the ritual used on other children. It sounds very beautiful.
>
> After I posted my question here, I mentioned it to my mother. She told me
> that her godmother, Aunt Ella, was not Catholic and so my mother's mother
> had the Blessed Mother be her godmother with Aunt Ella as her godmother on
> earth. My grandmother was the first generation born in the US so she was a
> little closer to the use of that custom. My mother had never mentioned this
> to me before!
>
> I suggest anyone with ancestors from Norte Grande, Sao Jorge, look at the
> 1880 baptisms. There is *a lot* of writing in the margins, I think with
> information about that person's later life. Unfortunately, none of the
> people I was looking for had the writing in the margins. This is probably
> true of other times and places, depending on who was "in charge".
>
> Mary Bordi
>
>
> >
>


-- 
Iolanda Bettencourt Ávila

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