The Virgin Mary's place in
the Kern County sun
Twenty years after a woman said the Virgin Mary appeared to her, hundreds
still attend Our Lady of the Rock gatherings in the Mojave. Despite disavowal
by the church, followers say they draw comfort.
By Paloma Esquivel, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
May 13, 2008
CALIFORNIA CITY -- -- Even as the early morning chill lingered in this
spot of desolate desert most frequented by dune buggies and dirt bikes,
the sunlight was fierce, highlighting every shadow and making even the
faintest color bright.
A string of worn flags around an altar housing a statue of the Virgin
Mary stood out in the light and hinted at the festive gathering that would
soon take shape.
Photos: In search of a holy image Photos: Visions of the Virgin
Mary Map
By 7 a.m. scores of people had already arrived, carrying bottles of
water, ice chests and rosaries. A few women carried roses, tulips and calla
lilies and set them lovingly on the ground near the altar.
"I look forward to these days," said Rosie Gaines, 77, a retired aircraft
worker from Lancaster. "I find it emotional here."
Gaines and nearly 1,000 others assembled last month at a barren site
known as Our Lady of the Rock. On the 13th of every month, they say, the
Virgin Mary appears and speaks to a woman named Maria Paula Acuña.
Crowds have gathered here, about 10 miles north of California City, for
nearly 20 years.
Some visitors photograph the sun, saying they see Mary in the images.
Some are just curious, some seek miracles and some say they want to feel
closer to God. Each 13th they create a fleeting community of faith in the
desert.
Reported sightings of the Virgin Mary are widespread. Her image has
been perceived in windows, gold nuggets, pieces of chocolate and, perhaps
most infamously, on tortillas. In rarer instances, people say Mary speaks
to them.
Scholars who have studied the phenomenon see a pattern: Publicity draws
the curious and faithful, but the excitement quickly fizzles. Rarely is
a lasting community forged, said Lisa Bitel, a professor of history and
religion at USC who is co-writing a book on Our Lady of the Rock.
In 1990, Acuña said, she had a vision of the Virgin Mary in Lopez
Canyon near her home in Pacoima. Her 3-year-old daughter, the youngest
of six children, had leukemia, and the Virgin cured her, she said. Acuña
returned to the site, and as word spread of her vision, bigger and bigger
crowds joined her until the property owners complained, and the gathering
soon moved to its current location.
On this spring day, Acuña arrived in a white van, smiling and
wearing a full-length white habit. She stepped out of the van and the crowd
ran to her: "My brother has cancer." "My cousin is sick." "Please, mother!"
Acuña smiled but kept quiet. A man in a T-shirt reading "Our
Lady of the Rock" told the crowd to save their petitions for "Mother Acuña"
for later. For now, just let her walk, he said.
"I believe there are people who can intercede for God or the Virgin
Mary," said Linda Mora, 60, of Montebello as she walked alongside Acuña.
There will always be naysayers who don't believe, she said, but "if
it makes people happy, if people believe, then they should just leave us
alone."
As Acuña walked down the road, followed by musicians, someone
suddenly said, "She sees something." The message rippled through the crowd.
Many dropped to their knees and turned to watch Acuña, who fell
to her knees and whispered words of prayer.
Acuña smiles knowingly and often. She can be friendly but doesn't
seem to posses the magnetic allure one might attribute to a telegenic preacher.
She does not belong to an established religious order.
Thirteen years ago, Cardinal Roger M. Mahony of the Los Angeles Roman
Catholic Archdiocese disavowed the reported apparitions, saying followers
were "in danger of being misled" and that the archdiocese found doctrinal,
canonical and financial irregularities among organizers of the ceremonies
in the desert. The archdiocese has not changed its position on the desert
gatherings.
Bitel said people who report apparitions are on the fringes of organized
religion. Some of those drawn to these seers, as they are known, say they
attend church regularly but are looking for a connection that eludes them
inside the parish. Others have eschewed organized Christian denominations
but still believe in the Virgin Mary.
Seers are often women or children, often poor or working class, Bitel
said. They're "people who are disenfranchised from the traditional leadership
of the church, people who couldn't be priests or bishops or popes but who
obviously have some spiritual influence," she said.
There have been a few similar cases around the country.
In the 1990s, hundreds of thousands flocked to the Georgia farm of housewife
Nancy Fowler after she claimed to see the Virgin Mary. Fowler read messages
of faith to the crowd but also predicted disasters, saying in 1993 that
she had visions of Chinese soldiers occupying American soil.
Though Fowler stopped making announcements in 1998, dozens of followers
still stop to pray daily at religious statues surrounding her home.
In Bayside, N.Y., Veronica Lueken said the Virgin appeared to her shortly
after the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy in 1968. She led thousands
of followers for more than 20 years. Even after her death in 1995, hundreds
have continued gathering at a shrine known as Our Lady of the Roses, where
Lueken often spoke.
Photos: In search of a holy image Photos: Visions of the Virgin
MaryMap
Acuña, for her part, is reclusive, saying she cannot speak about
her past without the permission of a "spiritual father," whom she refuses
to name. Information about her past is scarce. She was born in Sonora,
Mexico, and came to the United States 38 years ago "for the same reason
everyone comes, to look for a better life for my children," she said.
Acuña says she lives in a trailer in California City, in Kern
County, with four women, whom she calls "sisters," though they do not appear
to be recognized by any church. They manage a nonprofit known as the Marian
Movement of Southern California that reports tens of thousands of dollars
in donations every year.
The group passes its days praying the rosary, making embroidered textiles
for donations and preaching to inmates at the nearby jail, Acuña
said.
"I am poor, but I am happy," she said.
Like others, Acuña's messages can tilt toward the apocalyptic.
In one of her sermons a few years ago, she said the world would end in
four years, Bitel said. But the majority of her followers seem not to dwell
on these points.
"One feels closer to God here," said Alberto Ramos, 51, of Los Angeles,
who has been coming to the site with his four brothers for nearly a year.
"I've seen the body of Christ. I've seen angels. I've seen the Virgin,"
Ramos said, flipping through a stack of Polaroid pictures. In one, dark
rings appeared around the sun. In another, the silhouette of a woman seemed
to shade the sun.
Others say they feel closer to Mary or even the Catholic Church by coming
here.
Later, Acuña put her hands on every person who approached her.
Erika Lopez, 25, glanced down on her daughter's bald head briefly before
handing her to Acuña, along with a quickly scribbled note: "Paulina
Lopez, Bakersfield, 4 years old, kidney cancer." Acuña smiled at
the girl and prayed briefly before returning her to her mother.
A few minutes later, Cynthia Muro's family asked Acuña to pray
over the 21-year-old, who appeared to have difficulty walking and moving
her arms. Acuña squeezed her hands, and asked her to lift her arms
up and then out, all the while murmuring prayers.
"She needs physical therapy," Acuña told the woman's family.
"There's a problem with her nerves." They smiled politely and walked away.
After Acuña made her way through the crowd, people returned to
their cars, and one by one they drove off. A woman sold the flowers that
adorned the altar for $5 apiece. A pair of men raffled off framed paintings
of the Virgin that had been laid at a nearby cross.
The tents, umbrellas and folding chairs were packed away, and, slowly
but steadily, the community that had appeared for a few hours in the desert
disappeared.
paloma.esquivel@latimes.com
ilovecaliforniacity.com