Once the Cathedral of Kensington, now a heroin shooting gallery – Philly.com

Posted: July 8, 2017 at 4:26 am

The gas company supervisor showed up at Mother of Mercy, a storefront church on Allegheny Avenue, in late June. Hed just been inside the long-shuttered Ascension of Our Lord, a hulking cathedral of a building at F and Westmoreland. After what hed seen, he needed to speak with a priest.

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Hed been working in the neighborhood, the PGW man said, and slipped through a broken stained-glass window to take some photos for his wife, who had grown up in the parish. Thats when he saw the mess of needles carpeting the floor and pews and the figures moving in the darkness.

There were so many people in there it looked like they were waiting for Mass to start, the man reported.

It made sense to Father William Murphy. For months, he and Father Joseph Devlin and Sister Ann Raymond had been feeding the young people who got high on the lawn of McPherson Square library. But then the police drove the crowds away. The addicted people had to have gone somewhere, he thought.

So Father Murphy and Sister Raymond walked the few blocks to the church that long was the jewel of the neighborhood, until it wasnt. They stepped through a window, glass crunching underneath their feet.

In the half-light, they could make out thin forms. Some shot heroin in the pews, some laid half-naked on mattresses. Others stumbled past in their stupor, not noticing the priest and nun in their presence.

Father Murphy did all he could think to do. He began to bless them.

*

For nearly a century Ascension, with its towering columns and bell tower and interior that brought to mind the churches of Europe, was proudly nicknamed by parishioners the Cathedral of Kensington. It was deconsecrated in 2012 and sold two years later.

Now, the cathedral is a shooting gallery, a makeshift haven for young people who come to the neighborhood from all over for pure and powerful heroin the latest place where they have taken up residence as the city attempts to address other Kensington heroin encampments like McPherson Square and the Gurney Street train tracks.

It is more proof, if anyone still needs it, that simply closing sites where people shoot heroin and pushing them from train tracks to park to church would be shamefully inadequate.

The building has the feel of an abandoned field hospital. Blankets and cardboard mattresses line the floors, the chapels, and the sacristy where priests used to robe. Needles litter the altars and stick from the holy water font like crosses in a graveyard. Bloodied rags fill pews. Human excrement and condoms mar the confessionals.

Three needles sit in what was a holy water basin inside the former Ascension of Our Lord Church. DAVID MAIALETTI / Staff Photographer | Click to view more images

Day and night addicted people come and go by the dozens through once-boarded windows. Some get high and collapse onto mattresses. Some come looking for prostitutes. Others have made it a home. Even in the depths of addiction, they are drawn to the familiar, the normal. First, a library lawn, now a church.

I know its probably not the right thing to do, said Josh Green, who is 28 and originally from Kensington. For three months he has been sleeping on blankets in the filth of a lower church office. But I honestly feel a little more comfortable because I know I am in Gods house.

Josh leaned against a pew Thursday afternoon, using a piece of wood from the rubble as a cane. His feet have grown raw. He said he was sick for the want of a hit.

Soon, he joined some friends and climbed a spiral metal staircase to a makeshift apartment filled with soiled mattresses, chairs, and school desks. All were covered with used syringes.

Paradise Island, cracked a guy named Matt.

Hovering around the drugs were Matt and Anthony, both 25 and from the Northeast. And Steven Sharp, who is 23 and used to be from Chester County. They talked of relapses and rehabs, of abusive parents, loving parents, lost union jobs and abandoned college courses, of hunger and thrown-away opportunities and they shot heroin.

Left to right: Matt, 25, Anthony, 25, Josh Green, 28, and Steven Sharp, 23, get high in a room inside the former Ascension of Our Lord Church. DAVID MAIALETTI / Staff Photographer|Click to view more images

They talked of the church as a safe place a place they show respect. As proof, Steven said, they rarely shoot up in the main church.

We wouldnt disrespect it, he said, squeezing his fist tight and injecting his forearm, before falling back onto a mattress.

Across the hall, in what looked to be a former devotional chapel, someone had spray-painted a plea: Forgive me, father, for my sins.

Some tell themselves this place is only a way station.Like Valerie, who is 26, originally from Chester County, and addicted to heroin. She sleeps in the church with her Lab, Izzy.

Valerie tries to clean up a place to sleep. DAVID MAIALETTI / Staff Photographer|Click to view more images

Its sad what it has become a place to come when you use drugs and you dont have any options, she said, sitting on a dusty pew.

Her goal is to save up for a tent, so she can move to the wilderness. Rough it and get clean. But for now, she has settled on a large closet in the sacristy.

I think I can put a bed in it and maybe sleep on it, she said as she swept trash with a broken broom. To make room for her sleeping space she moved away a tall wooden crucifix. As she worked, her friend Charlie, who is from California, nodded off on the ledge before a broken window. A neighbor yelled that she would be calling the cops.

New Philadelphia Investments bought the church and other parish buildings in 2014 for $800,000. When I called owner Kevin Fei, he said he did not know of anyone living there but he hadnt been there in months, he said. A caretaker has been managing it.

Im sorry, Fei said. I will take action.

Josh Green, left, talks with Father Joseph Devlin, center, and Sister Ann Raymond. DAVID MAIALETTI / Staff Photographer|Click to view more images

The caretaker, George Groves, a neighborhood developer involved in a handful of community revitalization organizations, says he has been working for free to do all he can for the building and that every time he nails boards up, people just tear them down.

He said hes been in touch with Fei to address the problem right away. Like today, Groves said.

That will be a tall order. As ruined as the building is, its probably best they tear it down. If not, in a church building where for nearly a century people celebrated, and mourned, and prayed, someone will likely die.

Next time its boarded, city and outreach workers need to be there. Meet the young people at the door. Get them help before they find another kind of sanctuary, probably a worse-off one.

Thursday, the church was busy.

In the trash-strewn garden, Frank Ratke, who is 79 and can still recall the booming cadence of the old pastors voice, walked his dog and watched stragglers slip through the window.

In the choir loft sat Michael Zenquis. The 37-year-old said he grew up singing in the choir of the very church he now comes to get high in and sometimes sleeps in. He said he feels ashamed. He recalled how Ascension once shone.

Who knew if he was ever in the choir, or if this was even his church. But then he stood and began to sing, the gospel tune Oh Happy Day! His voice filled the old church.

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After this column posted on Philly.com on Friday, Lauren Hitt,spokeswoman for Mayor Kenney, wrote:L&I will inspect the property today to begin the process of shutting it down. L&I will be accompanied by Homeless Outreach and DBH Outreach to provide services to those in the church.

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Published: July 7, 2017 3:01 AM EDT | Updated: July 7, 2017 6:38 PM EDT The Philadelphia Inquirer

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Once the Cathedral of Kensington, now a heroin shooting gallery - Philly.com

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