They kneeled. They cried. They asked for healing.
Before them, on an altar of roses and prayer candles, was a metal baking sheet, stained with what hundreds of
Houston Catholics now believe is an image of the
Virgin Mary.
Guadalupe Rodriguez, a
Pugh Elementary School cafeteria worker, discovered the possible miracle on Ash Wednesday, while scrubbing away the last crumbs from the pizza lunch.
By Friday, a steady stream of people were filing through the southeast Houston front yard of Sylvia Calderon, a PTA member who took in the sheet pan after school leaders decided they couldn't accommodate the curious crowds.
At dawn, one woman arrived at Calderon's home in the Denver Harbor neighborhood asking to see the Virgin's image before her 8-year-old son had surgery. That afternoon another woman came for a blessing bearing a picture of her grandson, who has cerebral palsy.
Scientists call this phenomenon
religious pareidolia, when the eye sees religious images in objects such as tree trunks and grilled cheese sandwiches.
Believers say it's a miracle.
"It was beautiful," said Angie Bentancur, who left the picture of her grandson beside the sheet pan Friday afternoon.
On Wednesday, Rodriguez, a longtime kitchen worker, was leaning over the sink of the cafeteria at Pugh Elementary washing sheet pans — the kind that normally hold rows of chocolate chip cookies or chicken nuggets.
It was with the last pan, pulled from the cold rinse, that the Virgin appeared, Rodriguez, 59, said.
"I started looking at it, and started looking at it, until I realized it was the Virgin," she said.
The pan appears to be stained, maybe by grease, with an image several inches tall. A splotch of missing color resembles the Virgin Mother's down-turned face, a slight rainbow stain running alongside this could be a shawl.
Her hands still wet, Rodriguez took the pan to the cafeteria, and held it up to her co-workers. What do you see, she asked?
The Virgin Mary, they said, undeniably — on a sheet pan.
Someone got the cafeteria manager, Coralia Pacay, who said the same: undeniably, the Virgin Mary — on a sheet pan.
Pacay and Rodriguez went to Principal Lyda Guerrero. They asked her what she saw.
"It was a silhouette," Guerrero recalled. "A silhouette of the Virgin Mary."
For believers, there is no doubt about Rodriguez's discovery. It is a message from
God. The find created a logistical problem for school officials. When they got home Wednesday, many pupils who had seen the sheet pan told their parents, many of whom returned to school to see for themselves. Pacay propped up the pan near the lunch line.
The crowds grew to include neighbors, and soon district officials, including Houston Independent School District Superintendent Abelardo Saavedra, who agreed the tray had to go somewhere else. That's when the PTA agreed to take it to Calderon's house.
"Right now because it is attracting a lot of attention, we just don't want it in the school," said Rebecca Suarez, HISD spokeswoman. "But we want to treat it with respect."
Calderon, who has a 7-year-old daughter at Pugh, has been up since dawn and stayed awake until near midnight every day since then. She only takes the sheet pan in when she sleeps.
A steady stream of people continue to shuffle into her yard. Most are women, some with children. They walk from neighboring houses or park down the street. Some hold bouquets, others candles or pictures.
They brush the Virgin's image with their palms, fingertips, the backs of their hands. They close their eyes and make the sign of the cross.
Some hope to set up a permanent spot for the baking pan in the neighborhood, where anyone can visit, day or night.
Regardless, school officials say they doubt it will go back to the wash bin any time soon.
"I think someone was watching over us," Guerrero said. "I think someone is watching over this community and this school district and this school."
Religious simulacra is the name scientists give to images, like Mary or Jesus, that people say they see in inanimate objects.
• Sandwich: In 2004, Florida resident Diana Duyser sold her grilled cheese on eBay for $28,000. She claimed the sandwich was 10 years old, and she had kept it, preserved in a plastic container, after noticing a shape that looked like the Virgin Mary on the bread.
• Tortilla: In 1978, a woman frying tortillas in New Mexico said she saw an image of Jesus within the pattern of burn marks on her tortilla. She set up a shrine and thousands came to see it.
• Egg: Last year, villagers in Kazakhstan said they found an egg with the word "Allah" inscribed on it in Arabic. A chicken laid the egg just after a hail storm hit the Kazakh village, state media said.
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I guess I am going to have to stop washing out my pans until I check for jesus or his mama. Interesting it just so happened on Ash Wednesday.
Texas seems to be a popular place this year for the dynamic duo. Maybe GWBastard invited them down to sit a spell.
"It was beautiful,"
Come on over I just shit a masterpiece!
Holy Shit!
http://www.poststar.com/articles/2007/03/01/ap/headlines/d8njnefo2.txt
Why isn't anyone in awe of this finding, unlike fanatics who go crazy seeing an image of Jesus on a tree or a piece of toast?
And if Jesus was so great in his time, why wasn't a single statue ever built resembling him during his reign on earth? Why wasn't his name ever mentioned as well?
Other civilations build pyramids, temples, statues, artwork, and palaces for their gods, but no one ever build and of those for their god, Jesus Christ.
Why is that?
There is also the question of worshipping idols. Isn't that in the ten commandments? These people come to an ordinary pan and think of it as a sign and have to touch it while they think it will give them what they desire most. I don't know about you, but I would assume that would fall under worshipping idols. These people see these so called "miracles" and can't even follow their own religion because they are caught up in their hysteria.
If they want to pray for anything I would hope that they would pray for sanity, because it has obviously been striken from them somewhere within their lives.
You know, I think Christians get the most excited is because the cross is so simple to reproduce, especially on a random ink blot test.
Jews have the 6-sided star - difficult to produce. Muslims have an arc - a little easier, but not likely seen on an ink blot. Buhhhists - try replicating Buddha on an ink blot - very difficult.
If it took so long to realise it was the Virgin, what made you start looking at it in the first place?
Anyway, why is it Mary?
Any woman can wear a shawl across her head.
It could be Mary's neighbour?
Or the girl down the street from Mary?
Or the lady two towns over, born fifty years later?
It could be a muslim woman wearing the hijab?
It could even be a man, wearing a raincoat?
"...Anyway, why is it Mary?
Any woman can wear a shawl across her head.
"It could be Mary's neighbour? Or the girl down the street from Mary?
Or the lady two towns over, born fifty years later?..."
No way; it was Mary. The way you can tell is that, through transsubstantiation, the image turns into the actual flesh-&-blood Virgin Of Houston, (can there really be more than one?) as soon as you put it, I mean Her, into a perfectly dark room.
Unless and until you try to touch her. Thou shalt not put the Lady thy god to the test; and, anyway, I think we're all familiar with the difficulties experienced trying to touch a virgin in the dark.
Idiots. With $5 a head admission (OK, children half price,) plus refreshment sales, plus souvenir sales, I'd be making a small fortune with this freakin dirty pizza pan. Then when the local cash stream starts to dry up, its off to ebay. If a grilled Mary sandwich can get $28,000, this ought to do pretty well. God helps those who help themselves, right?
Two questions: If Jesus Christ or his mother (who is not said to be "holy" anywhere in the Bible) were to come for a visit, wouldn't they pick a better way to visit than on a pizza pan? And secondly, how in the name of Zeus' butt hole does anyone know WHAT THE HELL THEY LOOKED LIKE???
There are no images of either of them from their own times. It could be a silhouette of the virgin Mary, or the whore Maria who lives down the block from me. It's a frigging outline that resembles that of a woman.
Same goes for Jesus. Nobody who was around back then is doing police sketches here, and if they were, I doubt we would end up with a blond haired, blue eyed pretty boy. He was from the frigging Middle East.
I will tell you, it's not the way that all Christians act; it's just the sensational BS like this that makes the news, and makes Christians look stupid.
--Frustrated Christian