
NEWARK — Recently ordained Auxiliary Bishop Pedro Bismarck Chau of Newark has an abiding love for the local deaf community, having been its chaplain for 17 years.
He lovingly pledged during his Sept. 8 rite of ordination to continue serving deaf Catholics in Northern New Jersey. Still, he’s not bashful about declaring he needs help, because his workload has changed.
As the newest auxiliary for the Archdiocese of Newark, he is now the regional bishop for 50 parishes in Hudson County. His dilemma of time and resources is an example of a Church-wide challenge to serve deaf Catholics.
He acknowledged this is a small community but said that shouldn’t matter.
“I believe that we need to do more,” Bishop Chau told The Tablet on Sept. 16 at the rectory for the Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart. “Deaf people are hungry. But how do you expect a deaf person to have a full participation without the resources to have access to the full participation in the liturgy?”

Bishop Chau’s comments coincided with September being Deaf Awareness Month. He has a lifelong connection to the community through his older sister, Ana Maria, who is deaf. Ever since he first discerned a vocation to the priesthood, he said that he has wanted his sister to experience the joy of receiving the Gospel and sacraments.
He set out to learn American Sign Language (ASL), but not casually. He knew that sharing the liturgy demanded advanced skills, so he immersed himself in learning them. At his priestly ordination in 2008 in Newark, Bishop Chau could celebrate the Mass in ASL.
Becoming a chaplain for the local deaf Catholics thus became an easy fit.
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Over the years, however, Bishop Chau experienced firsthand the challenges of serving the community. The National Catholic Office for the Deaf estimates there are about 5.4 to 5.7 million deaf or hard-of-hearing Catholics in the U.S., but 96% of them are unchurched.
“The problem is that if deaf individuals are not going to church, their kids are growing up without any knowledge of religion at all,” Bishop Chau said.

Alternatively, deaf people from throughout the archdiocese come to the Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart for a weekly Sunday Mass in ASL with fully trained interpreters.
Bishop Chau was pleased to learn that the Diocese of Brooklyn offers a similar long-standing service for deaf people at the Cathedral Basilica of St. James.
Still, he noted, there are not enough qualified ASL interpreters to serve all the people who need these services in the parishes where they live.
“Unfortunately, it all comes down to finances because to have an interpreter every week costs money,” Bishop Chau said, explaining that a well-trained interpreter can charge $75 to $225 per Mass.
“Listen,” he added, “I’m not judging. Many dioceses are going through financial problems, and a lot of them have done away with their deaf ministries as part of their cuts.”
A possible solution, he said, is to more vigorously encourage their seminarians to learn ASL well enough to celebrate Mass with it and provide the money for them to train for the highest levels of certification.
“Yes, the deaf community is a small group,” Bishop Chau said. “But they’re still part of the fold of Christ. There are his sheep, and we have to minister to them. I mean, we’re always talking about going to the margins. Well, they’re part of the margin, right?”
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