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Wisconsin Walk to Mary pilgrimage brings participants closer to the Blessed Mother

More than 5,300 people participated in pilgrimage between two shrines in northeastern Wisconsin

Children and adults wait for the start of a 2-mile “Walk with the Children” pilgrimage to begin at the National Shrine of Our Lady of Champion in Champion, Wis., May 6. Organizers of Walk to Mary, a 21-mile trek, began a walk for children in 2014 to allow more families to participate in the annual event.
Photo Credits: Sam Lucero | OSV News
GREEN BAY, Wis. — A priest’s appeal in 2011 to begin a walking pilgrimage in northeast Wisconsin, similar to other pilgrimages to holy sites around the world, inspired two men to take up the challenge.

On May 4, 2013, the first “Walk to Mary” took place. About 350 people participated in the 21-mile pilgrimage from the National Shrine of St. Joseph in De Pere, Wisconsin, to the National Shrine of Our Lady of Champion in Champion, Wisconsin.

This year, the 10th Walk to Mary was held May 6 and attracted 5,330 people from 44 states as well as Canada and Mexico.

After a 7 a.m. prayer service and blessing, pilgrims departed on their journey along the Fox River Trail under overcast skies and drizzling rain. By noon, the rain had stopped and lunch was served at Holy Cross Church in Bay Settlement, the 14-mile mark. Pilgrims began arriving in Champion around 3 p.m. Green Bay Bishop David L. Ricken was on hand at the shrine to welcome pilgrims, and he celebrated Mass for them at 5:15 p.m.

The walk’s founders look back with awe on the event’s success and how it has achieved one of its goals: bringing people closer to Mary.

“It has been inspiring to see how it has grown, not only attracting people from all across the U.S., but impacting those who participate,” said Pat Deprey, who along with Tom Schmit answered the call made by Father Francis (Rocky) Hoffman, executive director of Relevant Radio.

“It’s an event unlike any other in the United States and possibly the world,” Deprey said. “We really wanted to create a spiritually centered walking pilgrimage that was similar to ones in Europe, such as the Camino de Santiago.”

Father Hoffman, who made his appeal at a Catholic men’s conference in Appleton, Wisconsin, has participated in every walk. “It is a tiring, but spiritually energizing day,” he said.

The idea to begin a walking pilgrimage came to Father Hoffman shortly after Bishop Ricken declared on Dec. 8, 2010, that the Marian apparitions in Champion were worthy of belief.

Adele Brise, a Belgian immigrant living near the site of what today is the National Shrine of Our Lady of Champion, located some 18 miles northeast of Green Bay, was 28 when Mary appeared to her in October 1959.

The Champion shrine is the first and only officially declared site of a Marian apparition in the United States.

“I was serving as the emcee of the men’s conference and at the end of the day I said, ‘I have an idea and I’m not taking responsibility for it,’” Father Hoffman said. “Now that the apparition has been approved, someone needs to organize a walking pilgrimage in the month of May. … That’s what they do in Catholic countries like Mexico, Spain, Italy and Poland.

“That’s the last I thought I would hear of it,” he added. “But it fell on the hearts of Pat Deprey and Tom Schmit and now the rest is history.”

Deprey said he had visited other Marian apparition sites around the world, including Mexico City; Fatima, Portugal; and Lourdes, France. “I have firsthand experience of how Mary can convert hearts, how Mary can bring someone closer to her son,” he said.

Schmit said he saw the Walk to Mary as “God’s will working” in him. “It brought about a lot of passion and desire on my part to help serve the Lord,” he added.

The Walk to Mary is held on the first Saturday in May, a month the Catholic Church dedicates to the Blessed Mother.

The 21-mile route is divided into four segments, said Deprey: the National Shrine of St. Joseph, located on the St. Norbert College campus in De Pere, SS. Peter and Paul Church in Green Bay, Holy Cross Church in Bay Settlement and the National Shrine of Our Lady of Champion.

If pilgrims cannot make the 21-mile journey from De Pere, they can start at any of the other points. Nearly 3,000 walked the entire 21 miles this year.

Deprey said that after the first walk, the pilgrimage “started taking on a life of its own.”

“Other people had ideas about the walk,” he said, including a walk for children. “I had a young mother approach me and say, ‘If you just had a shorter distance that young kids could get involved, that would be really cool.’”

A 2-mile walk was added the second year.

“It has now evolved to be like a mini-Walk to Mary that starts at the St. Joseph Grotto and ends at the Apparition Grotto on the shrine grounds,” said Deprey. “So you have young families now, people in wheelchairs. A lot of really cool things have taken place over the last 10 years and Our Lady certainly has a hand in this.”

Many people who participate in the walk do so as an act of thanksgiving for prayers answered or an offering of prayer intentions. This includes cancer survivors, people diagnosed with cancer and young couples struggling to conceive, said Deprey.

“Every year there are more and more reports of miraculous answers to prayers. I could share a million,” said Father Hoffman. “In short, we are witnesses of many prayers answered. So now I tell people, ‘If you want a house, if you want a spouse, if you want a baby, don’t say maybe. Just come to the Walk to Mary.’”


>> By the numbers

More than 5,300 people participated in this year’s Walk to Mary, the 10th held since 2013. Here are a few other numbers of note:

• Pilgrims walking the entire 21-mile walk: 2,869

• States represented: 44

• Buses and vans utilized to shuttle pilgrims: 43

• Bottles of water distributed along the route: 12,000

• Portable toilets rented and placed along the route: 220

• Volunteers: 207

• Total miles walked: 75,205

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