Pictured left: The old Whistler Skier’s Chapel, built in 1968, in an undated photo. (Whistler Museum and Archives Society photo)
WHISTLER—The season has shifted gears from skiing to hiking in Whistler. For a small community in the resort municipality, a season of celebration has also just begun.
Our Lady of the Mountains Parish has just celebrated its 25th birthday.
Whistler is “a small community, some 10,000 souls, and yet it’s a host to the world – particularly as it is, I’ll admit, the greatest ski resort in the world,” Father Dale Normandeau said to cheering and applause at a banquet June 2.
Our Lady of the Mountains, with visitors from across the globe, a church built like a wooden ski chalet, and Mass participation that ebbs and flows depending on the season, is one of B.C.’s most unusual churches. And, 25 years ago, it became the permanent place of worship for a vibrant community of Catholics.
Father Bob Haggarty, OMI, helped the community discern building a church when he was assigned to serve in Whistler in 1986. “The Catholic Church is here to stay until the Lord comes again in glory, and you do need a place to call home,” he said.