hidden image

Servant of God: Fr Alfred Roche OFM Cap; A Devout Pastor

Patrick Crasta Patrick Crasta
04 Apr 2022
Fr. Alfred Roche, his life was like that of St. Francis of Assisi – a life of Beatitudes, a total dedication to his mission.

“Fr. Alfred Roche was firmly anchored in God; consequently, there was a glow of joy in his face. He visited families of Brahmavar, Barkur and Sastan often, availed himself to administer Sacrament of Reconciliation and the Anointing of the Sick, and even reclaimed many former Catholics from the schismatic Syrian community,” says Rev. Dr. Henry D’Souza, Bishop of Bellary in Karnataka. 

In fact, the God-centeredness of Fr. Alfred Roche was the secret of every success in his apostolate, beginning with his fraternal service in the novitiate at Monte Mariano, Farangipet (diocese of Mangalore). Fr. Bertrand D’Cunha OFM Cap testifies: “My contact with Fr. Alfred Roche was limited to just one year.... It was at the novitiate house, Farangipet, when I was a novice.... The first thing that struck me about Fr. Roche was his love for prayer. Apart from his community prayers, he was also found to pray on his knees in his own room when free of any other work/duty. In the evenings every day we had to go to him for Benedicite (blessing) before starting work, and he was on his knees praying. An inspiration for us novices, for he was our vice-novice master.”  

Following the life-pattern of the Master, who was constantly in communion with the Father (cf. Mk 6, 46; Lk 6, 12), Fr. Alfred Roche used to begin his day with prayer. Sr. Hilaria Montero from Sacred Heart Convent, which is next to the Holy Family Church, Brahmavar (diocese of Udupi), bears witness to this: “Fr. Roche would get up early for his prayers and when we went for the Mass we could see him in his pew bent in prayer. He would spend some time in the confessional before mass; the offering of mass evoked devotion.”  

Similarly, as the parish priest of St. Anne’s Church, Binaga (diocese of Karwar), Fr. Alfred’s sermons, deeply based on the Word of God, touched the hearts of his flock and a few families, who were rarely coming to the church, began to participate in the Eucharistic Liturgy regularly. Mr. Peter Gonsalves, a parishioner, sheds light on this: “He used to spend hours in the confessional with great sacrifices and inconveniences.... In a way, his life was like that of St. Francis of Assisi – a life of Beatitudes, a total dedication to his mission. For me, he was a good guide who changed my spiritual life totally.” 

The last parish where Fr. Alfred Roche offered his pastoral service was St. Joseph’s Church, Lower Kasarkod (diocese of Karwar). Once again, his focus was on faith-formation with special emphasis on Eucharistic Devotion. Mr. Francis Rodrigues bears witness to this: “When Fr. Alfred was celebrating Mass, I used to feel that God is speaking to us and we are speaking to God. On Sundays and other special occasions, I was enthusiastic even to participate in three Masses.” This was the devout life of devout pastor Fr. Alfred Roche. 

Recent Posts

From Somnath to Ayodhya, history is being recast as grievance and revenge as politics. Myths replace evidence, Nehru and Gandhi are caricatured, and ancient plunder is weaponised to divide the present
apicture Ram Puniyani
19 Jan 2026
When leaders invoke "revenge" and ancient wounds, politics turns supposed grievances into fuel. From Somnath to Delhi, history is repurposed to polarise, distract from governance, and normalise hate,
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
19 Jan 2026
As Blackstone and KKR buy Kerala's hospitals, care risks becoming a balance-sheet decision. The state's current people-first model faces an American-style, insurance-driven system where MBAs replace d
apicture Joseph Maliakan
19 Jan 2026
Christians are persecuted in every one of the eight countries in South Asia, but even prominent religious groups, Hindus and Muslims, and smaller groups of Sikhs and Buddhists, also find themselves ta
apicture John Dayal
19 Jan 2026
"The Patronage of 'Daily-ness': Holiness in the Ordinary"
apicture Rev. Dr Merlin Rengith Ambrose, DCL
19 Jan 2026
Pride runs deeper than we often admit. It colours the way we see ourselves, shapes the circles we move in, and decides who gets to stand inside those circles with us. Not all pride works the same way.
apicture Dr John Singarayar
19 Jan 2026
India's problem is no longer judicial overreach but executive overdrive. Through agencies, procedure and timing, politics now shapes legality itself. Courts arrive late, elections are influenced early
apicture Oliver D'Souza
19 Jan 2026
India is being hollowed out twice over: votes bought with stolen welfare money, and voters erased by design. As politics becomes spectacle and bribery becomes policy, democracy slips from "vote chori"
apicture Thomas Menamparampil
19 Jan 2026
Oh my follower, You named yourself mine. To gain convenience Personal, professional, political Without ever touching
apicture Dr Suryaraju Mattimalla
19 Jan 2026
Our chains are more sophisticated. They are decorated with religion. Polished with patriotism. Justified with fear of 'the other.' We are told someone is always trying to convert us. Someone is always
apicture Robert Clements
19 Jan 2026