



By Christie “Cici” Rachal | Bella Creole Life ✝️💜
There is a special kind of faith that lives in Creole women — a faith that is not loud or showy, not something performed for attention, but something lived, breathed, and carried quietly in the soft cradle of their hands. It is the kind of faith that hovers over a family like a warm shawl, covering each of us in prayers whispered long before we were born.
When I think of what it means to be covered in prayer, I think of the women who shaped my earliest understanding of God, of love, and of spiritual protection. I think of Friday evenings, when the sun began to dip behind the pines and the rhythmic creaking of old wooden pews at St. John the Baptist Catholic Church in Cloutierville signaled the gathering of our elders — men and women, yes, but always spiritually led by the women, the prayer warriors of our community.
I can still see them clearly:
My grandmother Cecile, my Aunt Doris, Cousin Catherine, Ms. Louis, my mama, and my aunts — their soft caramel-colored hands sliding rosary beads carefully, reverently, lovingly. Those beads caught the sanctuary light like tiny droplets of grace. Their voices blended in prayer, steady and sure, stitched with decades of unwavering faith.
As a child, I believed their prayers were magic — real magic — the kind that could heal, protect, transform, and bless. And in many ways, they were. I believed that generations of Creole women in my family had prayed over us, and that those prayers flowed down through time like a spiritual inheritance, covering us still.
There were no specifically “Creole prayers,” but there were traditions deeply woven into the fiber of our community.
The Rosary was and is one of them.
I always longed to hear the Rosary said in French, the ancestral tongue of my people, but by the time I came along, that practice was fading — pushed aside by efforts to force English as the only language of church and state. Still, even in English, the Rosary felt Creole to me. It was the prayer of our grandmothers, our great-grandmothers, and their mothers before them. It was how Creole women called down protection on their families and anchored our community in God.
And then there was the song — the one that shaped my childhood faith:
“Hear O Lord.”
To this day, the opening notes pull me right back into a wooden pew, feet dangling above the floor, heart wide open and trusting.
Several churches nurtured my spiritual roots:
⛪ St. John the Baptist — Cloutierville, LA
My family church. My spiritual home.
This is where I learned reverence.
Where I watched my elders pray us through everything — storms, illnesses, heartbreaks, celebrations.
Where Father Harold Imamshah and Father Daniel Corkery taught me the structure and meaning of the Catechism.
⛪ St. Augustine — Melrose
A place of summer bible school, songs, Sisterly guidance, and the tender discipline of the Sisters of the Holy Family — Creole women who modeled a life of faith, service, and purpose.
They showed me that devotion came in many forms: as a mother, as a sister, as a woman choosing God above all else.
⛪ Holy Cross Catholic Church — Natchitoches
As a college student, I met Father Sheldon Roy — charismatic, emotionally attuned, a priest who encouraged a personal relationship with the divine. He taught me that Catholicism wasn’t just ritual; it was intimacy, connection, and daily conversation with God.
Each church added another thread to my spiritual tapestry, shaping the woman I would become.
These weren’t just meals—they were lessons in patience, love, teamwork, and pride in who we are.
Faith, in Creole families, was rarely preached at you.
It was lived in front of you.
The women prayed because they understood something important —
that life is hard, but faith makes it bearable, and prayer makes it powerful.
If you’d like to share:
Please visit the Faith page on Bella Creole Life.
You can list your church, add events, and help preserve our spiritual heritage for generations to come.
If you were raised Creole Catholic — or even if you found faith later in life — you probably know exactly what it feels like to be held up by the prayers of your elders.
To feel the strength of women who prayed you into existence.
To carry their love like armor.
I believe those prayers still linger around us — in our kitchens, in our church halls, in the wind that rustles cane fields, in the hush of old cemeteries, in the songs that shaped our childhood.
If you are struggling, doubting, searching, or needing encouragement, I hope you remember this:
You are somebody’s answered prayer.
And I truly believe the prayers of Creole women never miss their mark.
With love and faith,
Cici