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Drung chapel’s €1.2m makeover 24.03.09

THE people of Iskaheen and Upper Moville will come together on Sunday for the rededication of St Columba's Church, Drung, following a €1.2m renovation.
Parish priest Fr John Farren said the reopening of the 138-year old chapel would be a special day for the area following the one-year long refurbishment project.
Bishop Seamus Hegarty will be the main celebrant while every priest in Inishowen and former priests of the Iskaheen and Upper Moville parish have also been invited to attend.
The church closed on Easter Monday last year and all church services including funeral masses were temporarily relocated to Quigley's Point Community Centre.
The newly renovated St Columba's Church, Drung.
Fr Farren said while he was very grateful to the centre's management committee for the use of the building, parishioners would be glad to get back into their chapel.
"As a parish we are very grateful to the management committee of Quigley's Point Community Centre who were very, very accommodating to us. But it will be good to be back in our church," said Fr Farren.
He explained that the congregation, which now stands at around 5,000 people, had almost doubled in size in the last ten years during the construction boom, with many people moving from Derry and other places to the area.
Fr Farren said he hoped parishioners would be delighted with their newly-refurbished church following an almost "gutting" of the original building.
"Because St Columba's is a listed building, all the materials had to be replaced as close to the original style as possible.” This included Bangor blue slates on the roof, and a replacement timber floor. A brand new oil-fired central heating system and new tiles in the aisles have also been installed while there is also a new extension to the sacristy.
"All the sanctuary furniture is marble and the wooden altar has also been replaced with marble. Some of the timber beams had also to be replaced because of dry rot and wood worm," added Fr Farren, who has been parish priest at St Columba's since 2002.
The local parish priest said the memory of the theft of the Bangor slates in the early days of reconstruction had been firmly put behind them and the building now had a “clean bill of health”.
Meanwhile, he thanked parishioners for their ongoing generosity in raising funds for the renovation. He said when VAT was included the total cost would be close to €1.2m but that they were "more than half-way there". "We'll be fundraising for another while yet but the people have been very generous so far and we are more than half-way there."
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