![]() Luann, Robert, Anthony, and Angela Tomaso ♥️ Luann, Robert, Anthony, and Angela Tomaso. All our thoughts and prayers to all, family and friends. She was a great woman, mother, grandmother, sister, and daughter. We will miss her so much❤ May Jesus comfort you□ My sincerest and deepest condolences to you and your family Gina. May memories comfort you and bring you peace.□□ With our deepest sympathy to all the family. So sorry for your loss May she Rest In Peace and be with all the angels May God comfort you all and keep your Mom’s soul. The loss of any loved one is hard to cope with, but the loss of a Mother is the most difficult. She will be welcomed into the kingdom of heaven with open arms by all the angels and continue to watch over you like she always did. ![]() May the memories you have of her give you comfort in the most difficult moments going forward. Mary’s of the Assumption Church, 27 Pearl Street, Milford, Massachusetts 01757.ĭave sorry to hear about your mom passing our prays are with you and your family Gloria and Steven and the Lindell family In lieu of flowers, donations can be made in her memory to the Interior Renovation Fund of St. Burial will follow in the parish cemetery.Ĭalling hours are Sunday, from 4:00 to 8:00 p.m. Mary of Assumption Church, Winter Street, Milford. A Mass of Christian burial will be held at 10:00 a.m. from the Consigli- Ruggerio Funeral Home, 46 Water Street, Milford, Massachusetts. The funeral will be held, Monday, August 19, 2019, at 9:00 a.m. She will be sadly missed by her husband, children, their spouses, grandchildren, siblings, nieces, nephews, family and friends. She had the biggest heart and supported many causes. She was happiest when caring and cooking for her family and friends and any animal that crossed her path, attending church, tending to her garden, shopping and occasionally visiting the casino. Maria was a woman of love, care, faith and integrity. She was predeceased by one brother, Jose Da Cruz – Pinto, and three sisters, Ana Maria Rosa, Custodia Da Cruz – Pinto and Maria Das Neves Costa. In addition to her husband, she is survived by five children, Paul, husband of Susan (Resendes) Braza, of Milford, Loriann Braza and her fiancé David Brutsch, of Milford, Gina Braza and her husband, Ali Alavi, of Boston, Lisa and her husband Frederico Carneiro, of Hopedale, and David Braza and his longtime partner, Kristin Small, of Upton ten grandchildren, Matthew Pallaria, Andrew Pallaria, Thomas Pallaria, Melissa Braza, Brianna Braza, Justin Braza, Isabella Carneiro, Luke Carneiro, Sofia Carneiro and Julianna Carnerio three brothers Bento Pinto of Mendon, Manuel Pinto of Milford, Antonio DaCruz -Pinto of Sao Paulo Brazil one sister, Herminia Costa of Milford. Mary of the Assumption Church in Milford. She was a long time and devoted communicant of St. She worked at Porter Shoe, Drapers, Data General and Waters Corporation before retiring in 2002. She was born in Donoes, Montalagre, Portugal, daughter of the late Jose Pinto and Herminia (Dacruz) Pinto and came to the United States in 1967. ![]() Though distinct in their form and genre, these comics-alongside complementary short comics from Puerto Rico and the diaspora-critique the extractivist, colonial relationship with the US and invite readers to imagine sustainable futures drawn through a Boricua-centered, decolonial lens.Maria Luisa DaCruz Pinto Braza, 82, of Milford, passed away at home on Augafter a brave and courageous battle. In Miranda-Rodriguez's comics, this is framed within Indigenous and Afrodiasporic spiritualities and the need to reexamine Puerto Rican history in order to interrogate its experience of coloniality. It then turns to questions of sustainability, particularly Rosaura Rodriguez's use of watercolors, and how these titles seek to overcome the current environmental and political crises the archipelago is facing by foregrounding a close, community-oriented relationship with the natural environment. The analysis begins by reflecting on the comics' form, such as frames, text, and the space of the gutter, to explore the interactions between their structure and content and the ways in which they situate the reader in a generative process of memorializing. Focusing on Maria (Rosa Colon and Carla Rodriguez 2018), Temporada (Rosaura Rodriguez 2019), and La Borinqueha (Edgardo Miranda-Rodriguez 2016, 2018), it analyzes the ways these works bear witness to the 'foreshocks and aftershocks' of the hurricane while delineating a decolonial future for Puerto Rico (Bonilla and LeBron). Abstract : This article examines graphic narratives of Hurricane Maria in independent comics published both in Puerto Rico and its US diaspora.
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