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The Garden of Gethsemane - A Spiritual Oasis in Tucson

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By Chuck


A Spiritual Oasis in the Midst of a Bustling City

Visitors traveling along Interstate 10 between Atlanta and Los Angeles can obtain a spiritual recharge while passing through Tucson, Arizona, if they pause take the Congress St. west exit off of Interstate 10 in downtown Tucson, Arizona. Once off the freeway they will immediately find themselves on the bridge crossing the Santa Cruz River. They shouldn't be fooled by the sight of sand and trees where an ordinary river would contain water. This is a river and, on the few occasions when it rains during the year, this peaceful stretch of sand, weeds and trees becomes a raging river. Once across the bridge turn right on to Bonita Ave. and pull into the small parking lot of the Garden of Gethsemane-Felix Lucero Park.

Sitting the west bank of the Santa Cruz River across the street from the central business district and the interstate, this site has been a spiritual oasis for people seeking a few moments to relax and mediate for over a half a century. Walled off from the noise of the surrounding city and lush with plants and trees the garden has an immediate calming effect on visitors. The name, Garden of Gethsemane refers to the garden where Jesus prayed before being arrested and crucified. Dominating this garden are life size concrete statues of Christ, his Apostles and his mother and father. Maintained and supported by a partnership between the Catholic Knights of Columbus and the City of Tucson Parks and Recreation Department, the park is a gift to God from a grateful artist.


A Wounded Soldier Keeps his Promise to God

Like other young men of his generation, Felix Lucero, a Native American from Trinidad, Colorado, was drafted into the Army and sent across the Atlantic to the trenches of France to fight in World War I. Following a battle in which his unit engaged the enemy, Felix found himself laying along among the dead and near-dead who had been abandoned and left to die on the now silent battle ground. Critically injured himself, as well as alone and scared, he prayed to God for life, promising that in return for the gift of continued life he would devote that life to building statutes of Christ wherever he went in that life. His prayer was answered and following his rescue, recovery and return home, this young man, with no formal training in art, began to devote his life to creating sculptures of Christ and related religious figures. Despite his lack of formal training, his figures have a majesty and realism that people can immediately relate to and feel some of the bond that Lucero felt with God.

Felix Lucero appears to have been a classic starving artist. He drifted into Arizona during the Depression years of the 1930s and finally settled in Tucson in 1938. Home in Tucson was a plywood and cardboard shelter erected under the Congress Street Bridge. He was homeless, living a few yards from where the park holding his sculptures now stands.

When it rains and the Santa Cruz turns into a raging torrent of water, a considerable amount of trash and debris is left behind by the receding waters. Lucero collected this debris along with pieces of driftwood and sand from the river and created his sculptures and other works of religious art. Despite his austere lifestyle, Lucero did establish a reputation as an artist in his lifetime and received commissions from other parts of Arizona if not further abroad. In 1939 a group of Catholics from Phoenix commissioned Lucero to create the Stations of the Cross in the Weaver Mountains overlooking Yarnell, a town northwest of Phoenix. While not as famous has his Garden of Gethsemane in Tucson, the Stations of the Cross in Yarnell are just as impressive and located in a similar magnificent setting.

The sculptures that grace the Garden of Gethsemane in Tucson were a work in progress the entire time he lived in Tucson. They were originally made of sand and plaster but were soon destroyed by the flooding river. Later versions were cast in concrete to make them more durable. However, despite their beauty, most of the sculptures were created from trash found in the river such as the bed springs that provide the interior support for the table in the last supper sculpture. Lucero apparently just created the sculptures and mounted them on the bank next to his home. But they soon attracted neighborhood people and later others from further away who treated the spot as a shrine where they came to pray and meditate. Following Lucero's death the pilgrims continued to come and to preserve and maintain the shrine. With the help of the Knights of Columbus and later the City of Tucson the site has remained and, in recent years formally preserved as a park.

Today, the faithful still come to pray, but the secret is out and the park attracts people from all over. It has also become a popular spot for weddings and quincenaras. However, despite its fame, it retains its spirituality and continues to envelope visitors with its peace as they enter. A beautiful legacy and monument of one man's promise to God

The Park

Entrance to the Garden

The Garden

The Last Supper

Christ on Cross

Christ in Tomb

View of Garden


Tucson in the News

  • Tucson-based Lasertel in $10M sale to Italy's FinmeccanicaArizona Daily Star12 hours ago

    Tucson-based laser components maker Lasertel Inc. will be sold to a subsidiary of Italian industrial and defense giant Finmeccanica SpA in a deal worth $10 million.

  • Tucson stripped of control of development projectFOX 11 Tucson12 hours ago

    TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — In one of their final acts during a recent special session, state lawmakers took control of the Rio Nuevo development away from the city of Tucson.

  • Legislature strips Tucson control over Rio NuevoKOLD News 13 Tuscon13 hours ago

    TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - In 1 of their final acts during a recent special session, state lawmakers took control of the Rio Nuevo development away from the city of Tucson.

  • Tucson on most dangerous cities listKOLD News 13 Tuscon20 hours ago

    TUCSON, AZ (KOLD) – Tucson is making a list cities we don't want to be on. A new survey from C-Q press ranks Tucson 65th on the list of the nation's most dangerous cities. The findings are based on f-b-i statistics for violent crimes and theft.

  • Tucson company to supply armored parts for Army vehicleArizona Daily Star28 hours ago

    A Tucson maker of heavy-duty, precision parts for trucks is moving into a new market where the phrase "bomb-proof" is more than just slang.

  • Tucson teen is among 3 Yahoo yodeling champsArizona Daily Star28 hours ago

    Log on to the Yahoo home page and click the exclamation point. That's a Tucson teen you'll hear yodeling.

  • Armstrong's new cycling team sets camp in TucsonArizona Daily Star28 hours ago

    AUSTIN, Texas — Lance Armstrong's new RadioShack racing team is getting ready to ride and will be training in Tucson next month.

  • Tucson's Lasertel sold to European defense firmKOLD News 13 Tuscon33 hours ago

    A local company that makes very bright lights is getting a new owner. Presstek, Inc. is selling Tucson-based Lasertel to the U.S. arm of European defense electronics firm SELEX Galileo.

RSS for comments on this Hub

Carol Bartell Miller  says:
3 years ago

I used to go down and see those statues when I was a teen in the early 1950's. I now live in Ca. but was just there last week and got to see the statues again. I am so pleased that the city and the Knights of Columbus are preserving them and have moved them. They are now protected. I was so happy to find them again, since it has been over 50 years now, that I have seen them. I thought he had a wife who kept them up after he died. Guess that was just a rumor. God Bless all those who see them and God Bless America!!!!!

Chuck profile image

Chuck  says:
3 years ago

Carol, thank you for your comment. I have tried to find out more about Felix Lucero but information about him is scanty. Thanks for the tip about his having a wife who kept the statutes up after his death. I will keep that in mind as an angle to check in future research.

Stacey  says:
15 months ago

I'm so happy to find out that this Tucson treasure is still around. I am Tucson native who LOVED going there as a child w/ my mother.As a renewed Christian,I can't wait to visit it again w/ new eyes along w/ my son and husband. I know this will be a special place for my son to remember from his childhood oneday as I do.Praise God!

Martha Castillo  says:
3 months ago

Nice site I will try to visit this place next time.

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