"I call them my other sons. They are here all the time. They are just a great group of kids. ... They were the first ones to sign up and help to do this. They are the first ones that every time something went wrong with Kristin, they were right there," said Rita Graci, Justin's mother.

"Actually, they're not kids. They're adults now," she added with a laugh.

Simply by giving a mouth swab, guests of the festival can participate.

Ross Tanner, another young member of the parish, had such a swab in 2013 at a drive at UMass.

"Little did I know that I would be called three months later and told that I was a potential match for a person with leukemia," he told the parish newsletter.

He said he is praying for the man who received the treatment.

The parish community hopes to add 2,000 names to the bone marrow registry with the drive during the festival named for a patron saint of the sick.

Born around the year 1340 in Montpellier, France, St. Rocco -- also known as St. Roch -- was orphaned as a young man. Soon afterward, he gave away all his property to the poor, took a vow of poverty and left on a pilgrimage to Rome. As he travelled through Italy, in each city he visited he devoted himself to caring for plague victims, healing them with prayer and the sign of the cross.

The festival began in Franklin amongst the Italian community under Father R. Michael Guarino, in 1979. The original celebration began with a procession from the church to the fields where the celebration was held.

"He started this to make a contribution to the parish as a community, that it would be a religious, social, and cultural event," Father Brian Manning, pastor of St. Mary's, said.

The opening Mass of the feast this year takes place on Aug. 3, before the rest of the celebration gets underway on Aug. 7 with the opening of the grounds that host the celebration's rides, food booths, and entertainment.

"The mission of the feast is to bring together people, to celebrate life, and to also acknowledge that people are ill and sick," he said.

A Mass for the anointing of the sick will be celebrated Aug. 9, with the closing Mass on Aug. 10.

Father Manning said having a bone marrow drive on the feast day for such a saint made perfect sense when parishioners proposed the idea.

"We are honored to be part of the bone marrow drive because our patron saint is concerned about the ill and the sick, so being able to collect exemplars for bone marrow for future matching allows us to help people to be part of the healing of the sick," he said.

"Healing and health has changed over time, and this is a wonderful way to participate in modern medicine and helping people to be healed," Father Manning added.