Pope restores full powers to Cardinal Alencherry

Pope has decided to restore the administrative responsibilities of the Archdiocese of Ernakulam-Angamaly to Cardinal George Alencherry, a press statement from the Syro-Malabar Media Commission said on June 27.

Cardinal Alencherry resumed office of archbishop of Ernakulam-Angamali archdiocese on June 27 morning. He resumed office as the interim responsibility of Bishop Jacob Manathodath as administrator ended a day earlier.

The term of Bishop Manathodath as the apostolic administrator of the arch-diocese ended and he would now look after his original diocese – Palghat, said the statement signed by Auxiliary Bishop Joseph Pamplany of Tellicherry, chairman of the media commission.

Bishop Manathodath was appointed the apostolic administrator in June 2018 in the wake of controversies pertaining to sale lands belonging to Ernakulam-Angamaly archdiocese.

The commission statement claimed that the Pope has also removed Sebastian Adayanthrath and Jose Puthenveetil as auxiliary bishops of the Ernakulam-Angamaly Archdiocese based on a report Bishop Manathodath submitted to Rome.

The Syro Malabar Synod will take a decision on their new responsibilities.

Pope Francis took the decision in the light of studies carried out on different levels over the recent developments in the Ernakulam-Angamaly Archdiocese.

Sister Thresia of India to be declared as saint soon

Pope Francis has called an Ordinary Public Consistory of Cardinals in Rome to decide on the canonization of five Blesseds, including Sister Mariam Thresia of India and Cardinal John Henry Newman of England.

The Office for the Liturgical Celebrations of the Supreme Pontiff released a note on June 27 saying the Pope will preside over the celebration of the Liturgy of the Hours and an Ordinary Public Consistory in the Vatican’s Clementine Hall on July 1 for the canonization of Indian Sister Mariam Thresia Chiramel Mankidiyan, founder of the Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy Family; Pope Francis on February 12 authorized the pro-mulgation of decrees regarding a miracle each attributed to the intercession of Sr Maria, Theresia and Cardinal Newman, clearing them for sainthood.

Marialaya offers slum girls home, future

When Glory Karthik was 8, a social worker suggested that her parents, who had no money to feed or educate her, send her from the slums to a home for girls managed by Catholic nuns in Chennai, a southern Indian city. “I felt happy seeing the sisters and girls and expressed my desire to stay there,” Karthik said.

She returned home after spending 10 years in Marialaya (House of Mary) under the care of the Daughters of Mary Help of Christians, also known as the Salesian Sisters of Don Bosco. Now 31, the mother of four school-going children makes a living by stitching clothes while her husband works in a transport company.

“I’m happy and content now, thanks to the sisters. They prepared me for a decent and dignified life. Otherwise, I would have continued my miserable life in the slum,” Karthik told Global Sisters Report when she came to visit the nuns at Marialaya.

Marialaya has nurtured more than 2,000 girls like Karthik between the ages of 6 and 18 since its inception in 1990. Currently, more than 100 girls live in Marialaya, a four-story building in George Town, one of the oldest parts of Chennai, capital of Tamil Nadu State.

So the girls can have a decent life when they leave the home, Marialaya teaches them communication skills, English, and ways to solve problems and manage money and time, said Sr Sebastiar Caroline, program coordinator of Marialaya.

After Ireland, Canada bans Indian preacher priest

A Catholic diocese in Canada has cancelled a retreat to be given there in July by Indian priest Fr Dominic Valanmanal who has been preaching that an increased incidence of autism and hyperactivity in children is due to their parents’ lifestyle.

Earlier Catholic Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin said an invitation to the priest to lead a retreat in Ireland should be withdrawn.

A priest of the Eastern Syro-Malabar Catholic Church, based at Kerala in India and which has about 4,000 members in Ireland, Fr Valanmahal has been preaching that “adultery, masturbation, homosexuality, porn, if you are addicted to these, I say to you in the name of God. when you get married and have children, there is a high possibility of bearing these type of children.”

He said: “They lead an ani mal-like life. They copulate like animals. They bear children like animals. Therefore those children also, will be like animals,” he said.

Deacon dies while serving on Corpus Christi Day

A 27 year-old deacon who was to be ordained a priest in 6 months time has passed away on Jun 20, the feast day of Corpus Christi. Jerin Joyson Chittilapilly who belongs to the Eparchy of Kalyan in Maharashtra had just celebrated his 27th birthday a day before on June 19. Deacon Jerin was born on 19 June 1992 and was brought up in Mary Matha Parish in Sakinaka, Mumbai. He joined for priesthood for the Eparchy of Kalyan in 2007 and did his philosophy at St Thomas Apostolic Seminary, Kottayam and Theology at Papal Seminary, Pune.

Christian group condemns damage to tribal leader’s statue

A Christian group in Jharkhand on June 14 expressed anguish over damage done to the statue of Birsa Munda, a 19th century tribal freedom fighter and martyr. The statue was damaged on June 13 night allegedly by some unidentified persons. All Christians Media Cell has expressed dismay over “the distressing incident” and appealed to the administration to reinstate the freedom fighter’s statue with fitting honor as early as possible. The Christian Cell also demanded that the administration adopt appropriate measures to forestall such incidents and that the perpetrators be identified and prosecuted immediately, said a statement signed by president Father Anand David Xalxo.

Suspicions over India’s minority grants

Some Christian and Muslim leaders in India are sceptical about the government’s motives in announcing provision of 10 million annual religious minority community educational scholarships for the next five years.

On June 12, the federal government, led by the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), announced a grant to fund the assistance Minister for Minority Affairs Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi also said that teachers in madrassa, traditional Muslim schools attached to Mosques, will be given training in main-stream subjects such as the Hindi language, English, Maths and Science as well as in the use of computers.

The aim is to help madrassa students receive a mainstream education as well as their religious studies.

Though the measures were welcomed by a number of Muslim organizations, others remained dubious as to the government’s intentions.

“Why should Hindi be made compulsory in madrassas of the country?” queried social activist Syed Shahid.

He referred to the scholar-ships on offer as worrisome “sugar-coated capsules.”

Court favours Christian view on Delhi college’s admission process

Officials of the Protestant Church of North India have welcomed a New Delhi High Court decision that accepted their right to oversee the admission of Christian students in a college started by protestant missionaries.

The court refused to stay the interview process for admission of students in the 138-year-old St Stephan’s College, a premier Christian institution in the national capital.

The court was hearing a petition filed by three teachers who challenged the inclusion of a member of the colleges’ top management in the interview panel for admission of Christian students.

They wanted the court to stop selection interviews being conducted in this way. “I do not consider it appropriate to stay the interview process,” Justice Anu Malhotra said on June 12. Bishop Masih said in the statement. “It can have its representatives wherever it wants. The teachers should not complain unless it is affecting the quality of education in the institution.

Defying canon law, Capuchins elect lay brother as their leader

Capuchins aren’t generally known for being on the Church’s avantgarde, but the friars of the Mid-America Province just did something which, technically, they’re not supposed to do according to canon law. And, frankly, they’re pretty proud of it.

They elected Brother Mark Schenk, a lay friar, as their provincial minister. The problem lies with Canon 129 Sect.1, which prohibits a lay person from holding jurisdiction over ordained men. This rule clashes with the Capuchins’ understanding of their constitution, which, in its latest form ratified by the Vatican in 2013, reads, “By reason of the same vocation, brothers are equal.” It goes on to say that “all of us are called brothers without distinction,” and all offices in the order are open to all brothers.