PEACE DEAL AFTER PAKISTANI CHRISTIANS FLEE BLASPHEMY MOB

Christian and Muslim clerics signed a peace accord to restore calm in the Pakistani city of Lahore, a day after hundreds of minority families fled their homes fearing attacks from hard-line groups over alleged blasphemy.

More than 1,000 Christian families left the Shahdara neigh- bourhood after locals protested against Patras Masih, 18, who allegedly shared a photo of a Hindu wearing shoes in Roza-e- Rasool, the burial place of the Prophet Muhammad in Medina, Saudi Arabia.

Non-Muslims are prohibited from entering Mecca and Medina, Islam’s holy cities.

Masih was arrested on Feb. 19. His family is in hiding. “He was a member of a Facebook page titled “paglo ki basti” (the slum of lunatics). The existence of this photo challenges the religious sentiments of Muslims. This may result in an unpleasant incident,” said complainant Hafiz Muhammad Awais.

A mob carrying wooden sticks and placards gathered on a main road, burned tires and chanted religious slogans on Feb. 21 while demanding the public execution of the Christian sanitary worker. They also gathered outside the teenager’s house and threatened to burn all Christian houses in the area.

UNDERGROUND CATHOLIC: WE ARE EXCLUDED FROM DIALOGUE BETWEEN CHINA AND THE HOLY SEE

The news of an “imminent” agreement between China and the Holy See on how to appoint bishops is arousing tensions, debates and the taking of positions among the official and unofficial Chinese Catholics (under- ground). Above all, the campaign in favour of signing the agreement that some media have undertaken to convince the world the benefits of a deal and perhaps even to convince China, which so far has not expressed itself, is being targeted. Several speeches criticize the fact that this campaign has silenced the voice of the unofficial Church. The following article, received from AsiaNews, is from an underground Catholic of China, known to us, who signs with the pseudonym “John.”

“Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing, but underneath are ravenous wolves. By their fruits you will know them. Do people pick grapes from thorn bushes, or figs from thistles? Just so, every good tree bears good fruit and a rotten tree bears bad fruit. A good tree cannot bear bad fruit nor can a rotten tree bear good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit will be cut down and thrown into the fire. So by their fruits you will know them” (Mt. 7:15- 19). Before starting, I wanted to mention this biblical passage to remember what is happening or is about to happen.

Reading the article “China, the “under-ground” bishop: we will follow the Pope, because we trust the Lord,” I would like to thank the author because he put quotation marks on “underground” to describe this Chinese bishop of Qiqihar [this is Msgr Giuseppe Wei Jingyi, interviewed by Vatican Insider, on February 16th last]. All this is really ridiculous: this so-called underground bishop is actually an official bishop who wants to represent the underground Church and claims to be an authoritative voice. The bishop asks his friends in Hong Kong, Macao, Taiwan to “set aside the pretence” to speak in his place. If this is true, I would like to ask: who should represent the voice of the underground Church? Whose voice should that be? Based on what? What is the core of our Catholic faith? Who can represent the interest of the Chinese faithful?

MIRACLES MULTIPLY AT BANGLADESH’S TOP CATHOLIC SHRINE

Jolekha Begum is eight months pregnant but the Muslim primary school teacher still travelled more than 150 kilometres across Bangladesh on a wintry morning in late January to worship at a miracle-bestowing shrine that has gained fame nationwide. This year, about 50,000 devotees flocked there to attend the feast on Feb. 2, which was presided over by Cardinal Patrick D’Rozario. Traditionally, it is celebrated ahead of Lent, which begins on Feb. 14 this year, rather than on June 13, St Anthony’s feast day in the church’s liturgical calendar. Most devotees are Catholics from Dhaka Archdiocese’s Bhawal region, one of country’s oldest and largest Catholic strongholds covering seven parishes.

TURKISH MONASTERIES TO BE RETURNED TO THE CHURCH

Have the monks from one of the last monasteries in eastern Turkey finally won their battle? In 2014, fifty properties belonging to the Syrian Orthodox Church were expropriated by the government in southeast Turkey. Among them were several ancient monasteries where a dozen monks continue to live. Since then, the monks have launched a series of legal cases to recover their properties. A recent decree may finally grant them victory, according to a report in the Hürriyet Daily News in early February.

ASIA BIBI FAMILY APPEAL TO POPE FRANCIS FOR HELP

Pope Francis says a Catholic woman sentenced to death under Pakistan’s blasphemy laws and a Nigerian woman who was captured by Jihadist militants Boko Haram are both “martyrs.”

He made the remarks during a private audience in the Vatican with the husband and daughter of Asia Bibi, imprisoned since 2009 for an alleged offence against the Prophet Mohammed. Asia Bibi has always denied the offence.

The family was also joined by Rebecca Bitrus, who told the Pope how she had been raped by one of her Boko Haram kidnappers and later gave birth to his son.

“Rebecca’s testimony and that of Asia Bibi represent models for a society that today is afraid of pain,” Francis said according to a statement from the Italian branch of Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) whose president and founder were present during there meeting. “They are two martyrs.”

The Pope met the group in the Apostolic Palace hours before Rome’s Colosseum is lit up in red, an event aimed at highlighting the persecution of Christians which has been

steadily on the rise in the Middle East, parts of Asia and Africa. Before the papal audience Ashiq Masih said he wanted to appeal to Francis to do “everything he can” to have his wife released, and at the end of the audience asked the Pope to pray for his wife “and all persecuted Christians.”

Ms Bitrus has described in the past how she had been taken from her husband, saw her 3-year-old son drowned by kidnappers and told she be made to “work for Allah.” She was later imprisoned where one of her captors “forced himself” on her and she became pregnant. “After that I tried to kill myself,” she explained. But the wife of a Pastor, herself abducted from Gwoza, pleaded with me not to take my life. She already had two children fathered by the militants. When the time came for me to give birth, I delivered at home, alone.”

NIGERIA’S BOKO HARAM CRISIS: COURT FREES 475 SUSPECTS

When mechanics Taye and Kehinde Hamza agreed to service a vehicle at their workshop in Nigeria’s Bauchi State in 2010, they could never have imagined the years of hell which would follow. The car, it turned out, belonged to a Boko Haram fighter, and the job was enough to get the twins arrested.

It would be another eight years until they were free again, cleared along with 473 others of terrorism charges.

At a previous mass trial, held in October, more than 400 suspects were released, with just 45 jailed for their roles in the Boko Haram insurgency which has killed more than 20,000 people and displaced millions of others.

Justice Minister Abubakar Malami told the BBC that the released suspects would be rehabilitated before being allowed to return to their families.

But while these judges are making headway into the backlog of people awaiting trial, there are still another 5,000 people are still waiting for their own dates to be set.

The judges have found 205 people guilty of terror-related offences – including the “master- mind” behind the abduction of the Chibok girls.

But while convictions like this offer the hope of justice for Boko Haram’s many victims, campaign group Amnesty International has questioned the method of the trial.

REV. GRAHAM DIES; WORLD FAMOUS EVANGELIST WAS ADMIRED BY MOST AMERICANS

The Rev.Billy Graham, a fiery Baptist preacher who was easily the most famous evangelist of the 20th century and for decades one of the world figures most admired by Americans, died early Feb. 21 at his home in Montreat, according to the Billy Graham Evangelistic Associa- tion. He was 99.

He had suffered from Parkin- son’s disease for many years,

although he continued to lead crusades until 2005, when he held his last one in New York. In recent years, he also suffered from cancer, pneumonia and other ailments.

Graham welcomed represen- tatives of other denominations, including Catholics, to attend his crusades. In many places local Catholic authorities welcomed him and formed pastoral follow- up programs to welcome lapsed Catholics who were prompted by the preacher to return to the church. In 1964, Card. Richard J. Cushing of Boston said that no Catholic who heard Graham preach “can do anything but become a better Catholic.”

THEOLOGIAN: CHURCH DOCTRINE MUST BE LIFE-GIVING, NOT OPPRESSIVE

Richard Gaillardetz is the Joseph Professor of Catholic Systematic Theology at Boston College. He is the author of By What Authority? Foundations for Understanding Authority in the Church; the revised edition was just released by Liturgical Press, and An Unfinished Council: Vatican II, Pope Francis, and the Renewal of Catholicism. Last month he was awarded the Yves Congar Award for Theological Excellence by Barry University. He spoke to Charles Camosy.

In an interview he said “One of the more daunting challenges facing the Church today comes from many young adults, in particular, for whom the idea of adhering to a normative religious tradition appears both unnecess- ary and irrelevant to their lives. The Church needs to offer an account of its tradition that makes evident the authentic human flourishing that tradition makes possible while affirming the value of questioning, doubt and dis- agreement. Such an account might build on the biblical meta- phor of Jacob’s wrestling with an angel in the book of Genesis to propose what it might mean to “wrestle “with the Church’s

normative tradition.” The Church no good to deny or white- wash this feature of our tradition. Nevertheless, for Catholic Chri- stians, doctrine cannot be reduced to those power.”

FROM NORTH KOREA TO CATHOLICISM: MI JIN’S ANSWERED PRAYER

During her childhood in North Korea, Mi Jin Kang never believed in the existence of God, until one person began to spark her curiosity.

“From school education, I learned that religion is a drug,” Mi Jin told CNA, “However, I heard the story of God from a girl that I met in North Korea before my escape. This was the first step to belief.”

“Before escaping North Korea, the story of God was a curiosity and miraculous,” said Mi Jin who decided to escape North Korea in 2009, at the age of 40. “When I escaped from North Korea, I prayed with my two hands,” remembered Mi Jin, “When my prayer to God at the moment of escape was answered, I decided to be a child of God.”

“It was especially this prayer to God at the moment of escaping from North Korea that led me to be a believer during the process of settling in South Korea.” Though she did not share details of her escape, many North Korean defectors are helped to South Korea by a network supported by Chinese Christians.

In South Korea, an order of Korean religious sisters taught Mi Jin and other North Korean defectors about the Catholic faith. Mi Jin learn- ed about Saint Therese the Little Flower from the sisters.

At her baptism, Mi Jin took a new Christian name, as is the custom for Korean Catholics. She became Teresa.

“I wanted to be like Saint Teresa, who lived a faithful life,” Mi Jin said. When Pope Francis visited South Korea in 2014, Mi Jin was invited by the Korean bishops to see Francis face-to-face, in the front row of the beatification Mass for 124 Korean martyrs. She also attended the Pope’s Mass in Seoul’s historic Myeongdong Cathedral.

“I got to experience the glory of a Mass close to the Pope,” said Mi Jin.

Mi Jin especially encouraged prayer for North Korea. “I hope that Kim Jong Un’s regime in North Korea realizes economic democratization for North Korean’s true freedom and life by giving up nuclear weapons.”

She also “hopes to see the unification Korea as the relationship between North and South Korea has developed in a positive way like recently.”

POPE FRANCIS BACKS DOWN IN NIGERIAN BISHOP ROW

Pope Francis has accepted the resignation of a diocesan bishop in Nigeria who has been at the centre of a long-running dispute in which local priests refused to accept his oversight. In its daily press bulletin, the Holy See said Pope Francis had accepted the “renunciation” or resignation of the Bishop of Ahiara in Nigeria, Peter Ebere Okpaleke.

Bishop of Umuahia, Lucius Iwejuru Ugorji, has been appointed Apostolic Admi- nistrator. Bishop Okpaleke was appointed in 2012 by the Pope Benedict. He has struggled to function as bishop since because the majority of priests have refused to work with him because he is not a local man. He even had to be installed outside his cathedral because protestors blocked him from entering.

Ahiara is in Mbaise, a region of Imo State in southern Nigeria. Bishop Okpaleke is from Anambra State, which borders Imo to the north. Mbaise has more than 400,000 Catholics and one protest petition against the appointment described it as “mind-boggling” that no priest from Mbaise had been made a bishop. Last summer, Pope Francis delivered an ultimatum, giving the priests of the diocese 30 days to write a letter promising obedience to him and accepting the bishop appointed to

their diocese in 2012. Priests who refused to write as instructed faced being suspended. Dozens of priests obeyed, but not enough to restore unity to the diocese. This was the Pope’s second attempt to order the priests to accept the bishop. In a letter dated June 29 2014, Francis warned them to end their “grave act of disobedience.”

Agenzia Fides reported that Pope Francis received letters from a number of individual priests promising obedience and fidelity. Some priests, however, pointed out their psychological difficulty in collaborating with the Bishop after years of conflict. Taking into account their repentance, Pope Francis decided not to proceed with the canonical sanctions and instructed the Congregation for the Evangelisation of Peoples to respond to each of them.

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