All posts by Light of Truth

Cardinal Cupich calls on White House to apologise over social post

The Archbishop of Chicago, Cardinal Blase Cupich, has called on US President Donald Trump to apologise over a “viciously racist” videoclip posted to his Truth Social account.

The final frames of the video, which appeared on President Trump’s account on Thursday evening, depicted former US President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama as apes. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt initially defended the video, describing the reaction to it as “fake outrage”. It was later deleted, some twelve hours after being published.

In a statement, Cardinal Cupich stressed that “portraying human beings as animals – less than human – is not new”. Successive generations of immigrants to the United States have been demeaned in this way, he said. The videoclip, Cardinal Cupich wrote, shows that “in the White House such blatant racism is not merely a practice of the past”. 

President Trump has condemned the clip, but refused to apologise, saying that it was posted in error by an aide. In his message, Cardinal Cupich called on the President to offer an apology. “If the President intentionally approved the message containing viciously racist images, he should admit it,” the Archbishop wrote. “If he did not know of it originally, he should explain why he let his staff describe the public outcry over their transmission as fake outrage.”

“Our shock is real,” Cardinal Cupich said. “So is our outrage. Nothing less than an unequivocal apology – to the nation and to the persons demeaned – is acceptable. And it must come immediately.”

‘I will never forget you:’ Theme for Sixth World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly

Pope Leo XIV has chosen “I will never forget you” (Is 49:15) as the theme for the Sixth World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly, said the Vatican’s Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life in a statement.

The World Day, instituted by the late Pope Francis in 2021, is celebrated every fourth Sunday of July and is presented as an opportunity to bring the closeness of the Church to the elderly and to enhance their contribution within families and communities. This year, the date coincides with the feast of Saints Joachim and Anne, Sunday, July 26, and the Holy Father invites everyone to celebrate the Day with a Eucharistic liturgy in the cathedral church of each individual diocese.

Taken from the Book of the Prophet Isaiah, the chosen verse is meant to be a message of consolation and hope for all grandparents and elderly people, especially those who live in loneliness or feel forgotten. At the same time, it is a reminder to families and ecclesial communities not to forget them, recognizing in them a precious presence and a blessing.

The Pope’s choice highlights how God’s love for every person never fails, not even in the fragility of old age.

The Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life encourages particular Churches, associations, and ecclesial communities throughout the world to find ways to promote and celebrate the Day within their local contexts, and for this purpose it will later make available specific pastoral resources.

American sister ends 40 years in Bangladesh forming priests, founding school

For nearly four decades, Sister Miriam Francis Perlewitz has lived a quiet but extraordinary missionary life in Bangladesh, a Muslim-majority nation where Catholics represent a tiny minority.

An American missionary sister, Scripture scholar, and educator, she has shaped generations of Catholic priests while also transforming grassroots education for children of all faiths. Today, she stands as one of the last American nuns still serving in the country — and as her advanced age signals an imminent departure, her story emerges as a rare testimony to missionary perseverance, women’s leadership, and faith lived from the margins.

Sister Miriam arrived in Bangladesh in 1985, initially to teach sacred Scripture part time at Holy Spirit Major Seminary in Dhaka. At the time, Bangladesh faced daunting challenges: widespread poverty, limited access to education, and pervasive illiteracy. The idea of a woman teaching future priests — let alone in South Asia — was uncommon and controversial.

Yet what she encountered immediately disarmed hesitation. “The friendliness and welcoming attitude of the students, as well as the questions I had about applying the message of Scripture in a Muslim environment, deeply touched me,” she told EWTN News.

For several years, she divided her time between Maryknoll’s major seminary and Bangladesh. When Maryknoll closed its school of theology in 1992, she made a decisive choice: She would remain full time in Bangladesh. That decision would shape the Church in the country in lasting ways.

For more than two decades, Sister Miriam taught sacred Scripture at Holy Spirit Major Seminary, forming generations of priests — including men who would later become bishops and archbishops. Her presence itself was a quiet challenge to convention.

“First of all, the fact that I was a woman, involved in a ministry that was considered to be a man’s field, was questioned,” she recalled. Initially, some Church authorities hesitated. But the seminarians themselves defended her role. “When the students supported and spoke in my favour, the ‘powers that be’ decided to allow me to continue.”

What followed was a deeply collaborative ministry. Sister Miriam describes her seminary years not simply as academic formation but as a shared spiritual journey. “We became ‘one’ in the endeavour,” she said, united by the goal of passing on the Gospel — “the good news that God became man so that man may become one again with God.” For her, the word “man” was always inclusive, embracing all humanity.

China’s Catholic bishops back worship limits, prompting call for Vatican action

The state-sanctioned Bishops’ Conference of the Catholic Church in China (BCCC) backed the government’s ban on unregistered clergy engaging in pastoral work and using unapproved sites for worship. The BCCC said in a Feb. 4 statement that “religious groups must comply with relevant laws and regulations when conducting religious activities,” describing compliance as a matter of “national and public interest.” The statement aligned with the Chinese Communist Party’s controls over the region.

Nina Shea, Hudson Institute senior fellow, called on Pope Leo XIV to summon the Chinese Catholic bishops’ conference for supporting the “suppression of Chinese Catholicism.” “That the heads of these entities are the bishops of Beijing and Shanghai, China’s most important dioceses, is shameful,” she told EWTN News. “Pope Leo should immediately summon them to Rome to review their episcopal authority.” Chinese Communist Party (CCP) controls stipulate that religious activities occur in “registered” religious venues by “certified and registered religious personnel.”

Though the bishops noted religious groups may request to carry out their activities in a temporary location with prior permission from the government, no unauthorized clergy may ever preside over such activities for any reason, according to Article 40 of the Regulations on Religious Affairs.

Shea, who also directs the Center for Religious Freedom, said: “Supporting the CCP ban on unregistered clergy and churches directly conflicts with Vatican policy.” “[Pope Leo] should disclose the content of the Holy See’s provisional agreement with China and review whether this new Chinese policy constitutes a breach of the agreement’s terms or even of its spirit,” she said.

Shea cited a 2007 letter from Pope Benedict XVI to the Chinese Catholic Church in which the late pontiff described the Chinese government’s bid to impose its own structure on the Church in China as “incompatible with Catholic doctrine.”

Shea said the Vatican’s 2019 pastoral guidance to members of the Chinese Catholic Churchaffirmed that a cleric had the right to “individually follow one’s conscience on whether to refuse to take the pledge renouncing foreign influence, such as papal influence — a pledge required to register with the state’s Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association and its bishops’ conference.”

“This new position in support of banning and criminalizing those clergy who refuse to take the pledge renouncing papal authority lays bare these entities as mere party tools for communist control and suppression of Chinese Catholicism,” Shea said.

Church in Northern Thailand urges ethical formation in the AI age

At the beginning of this year, the Catholic Church in northern Thailand held its 2026 Annual Regional Seminar in Nakhon Phanom Province in the country’s northeast, bordering Laos. The gathering was attended by nearly 200 priests, five bishops, and several delegates from neighboring Laos.

The seminar focused on the theme drawn from the recent Vatican document Antiqua et NovaNote on the Relationship Between Artificial Intelligence and Human Intelligence, issued by the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith and the Dicastery for Culture and Education. The main speaker was Fr. Joseph Anucha Chaiyadej, Secretary General of the Office of Social Communication of the Bishops’ Conference, who addressed clergy and pastoral workers on the Church’s discernment regarding emerging technologies.

In his keynote address, Fr. Joseph reflected on the nature and limits of artificial intelligence. “Artificial intelligence does not possess true intelligence, consciousness, or comprehension. AI is not the ‘subject’ but the ‘object.’ It has no conscience and no life,” he said.

Basing his reflections on Antiqua et Nova, he presented the document as a “moral compass” for “those entrusted with transmitting the faith,” especially priests and pastoral ministers working in digital environments. He urged participants, “Don’t let algorithms write your story; use technology to serve humanity.” Fr. Joseph also highlighted what he described as the ongoing tension between “statistics and wisdom.” While AI excels in “averaging and predicting” based on available data, he emphasized that human love, freedom, and intelligence remain “unpredictable and sacred.”

In his concluding remarks, Fr. Joseph emphasized the importance of transparency in artificial intelligence systems, especially in areas that have significant social impact.

He described transparency as the effort to “open the black box”, the hidden and often opaque processes by which AI systems generate decisions and recommendations.

This, he explained, is particularly necessary in “high-impact areas” such as education, governance, communication, and social services, where technological manipulation can have serious consequences.

Only through clarity, ethical oversight, and human discernment, he said, can technology truly serve the dignity of the person and the mission of the Church.

Through initiatives such as this regional seminar, the Catholic Church in northern Thailand continues to promote a critical, faith-based engagement with artificial intelligence, one rooted in responsibility, wisdom, and fidelity to the Gospel in the digital age.

Philippine Church highlights unity as Lent, Ramadan begin together

As Ramadan and Lent begin on the same day this year, Catholic and Muslim communities in the Philippines are being invited to embrace the moment as a shared season of prayer, fasting, and conversion. Ramadan commemorates the first revelation of the Qur’an to the Prophet Muhammad, while Lent prepares Catholics for the commemoration of the passion, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

Although Ramadan begins in the evening of February 17, the first full day of fasting starts on Wednesday, February 18, subject to the sighting of the crescent moon. For Catholics, the same day marks Ash Wednesday, the beginning of the Lenten journey.

In countries where Muslims and Christians live side by side, Church leaders say this convergence is a rare and meaningful coincidence, a shared sacred moment to reflect and walk together toward God, who is “Merciful and Compassionate.”

From southern Philippines, Bishop Jose Colin Bagaforo of Kidapawan, chairman of the Commission on Interreligious Dialogue of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines, highlighted the spiritual significance of this convergence. “This shared beginning is a grace,” he said. “It invites us to slow down, to return to God and to walk together in faith.” “In these sacred seasons, Muslims and Christians enter a time of prayer, fasting, repentance, and generosity. We turn our hearts to the Merciful. We learn again to see one another as brothers and sisters,” he added. Reflecting on the sacred texts of both traditions, the bishop recalled: “Our scriptures call us to peace: ‘Blessed are the peacemakers’ (Matthew 5:9) and God ‘invites all to the Home of Peace’ (Qur’an 10:25).”

Bishop Bagaforo described Ramadan and Lent as traditional seasons of prayer, repentance, fasting, and charity; moments that renew the heart and strengthen the call to live as brothers and sisters. “Fasting opens our eyes to suffering and enlarges our compassion,” he said. “Love of God is proven in love of neighbour, especially the poor and the forgotten.”

The bishop also emphasized that peace must be rooted in right relationships with God, with others, and with creation. “Peace is more than the absence of war,” he said. “It is the right relationship with God, with one another, and with creation. The cry of the earth and the cry of the poor are one.” Caring for the environment, he explained, is therefore an essential dimension of working for peace and social harmony.

Drawing from the Filipino Lenten tradition of Alay Kapwa (Lentern Offering), the bishop highlighted the social dimension of prayer and sacrifice. He explained that through this practice, “prayer becomes service, and sacrifice becomes hope for communities affected by poverty, conflict, disaster, and ecological harm.” In this way, Lent and Ramadan become not only personal spiritual journeys, but also collective commitments to uplift the most vulnerable.

Cardinal Bo: Myanmar forgotten by world, but not by God

Cardinal Charles Maung Bo, Archbishop of Yangon, has repeatedly warned that “Myanmar is going through a ‘polycrisis’: an economic crisis, with rising prices; a crisis due to the loss of job opportunities; a social crisis, with more than 3.5 million displaced persons and young people fleeing abroad; a crisis of basic health care; and a crisis of education, with a generation that has lost five years of schooling.”

Sharing with Vatican Media the dire situation facing the country, the Cardinal described Myanmar, five years after the military coup, as a nation marked by fear, exhaustion, and deep uncertainty, especially among young people. Yet, he observed, while hope is “not dead,” it is “crucified.”

Cardinal Bo acknowledged that the general mood among the population is complex and varies according to personal experience, geographic location, and proximity to violence.

Among young people in particular, the Cardinal noted, daily life is increasingly defined by insecurity, psychological strain, and a loss of trust in the future.

“Young people are living with near-constant fear for their personal safety,” Cardinal Bo explained, pointing to ongoing conflict, widespread violence, economic instability, and the threat of forced recruitment. This prolonged insecurity, he said, has led to rising anxiety, stress, and psychological pressure among youth across many regions of the country.

Cardinal Bo also decried a deep sense of loss, observing how years of disruption have eroded education, employment prospects, and normal social life. Many young people, he said, express frustration, sadness, and helplessness, with surveys showing sharp increases in anger and emotional distress compared to the years before the coup. “Very few still experience any sense of normalcy,” he noted, adding that a growing number of young people are considering leaving Myanmar, or have already done so.

At the same time, Cardinal Bo cautioned against reducing Myanmar’s youth to victims alone. Even amid hardship, he observed signs of resilience and determination. Some young people continue to believe in the possibility of a better future, investing in education and new skills, including digital technologies, in an effort to create opportunities against extremely difficult odds.

Against this backdrop, Cardinal Bo insisted that hope remains possible. “This is not naïve optimism,” he said. “It is a Christian hope born of the Cross and Resurrection.”

This hope, the Cardinal explained, does not rest on circumstances or political calculations. “The people of Myanmar have lost many securities—peace, livelihood, stability, even international attention—but,” he noted, “they have not lost God’s presence.” That presence, he said, is visible in displaced villages, in camps for the internally displaced, and in the quiet endurance of families, mothers, catechists, and religious who continue to serve amid suffering.

Parish Priest of Nuuk, Greenland: ‘Our home is not for sale’

“We want to choose [Greenland’s] future ourselves.” A quiet determination runs through the icy streets of Nuuk, which, with its 20,000 inhabitants, is Greenland’s main city. It is Father Tomaž Majcen, a Slovene Franciscan friar, who is describing the atmosphere on the Artic island to Vatican Media. For about two and a half years, he has served as parish priest of Christ the King Church in Nuuk—the only Latin Catholic parish across Greenland’s more than two million square kilometers of land and ice.

 

An island with just 56,000 inhabitants has now become a focal point of global geopolitical competition over rare earths and energy resources. “The atmosphere in Nuuk right now is quiet on the surface, but inside there is tension”, Father Majcen says.

Since accepting the invitation in the summer of 2023 from the Bishop of Copenhagen to take pastoral care of the Catholic community on the Arctic island, he has come to know its people well. “People in Greenland are not loud. They watch, listen and think before they speak. Lately, … talk about politics happens more often in shops and coffee tables.”

Many people, the Slovene priest explains, feel “hurt” rather than angry when they hear foreign politicians speak of Greenland “as power or property”. “It touches their pride,” he said. “They want to be seen as a people with their own story, language, culture and faith. There is no fear, but people know that strong voices far away are talking about Greenland without really understanding it.” This, Fr Majcen says, brings both a sense of “weakness” and of “togetherness.”

US Bishops urge respect for human life after Minneapolis killings

Tensions are running high in the US city of Minneapolis, Minnesota, after US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents fatally shot Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old intensive care nurse and US citizen, on 24 January. The federal government alleged that Mr. Pretti was carrying a gun and intervened as ICE agents confronted a woman on the street. Local authorities said Mr. Pretti had a permit to carry a handgun in public, adding that his firearm was legally registered.

Video from the scene shows Mr. Pretti holding a phone, not a gun, as he assists other protesters. ICE agents are seen forcing Mr. Pretti to the ground, and one agent removes a gun from him and steps away. Another officer then points a handgun at Mr. Pretti’s back and fires four shots in quick succession. Thousands of protesters took to the streets of Minneapolis the next day, and several vigils were held for Mr. Pretti over the weekend. His death came just over two weeks after ICE agents killed 37-year-old mother Renee Good in Minneapolis.

On January 25, Archbishop Bernard Hebda, Archbishop of Minneapolis, released a statement calling for prayers for Mr. Pretti and his loved ones. “The loss of another life amidst the tensions that have gripped Minnesota should prompt all of us to ask what we can do to restore the Lord’s peace,” said the Archbishop. He recalled that all people were created in the image and likeness of God, both elected US officials and “our undocumented neighbours.” “While we rightly thirst for God’s justice and hunger for his peace,” said Archbishop Hebda, “this will be not be achieved until we are able to rid our hearts of the hatreds and prejudices that prevent us from seeing each other as brothers and sisters created in the image and likeness of God.” The Archbishop invited Catholics to join in prayer before the Blessed Sacrament in the city’s churches, which he said offer a “quiet place for prayer and reflection.”

Separately, Archbishop Paul Coakley, President of the US Catholic Bishops’ Conference, called for Americans to come together in dialogue and turn away from “dehumanizing rhetoric and acts which threaten human life.” “I prayerfully urge calm, restraint, and respect for human life in Minneapolis, and all those places where peace is threatened,” he said in a statement released on January 25. “Public authorities especially have a responsibility to safeguard the well-being of people in service to the common good.”

‘The answer to suffering is not tooffer death,’ cardinal says of assisted suicide bill in Italy

Cardinal Matteo Zuppi, president of the Italian Bishops’ Conference (CEI, by its Italian acronym), reaffirmed the Italian bishops’ opposition to any legislation that would legitimize assisted suicide or euthanasia while also calling for greater investment in palliative care and support for the sick.

“The answer to suffering is not to offer death but to guarantee forms of social support, health care and continuous home-based health care, and social services so that the sick person doesn’t feel alone and families can be supported and accompanied,” the cardinal stated during the opening session of the CEI’s Permanent Council, which met through Jan. 28. 

“Human dignity is not measured by efficiency or usefulness,” Zuppi emphasized, as reported by the Catholic newspaper Avvenire. According to Zuppi, laws that legitimize assisted suicide or euthanasia “risk weakening the public commitment to the most fragile and vulnerable, who are often invisible.”

The cardinal also warned that decisions about the end of life cannot be considered a purely private matter. “We strongly feel the duty to remind everyone that choosing an early death, even because one believes there are no alternatives, is not an individual act but deeply affects the fabric of relationships that constitutes the community, undermining the cohesion and solidarity on which civil coexistence is based,” he declared on behalf of the Italian episcopate.

The president of the CEI also emphasized the central role of palliative care, which, he pointed out, is still not fully guaranteed in Italy despite existing legal provisions. “It must be guaranteed to everyone, without social or geographical distinctions, while it is still not being implemented as established,” he said, emphasizing that this care “represents a true antidote against the thinking that considers assisted suicide or euthanasia as viable options.”

Zuppi’s words come at a crucial moment in the political debate in Italy surrounding the medically assisted suicide bill, which is going through one of its most uncertain phases since it was introduced in the Legislature.