All posts by Light of Truth

EGYPT ATTACKS WILL NOT PREVENT POPE’S ‘MISSION FOR PEACE’, VATICAN CONFIRMS

The Vatican has said Pope Francis will continue with his visit to Egypt later this month despite raised security fears following the deadly terrorist attacks on churches at the weekend.

Archbishop Giovanni Becciu, a top diplomat at the Holy See’s Secretariat of State, said the Pope is sticking with his plan to make the trip to Cairo on 28-29 April, where Francis will address a conference on peace at the famous Al-Azhar university.

“What happened causes confusion and great suffering but it cannot prevent the Pope’s mission for peace,” the archbishop explained in an interview with Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera. “Without hiding from reality the Pope invites us to look to the future with hope. And as always he wants to led by example.” The Palm Sunday attacks on two Coptic churches killed at least 44 with fundamentalist group Daesh – Islamic State – claiming responsibility for the atrocities.

Archbishop Becciu stressed that dialogue with the Islamic world was a way of “isolating” extremists and that the Pope wanted distinguish between acts of terror and the Muslim faith, something which has gained him the respect of Arab leaders.

“The honesty of his positions have earned him the gratitude of Muslims,” he explained. “Many Islamic authorities have met the Pope to thank him, while many others have written to express admiration for his moral authority.” Coptic Pope survives unharmed as at least 44 die In Palm Sunday suicide attacks in Egypt. When he is in Egypt Francis’ meetings will take place in secure and tightly-controlled locations while the papal Mass will be cele- brated amidst high security at a closed stadium of Cairo attended by around 30,000 faithful.

Philippine activists condemn ‘calvary of the poor’

Activists in the Philippines called attention to what they described as the “Calvary of the poor” during a protest march to mark the start of the observance of the Holy Week.

Protesters carried crosses symbolizing issues that burden the poor — lack of housing, killings, and human rights abuses — in a dramatization of the passion Jesus Christ on April 10, the Monday in Holy Week.

Hundreds from slum communities joined the procession to the presidential palace in Manila to condemn the government’s “anti-poor policies.” “Promises made by the government should not remain as promises,” said Gloria Arellano, spokeswoman of the urban poor group Kadamay.

President Rodrigo Duterte announced that he would provide free housing for the poor and distribute land to landless peasants as part of the government’s peace initiatives with communist rebels.
The Philippines concluded another round of peace negotiations in The Netherlands aimed at ending almost five decades of communist insurgency.

Arellano, however, said a lot of Duterte’s campaign promises, including wage hikes for workers and an end to labor contracting, remain unfulfilled.

During the march, protesters noted similarities between Jesus’ suffering and the Filipino people’s “continuing Calvary.”

“Poor Filipinos must continue to pressure the government to address the concerns of the homeless,” said Arellano.

“Instead of crucifying or shaming the poor, we call for solidarity with them in our prayers and our actions,” she added.

Aside from their call for free mass housing, urban poor groups said, “there is still so much to do” to address the plight of poor Filipinos.

The issues raised by the protesters during the “Calvary of the Poor” included the spate of killings of suspected drug users and peddlers, the proposal to revive capital punishment in the country, the lowering of the age of criminal liability for minors, the proliferation of fake news, and climate change, among others.

Kerala to ensure Lenten pilgrimage area remains ‘green’

Local authorities with support from Church have taken steps to ensure that the premises of the Malayattoor church in Kerala remain a green zone. The Ernakulum district collector has banned the use of plastic disposables and a green zone is being set up.

The annual Lenten pilgrimage to Malayattoor, believed to be the spot where St Thomas prayed, attracts devotees from across the State and outside, especially on Maundy Thursday and Good Friday.

The ‘Clean Malayattoor Pil-grimage’ campaign started on April 1. The Ernakulam Angama-ly diocese and the church authorities have taken a bold step to strictly adhere to the green protocol in the pilgrimage area.

With intensive planning and better participation from stakeholders, the church has taken up measures to rectify the problems faced during the pilgrimage season last year.
Discussions were initiated as early as in February involving the diocese, the church authorities, the district administration, the District Suchitwa Mission (DSW), the Forest Department, Malayattoor panchayat and voluntary organisations.

‘Clean, Green Malayattoor programme’ is the motto of the campaign. Steps are being taken to implement a better waste reduction system, to create awareness about reducing plastic waste and to ensure respon- sible pilgrimage at Malayatoor Kurishumudi.

Washing women’s feet can give healing touch: Bishops told

An ecumenical women’s forum says the inclusion of women for the feet washing ritual will help the Indian Church offer a healing touching amid clergy abuse cases.
A symbolic representation of “inclusion liturgy” celebrated in parishes and Mass centres across India “will have a healing effect especially in the light of the recent instances of the scandal of sexual abuse in the Church,” asserts the Indian Christian Women’s Movement (ICWM).

The movement comprising members from all Christian denominations has expressed dismay over the decision of India’s Oriental Catholic Churches to keep women out of on Holy Thursday.
Emulate Pope Francis and make the Church inclusive, the movement urged Catholic bishops of all three Catholic rites in India through a letter dated March 31.

The moment hailed Pope Francis’ initiative to include “all people of God” in the ceremony of the washing of the feet on Holy Thursday as one of the most encouraging signs of inclusiveness and equality in the Church.

The letter was drafted after the Syro-Malabar and Syro-Malankara Churches, the Oriental Catholic rites in India, decided to stick to their tradition of washing the feet of only men or boys on Holy Thursday. The ritual that falls on April 13 this year commemorates Jesus washing the feet of His disciples during the Last Supper.

The women’s movement says including women for the ritual will help the Church present a different face. At least three Catholic priests were arrested in the past year for sexually abusing minors in Kerala, where the two Oriental rites are based.

CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY IN BELGIUM SACKS LECTURER WHO CALLED ABORTION ‘THE MURDER OF AN INNOCENT PERSON’

A visiting lecturer at Belgium’s Catholic University of Louvain (UCL) has been dismissed after arguing that abortion was murder in his philosophy class for first-year students and saying it could be “worse than rape.”

The comments by Stéphane Mercier created an uproar at the university, the francophone twin of the Flemish-language Catholic University of Leuven, after a feminist group complained he was presenting his personal opinions in the class. UCL first suspended Mercier’s two courses while his case was reviewed. He later received a letter from the university advising him of his dismissal without giving any reason, he told the Belgian Church information service CathoBel.

Amid the discussion, the Belgian bishops’ conference repeated the Church’s opposition to abortion but also expressed confidence in UCL’s internal review. A spokesman stressed the issue was between UCL and Mercier and that he was not an employee of the Church.

A UCL statement said his courses were suspended because “the serenity required for teaching was not assured.” It said its inquiry had led to disciplinary measures against Mercier but did not disclose the details.

Rani Maria cleared for beatification

Sister Rani Maria, Franciscan Clarist nun who was assassinated in central India 22 years ago, has been cleared for beatification by the Vatican on Mar 23.
Beatification is the penultimate stage in the four-phased canonization process in the Catholic Church. Rani Maria’s cause of canonization began in 2003 and she was declared a Servant of God four years later.
Rani Maria was 41 when Samandar Singh stabbed her inside a bus on February 25, 1995. Singh was hired by some landlords who were upset with the nun’s fighting for just wages and other rights of the labourers.
She was attacked while travelling to Indore on her way to her native place in Kerala. The attacker followed her when she ran out of the crowded bus and continued to stab her. She died of 54 stab wounds on the roadside at Nachanbore Hill near Indore.
She was buried at Udaingar in Dewas district where she had worked among poor landless agricultural laborers.  As part of her beatification process, on November 18, 2016 Bishop Chacko Thottumarikal of Indore supervised the opening of the slain nun’s tomb and shifted the mortal remains to a church.
Rani Maria was born on January 29, 1954, as the second of seven children of Paily and Eliswa Vattalil at Pulluvazhy, a small village near Kochi. She made her first profession on May 1, 1974, as Franciscan Clarist nun and chose the name Rani Maria. She began her mission in northern India in Bijnore in 1975 and came to Udainagar in 1992.
A documentary, “The Heart of a Murderer,” which depicts the murder and subsequent repentance of Singh, won an award at the World Interfaith Harmony Film Festival in 2013. The congregation’s website says the saintly nun’s courageous sacrifice and martyrdom has helped sow “the seed of love and justice and brotherhood in many hearts.”

Mexicans who help build Trump wall are ‘traitors,’ top archdiocese says

Mexicans who help build President Donald Trump’s planned border wall would be acting immorally and should be deemed traitors, the Catholic Archdiocese of Mexico said, turning up the heat on a simmering dispute over the project. In a provocative editorial published Sunday (March 26), the country’s biggest archdiocese sought to increase pressure on the government to take a tougher line on companies aiming to profit from the wall, which has strained relations between Trump and the Mexican government.
“Any company intending to invest in the wall of the fanatic Trump would be immoral, but above all, its shareholders and owners should be considered traitors to the homeland,” said the editorial in Desde la fe, the archdiocese’s weekly publication.
On March 28 , Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo warned firms it would not be in their “interests” to participate in the wall. But the editorial accused the government of responding “tepidly” to those eyeing the project for business.
A spokesman for the archdiocese, which centres on Mexico City and is presided over by the country’s foremost Roman Catholic cleric, Cardinal Norberto Rivera, said the editorial represented the views of the diocese.

A defender of Sri Lankan fisher folk

He could have been a researcher or an entrepreneur but he chose to get involved in civil society. And at the age of 54, Herman Kumara believes that he made the right choice.
“I am really happy,” he says. “My former faculty comrades are earning money, sometimes a lot of money, but they are not happy with what they are doing. Personally, I have what I need to eat and to survive and that’s enough.” As a student, Herman Kumara studied biology at the University of Kandy in the centre of Sri Lanka, one of the nation’s most reputable universities.
There he was president of the Newman Society which organized the Catholic students.
“We Christians are a minority in the country but an influential minority,” he says. “We are like the salt that gives taste to the curry.” He had planned to do a master’s degree when the civil war broke out. “In 1989, some inhabitants of my village suspected me of being a member of the Marxist party, the JVP. They wanted to kill me.,” he recalls.
“So I realized what oppression of a minority really meant. As Catholics, we could also feel threatened.”
As a result, he ended his studies. “I did not want to be a white collar worker and I understood that my generation was suffering.  That it was necessary to find alternatives.”
A priest friend suggested that he join the Catholic development agency, Caritas. The movement then supported the struggles of farmers, fisherfolk, and workers in tea plantations as well as women war victims.
“I did not have confidence in the hierarchy,” he comments with reference to the religious authorities who removed him from Caritas.

The happiest countries in the world: Norway in first place, China ranked 79th despite economic growth

According to a The World Happiness Report 2017, Norway is the happiest country on Earth. Americans are a bit ‘more sad, the Chinese as happy as 25 years ago. The report shows that money is not everything for the people of the 155 countries studied. The rankings are based on gross domestic product per person, healthy life expectancy with four factors from global surveys. In those surveys, people give scores from 1 to 10 on how much social support they feel they have if something goes wrong, their freedom to make their own life choices, their sense of how corrupt their society is and how generous they are.
In Asia, Singapore occupies the 26th place in the rankings; Thailand 32; Taiwan 33; Malaysia 42; Japan is in 51 st place; South Korea ranked 56th; the Philippines 72nd. Cambodia is the saddest Asian country, ranking in 129th position.
Overall, Hong Kong was ranked 71st in the world and China to 79th. The report finds that people in China are no happier than 25 years ago. This contrasts sharply with the growth of income per capita in the last 25 years. The evaluations on quality of life declined steadily from 1990 until 2005 and today approximately amounted to the levels of the ’90s. “China’s soaring GDP growth over the past quarter century is viewed by many analysts as the hallmark of a successful transition from socialism to capitalism,” the report said. “But if the welfare of the ‘common man’ is taken as a criterion of success, the picture is much less favourable and more like that of European transition countries. The other Asian giant, India, is positioned only at 122th place, lower than Pakistan (80), Nepal (99th), Bangladesh (110) and even Iraq, which ranks 117th place.

Fresh concerns for Rome in new China church rules

China’s two government appointed Catholic bodies have released their revised constitu-tions with “Sinicization” as a central concept, seen as part of a broader strategy by Beijing to make all religion in the country more “Chinese.” Other changes in the appointment of senior officials finds the government -run bodies at even greater odds with standard Vatican practice, under-scoring the difficult road ahead as the Holy See continues its talks with Beijing over — in the first instance — the appointment of bishops. Specifically, “Sinicization” is now included in both constitutions.