Catholic dioceses in northern India plan to set up centres to help migrant labourers.
This was decided on August 7 during a virtual meeting organized by the Commission for Migrants under the Regional Bishops’ Council of the North (RBCN) in collaboration with its counterpart under the Conference of Catholic Bishops’ of India (CCBI).
The diocesan migrant resource centres along with helpline services to migrant workers will be prepared in collaboration with various CCBI commissions and coordinated by the conference’s secretariat based in Bengaluru.
The various commissions of CCBI will prepare a concept note on data collection, besides setting up the centres and launching helpline services to migrant workers.
The purpose of the centre is to collect data on migrants and make its services accessible and available to them. The concept note prepared at the online meeting has specified the quality of the data.
Other plans include engaging the migrants into mainstream society and encourage them to join the Church’s spiritual and welfare programs. It will also link them with the Church’s educational and healthcare insti-tutions that would accommodate and serve the migrants.
The migrant commission is to network with dioceses, reli-gious congregations, lay associa-tions and government for an integrated approach.
Funeral regulations aim to split Chinese Catholics
The Diocese of Shanghai on July 27 issued a circular saying that Catholic priests who officiate funeral prayers at the city’s Longhua Funeral Parlour should produce their identity cards to prove they are state-recognized priests. Across the globe, a Catholic priest’s approval comes from the Church and its Sacrament of Holy Orders. But in China Catholics face an absurd situation. The recognition of priests come from the state administration that functions under the atheistic communist party.
Members of the underground church, who do not submit themselves to the state administration, are not eligible to use the Shanghai funeral parlour because their priests cannot enter it. But if some among them insist on using the parlour, they will have to seek the help of a priest from the state-approved open church.
For many who are unfamiliar with communist machinations, it is a simple issue of limited funeral options. They would say the underground Catholics can use other funeral parlours in the city or have funeral prayers at home. “What is the big deal?” they might ask.
However, it not easy for an underground priest to conduct funeral prayers in a Chinese home. Several regulations and restrictions prevent them from holding prayer rituals in the homes of Catholics openly and honestly. It deprives the deceased of their right to have a decent funeral and burial or cremation.
The notice is even more devastating from another point of view. It has stirred up the conflict between the underground and open Catholic communities in the diocese. The notice came from state-approved diocesan officials, and naturally the underground community is upset by it. But those who are angry about it are falling into the trap of the government.
Sino-Vatican deal two years later: Priest calls on Holy Father ‘not to renew the Agreement’
“I call on the Holy Father not to renew the Agreement with China, because this could thre-aten the survival of the Church in China, driving us onto the path of despair,” writes Benedict, an underground Catholic in northern China. He and Fr John, a priest in northern China, have added their voices to AsiaNews‘s investigation into the situation of the Church in China a few months before the provisional agreement between China and the Holy See comes to an end.
Benedict’s bitter cry is complemented by the clergyman’s sober thoughts. The latter says he understands the motive behind the pontiff’s move, which is to show mercy towards the priests and bishops in the official Church, who are caught between the need to show obedience to the regime and their allegiance to the Church.
Two other elements emerge from these two stories. The first one is that the state’s repression against the Church is directed towards other religions as well, in particular Protestants. The second is that the crackdown is not uniformly applied across this vast country. Fr John notes that government officials, following their conscience, have protected the freedom of some communities, at their own risk and peril.
“In my opinion, Sino-Vatican talks and negotiations reflect the Pope’s concern and care for the Church in China. He has tried every way possible to break the chains that tie our bodies and hearts. For some, this makes sense because they no longer have to endure the problems of [legal or illegal] consecration or sacramental communion caused by China.”
Bp of Faisalabad: Unjust laws and policies do not ensure equality in the country
A conference on ‘Collective efforts for advancing diversities’ was held, eve of Pakistan’s Mi-norities Day.
A number of speakers representing religious and civil society groups addressed the ga-thering. One of them was Bishop Indrias Rehmat of Faisalabad who said that “disparities of rights in policies and laws can never ensure equality of status and treatment.”
For the prelate and the other participants, the government has failed to take seriously the pro-blems minorities face, noting that quotas for minorities are a futile attempt to ensure political, reli-gious, social and economic equa-lity if they do not have proper enforcement mechanisms.
According to various sources, Ahmadis, Christians, Hindus, Sikhs and Shias are the most discriminated in Pakistan, a country of 212 million inhabi-tants, in which ethnic Punjabis and Sunni Muslims are the largest groups.
Catholics and Protestants number around 2 million each (just under 1 per cent of the popu-lation respectively).
Rizwan Ullah Kokab, who teaches history at the Government College University, points out that Pakistan is a land of many religions and different cultures. For this reason, the authorities’ “ethnocentric” approach is not useful to the cause of national unity.
Anglican priest uses chopsticks to distribute communion
A Church of England vicar has tapped in to her Chinese cultural heritage and is using chopsticks to give bread to parishioners during Holy Communion.
The Rev Eileen Harrop took the unusual approach to the challenge faced by clergy who are reopening churches for public worship while sticking to Covid-19 safety protocols. The vicar of St Mary’s in Gainford and St Andrew’s in Winston, County Durham in North East England, decided that the best way to administer the bread at the Eucharist was to use extra-long serving chopsticks.
She has Chinese heritage, grew up in Singapore and has an enduring love of Asian cuisine, so felt confident in using the utensils for the sacred act and has now carried out services using them at both churches she serves.
Rev Harrop said: “Many of my parishioners were quite anxious at the thought of taking communion, even though we are only permitted to do so under strict guidelines to ensure that there is no chance of transmission of the virus.
I thought ‘Why can’t I use a long pair of chopsticks, real bread rather than wafers, and drop it into the communicants’ hands?”
Catholic Hong Kong media tycoon’s arrest sparks fear Church could be next
Earlier prominent Catholic millionaire and media tycoon Jimmy Lai was arrested in Hong Kong along with two of his sons and two executives of his Next Media company on charges of collusion with foreign forces and conspiracy to defraud under China’s new national security law. The three were released on bail late on August 10 night and Lai was cheered as he walked into the offices of his Apple Daily paper.
Lai, 72, made his initial fortune through the fashion chain Giordano before investing his money into media organizations, Next Media and Apple Daily, Hong Kong’s most notorious anti-Beijing paper.
A Catholic, Lai is also a known supporter of prominent Catholic personalities in Hong Kong who have been outspoken in criticizing China over the new law, which went into effect June 30, as well as human rights abuses and limits to religious freedom, prompting speculation that these people could be next on Beijing’s blacklist.
One of the prominent figures Lai has supported is Cardinal Joseph Zen, bishop emeritus of Hong Kong.
Church seeks rights for indigenous Bangladeshis
A Catholic official and activists have called for equal rights and justice for indigenous people in Bangladesh as millions of ethnic minorities marked UN-designated International Day for World’s Indigenous Peoples on August 9. They urged the government to ensure the basic constitutional rights of ethnic communities including recognition as Adivasi (indigenous peoples) and equal rights to food, employment, education in their mother language, healthcare and justice for abuse including torture, killing and sexual harassment.
Hagia Sophia Imam Defends Sword Sermon
Turkey’s top religious official has defended brandishing a “sword of con-quest” while delivering his first sermon from Hagia Sophia’s marble pulpit after its conversion into a mosque.
“Preaching in this way [with a sword] sends a message about the conversion of Hagia Sophia into a mos-que on the one hand and of conquest on the other,” Ali Erbaº, the country’s head of the Religious Affairs Dire-ctorate (Diyanet) defiantly declared.
“Reading sermons with a sword is a common practice in our history and tradition,” Erbaº stated. “When Istanbul was conquered, the first Friday sermon in Hagia Sophia was read with a sword and continued for 481 years,” the religious leader tweeted.
“The tradition of the khutbah (sermon) with the sword has been practiced in some mosques in our country,” he added. Erbaº held the sword all through his 19-minute sermon on July 24. The sword has three crescents engraved on it representing the three continents that were the object of the Ottoman conquest.
The “conquest verse” from the Koran (48:1) is also inscribed on the sword. It reads: “Indeed, we have given you, [O Muhammad], a clear conqu-est.”
Two green flags were also hung on the minbar (pulpit) of the mosque as a symbol of conquest.
Speaking to Church Militant, eminent Islamic historian Robert Spencer warned that “the Pope and all Christians should take careful note of the words of Ali Erbaº, particularly about Muhammad’s prophecy that Muslims would conquer Constantinople.”
Refugee Converts Aren’t ‘Fraudsters,’ German Pastors Say
Elias is waiting for a German official to evaluate his Christianity.
He converted from Islam in Iran secretly. He was afraid because he knew that other converts had been arrested and beaten, some even killed. He had also heard of converts finding asylum in Germany. He dreamed of going there and being baptized in public. He could worship in the open, start a new life, and join a church, free from the fear of reprisals for his newfound faith.
And so he fled to Germany. When he got there, he applied for asylum. Now, Elias (a pseudonym) waits for the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF) to rule on his case. He is far from alone. Between 20,000 and 40,000 refugees are seeking asylum in Germany on the grounds of religious persecution because of their con-version to Christianity, according to a 2019 Open Doors report. Amid sharp national debates about anti-refugee sentiment, religious literacy, and religious freedom, a number of evangelical leaders have called for changes to the process of officially evaluating refugee conversion.
Currently, the BAMF judges the sincerity of conversion and the severity of potential threats to asylum seekers’ lives. There is, however, a lack of explicit standards, clear criteria, or legal precedent for these exami-nations, and the BAMF grants asylum at significantly different rates in different parts of the country. “It’s like a lottery,” said Gottfried Martens, pastor of a Lutheran Church associated with the Missouri Synod in the Steglitz neighborhood of Berlin. Martens cares for more than 1,000 baptized Iranian, Afghan, and Pakistani Christians in his church and is currently instructing hundreds more in preparation for baptism.
“If you’re in Potsdam, you stand a better chance than in Berlin,” he said. “In Berlin, you stand a better chance than in Düsseldorf. In Hessen, you’re almost guaranteed protection. It just depends on which person you get.” Martens wants the process to be more consistent. He joins the German Evangelical Alliance and Open Doors in calling for a standardization of the exami-nation procedure and more cooperation between the government and religious authorities. The Christian groups are part of a diverse coalition calling for change, including conservative and liberal politicians, the Baha’i community, the International Society for Human Rights, the Konrad Adenauer Foundation, and Ahmadi Muslims (who have been persecuted in Pakistan).
Terror in Milan Cathedral: Egyptian knifeman takes cop hostage
Police overpowered an Egy-ptian migrant after the 30-year-old broke through security and, rushing up to the high altar at Milan Cathedral, held a guard hostage at knifepoint. Brandishing a 20-centimeter switchblade, the assailant who possesses a long-term residence permit for family reunification reasons, forced his uniformed captor to kneel for over eight minutes.
Italy’s General Investigations and Special Operations Division (DIGOS), which interrogated the suspect, revealed that the man, currently living in the Lombardy region, was stopped by a police patrol while he was sitting on the cathedral steps.
Asked by officials from the Centro Commi-ssariat for his residence documents, the migrant attempted to stall police inquires. Suddenly, he broke free and ran towards the cathedral entrance reserved for worshippers and pushed aside a security officer who was guarding the door. Inside the cathedral, a second security guard accosted him after he had reached the high altar. However, the assailant pulled a knife on the guard and forced him to kneel and later sit on the floor.
Senior police officials, including Commissioner Mauro Frare and Deputy Commissioner Luca Gazzili, rushed to the scene and began negotiating with the hostage-taker. A policewoman from the Flying Squad tried to calm the assailant and with hands raised told him: “Do you want me to take off the belt? I’ll take it off. I want to help you, look, I’ll put it on the ground.”
At one point when the migrant was distracted, armed police took him by surprise and disarmed him. Milan has over 50,000 mostly Muslim illegal migrants. Italian newspaper Il Giornale noted that it has become a “symbol of decay and disarray from the point of view of public order, with stabbings and rapes every day and open-air drug dealing.”
