Pandemic may speed up change in the Church

The coronavirus pandemic is changing just about everything.

That is clearest in the people who sicken, those who die, those whose lives are upended, those whose livelihood has disappeared. These are some of the direct effects of the disease.

There are many other effects not directly related to the illness that are manifesting themselves in the context of the pandemic. One major one is the proliferation of anti-scientific “theories” of the “truth” behind the scourge.

So, some people convinced that spread of the virus is aided, if not caused, by telecommunications equipment have burned internet transmission towers in the UK. An archbishop in Sri Lanka without presenting any evidence has advanced the “theory” that the virus was created by researchers.

Conspiracy theorists are working overtime to find any unreason at all that in their minds refutes what research and expertise have repeatedly demonstrated.

Other trends that had already been moving through societies at various speeds have accelerated while those societies are preoccupied. Racist and anti-democratic movements in societies and governments have advanced their objectives in Europe, the United States and elsewhere.

The Catholic Church, too, is undergoing a great change under pressure from the present situation. Some of that change was already underway but may now accelerate. It remains to be seen where it leads.

For decades, the decline in the number of priests has been obvious to us all. The answer until now has been for leaders in the Vatican, where there is a surplus of priests but a shortage of laity, to call for more prayer and sacrifice.

Sri Lankan cardinal: Catholics have forgiven 2019 Easter

Sri Lankan Catholics have forgiven the 2019 Easter suicide attackers who brought terror to the island nation a year ago, said the cardinal of Colombo.

“Not only did Catholics die, but the bombs killed Buddhists, Hindus and Muslims,” said Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith as he celebrated Easter Mass April 12.

“It is human nature to hurt people through anger, but we have given up that human nature and chosen the life of the resurrection of the Lord. Resurrection is the complete rejection of selfishness,” the cardinal said. His remarks were reported by ucanews.com.

“We have taught them that lesson, not hating anyone in any way. This is what civilization means and that is the Resurrection.”

Nine suicide bombers affiliated with a local Islamist extremist group blasted three churches and three luxury hotels on April 21, 2019, killing at least 279 people, including 37 foreign nationals, and injuring about 500. They carried out coordinated bomb attacks at St Sebastian Church in Negombo, St Anthony Shrine in Colombo and the evangelical Zion Church in Batticaloa.

St Sebastian Church and St Anthony Shrine were consecrated and reopened to the public, but Zion Church is still being renovated by the military.

After the bombings, the general public and religious leaders blamed politicians and government officials for failing to prevent the attacks.

Jesuits’ apostolic works based on unity in diversity

In recent years the Society of Jesus has been questioning how to serve the Lord and the Church in the social, political and economic context that the world has been experiencing during Francis’ pontificate. The starting point of our discernment, which has involved all Jesuit communities and all our apostolic works, is the “unity in diversity” of our cultures, languages and traditions.  At present the society is made up of about 15,600 Jesuits scattered across some 110 countries around the world, with a greater density that has moved away from Europe and is now in a belt stretching across Latin America, Africa and Asia.

Vietnam urged to free prisoners of conscience over Covid-19

Rights groups have asked communist Vietnam to release all prisoners of conscience as a way to save them from the deadly coronavirus pandemic.

On April 4, Vietnam-based Human Rights Defenders said the pandemic is spreading across Vietnam and the number of infections may surge if the government fails to apply proper measures or demand all citizens strictly obey preventive measures.

The group, which works to systematically report and document serious human rights violations in the country, said prisoners of conscience and people being held at prison camps and temporary detention centres are most vulnerable to Covid-19 infection.

Covid-19 forces China to ease crackdown on Christians

China has relaxed a crack-down on unofficial religious groups amid the intense fight against Covid-19, but some Christian leaders feel the freedom could be short-lived.

Since this year’s Chinese New Year, which fell on Jan. 25, the harassment of under-ground Christians has eased as most officials have been engaged in fighting the raging pandemic, said Father Paul, a priest of the underground church in Yunnan province.

The crackdown on unapproved churches continued unabated even after September 2018 when the Vatican and China signed an agreement on the appointment of bishops.

The crackdown aimed to force the Catholic Church loyal to the Vatican, known as the under-ground church, to become part of the state-approved official church, Christian leaders said.

In the past two years, authorities have not allowed Christian groups to post customary spring messages with Christian blessings or prayers on the entrances of their churches or houses, said Father Paul.

“If Catholics post such messages on churches or houses, governmental agents will tear them off,” the priest said.

However, during this new year, “local Catholics posted the spring couplets and they were not torn off. Maybe the officials were busy fighting the epidemic,” Father Paul said.

The Covid-19 pandemic was first reported in Wuhan city in Hubei province in late December. By mid-January, the entire Chinese bureaucracy was busy fighting the disease that has officially killed some 3,300 people in China.

Bombay archdiocese asks priests to cremate Covid-19 victims

The Archdiocese of Bombay has asked its priests to follow the directives of the municipal commissioner and cremate Covid-19 victims rather than bury them.

“In a video message to priests, Cardinal Oswald Gracias suggested in view of the extraordinary circumstances they would respect the call of the municipal commissioner and cremate any novel coronavirus victims,” Father Nigel Barrett, spokesperson for the Archdiocese of Bombay, informed the Times of India.

Early this week, municipal commissioner Praveen Pardeshi had issued a directive under the Epidemic Act, 1897, stating all victims of Covid-19 would be cremated and, if a family insisted on a burial, then it would have to be done outside the city.

The circular was, however, immediately withdrawn after Minority Affairs minister Nawab Malik objected to it. An amended circular issued a few hours later said burial would be allowed if the burial grounds were large enough so as not to create the possibility of the virus spreading in the neighbouring areas. Father Barrett said in view of the amended circular, a family would be granted a burial if they insisted as long as they followed WHO guidelines.

Meanwhile, former Congress minister Naseem Khan, in a letter to Maharashtra Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray, noted the anger in the Muslim community over a Covid-19 victim not being allowed burial at Malwani on April 1. He said the government must earmark a portion in all kabrastans across the state for victims of the pandemic.

Curfew blocks Catholics’ Covid charity in central India

Christian charities in central India’s Madhya Pradesh state have been forced to abandon their food distribution among the poor after the state tightened up social distancing norms to contain the spread of coronavirus.

The state government imposed a curfew in capital Bhopal on April 6, stopping all social workers, including church groups, from distributing free food to the poor and daily wage workers.

Thousands of daily wage earners, street dwellers and migrants lost their income to buy food after Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced a 21-day lockdown until April 15, shutting down all public activities and transport.

Christian charities helped Bhopal’s poor with food. “But now we are forced to stay at our homes as we cannot go out to distribute the food,” said Sister Lizy Thomas. The curfew came after a sudden spike in positive cases in Bhopal, where at least 12 people tested positive for Covid-19 on April 7, taking the city’s count to 74, the state’s chief medical officer Sudhir Dehariya told media.

Indians play key role in UK fight against COVID-19

The COVID-19 death toll in United Kingdom has reached nearly 9,000. At least 17 workers in National Health Service have so far died from the coronavirus. Mother Teresa Sister Sienna, Indian doctors Hamza Pacheeri and Jitendra Rathod, nurse Beena George, and care worker Sinto George are among the confirmed Indian victims.

The U.K. has been effectively in lockdown since March 23 due to coronavirus. Under the strict measures, people can only leave their homes for essential purposes, such as buying food or medicine. The UK’s social distancing rules are highly likely to remain in force for several more weeks, despite early signs that the coronavirus outbreak is slowing.

While UK faces this long battle, Indians in UK have been playing a big part. Doctors, nurses, care workers, restaurant chefs have been lauded for their great service in these critical times.

The National Health Service (NHS) relies greatly upon doctors, nurses and carers who come from countries all around the world. According to recent statistics, of the nearly 330,000 doctors around 30,000 had their primary qualification in India. This accounts for the single biggest nationality of doctors qualified abroad. The number does not include those of Indian origin who qualified outside of India.

Varsity team launches Covid 19 info App in Assamese

A team of four students and two faculty members of Assam Don Bosco University in Guwahati have launched a website to give information on coronavirus in the state to its residents and NRIs from the region.

The team comprises Anuron Patgiri, Sanjiban Roy, Injamul Islam, Jayantajit Gogoi, Rupesh Mandal and Nupur Choudhury.

Choudhury, an assistant professor of computer science and engineering at the university, told The Telegraph on Saturday, “We conceived the idea of providing a platform to the users, both in English and in Assamese, so that everyone knows about the situation in Assam.”

Covid19assam.in is a website-cum-dashboard which hosts the tracker of Covid-19-infected patients in all the districts along with statistical graphs and has many other imperative features.

“We enclosed some vital features like symptom checker, testing centres information,” Choudhury said. The website displays testing centres in Assam along with directions to reach those. Covid-19assam.in also displays the latest tweets by Assam health minister Himanta Biswa Sarma,” Choudhury added.

The website features latest news articles, related to Covid-19 in Assam.

Bangalore archbishop supports prime minister’s candle-lighting campaign

Archbishop Peter Machado has promised to light candles at 9 pm on April 5 as recommended by Prime Minister Narendra Modi as part of the country’s campaign against coronavirus pandemic.

“May this gesture of lighting of candles and recitation of prayers bring our families closer together and also with our countrymen in these very anxious moments,” Archbishop Machado says in a message to the priests, nuns and friends in the archdiocese with headquarters in Bengaluru, the capital of Karnataka state in southern India.

The prelate said he has written to the state chief minister “promising our prayers and support, and expressing our sincere appreciation and gratitude to him, and to his ministers and the public personnel (doctors, nurses, police etc.) for their dedicated and selfless service in this time of Coronavirus crisis.”

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