Women’s power to determine Christianity’s future: CCA moderator

The first Asian Ecumenical Women’s Assembly (AEWA) opened on November 22 at Hsinchu, Taiwan, acknowledging the power of women as the major factor to determine the Church’s future direction.

“I see the reality of our global Christianity, especially in Asia, that the Churches have been transformed into ‘churches of women.’ The power of women is extra-ordinary in determining the future direction of Christianity,” asserted CCA Moderator Archbishop Willem T.P. Simarmata, who opened the assembly at the Presbyterian Bible College auditorium.

The assembly organized by the Christian Conference of Asia (CCA) has the theme “Arise, Be Awake to Reconcile, Renew, and Restore the Creation.” More than 250 women from different denominations and Churches are attending the assembly.

In his welcome address, CCA general secretary Reverend Mathews George Chunakara said, “Improvements in the status of women are evident in different fields, and these transformations have been made possible by strengthened institutions and legal systems, demographic transitions, and a more dynamic civil society. However, we are on the trajectory towards a less inclusive and more unequal world.”

Chunakara said the assembly’s expected outcome is “not merely to address or talk about gender representation within Churches, but to reflect and strategize ways in which the Church and society can be further sensitized.”

He reminded the participants that their collective task to create conditions for identifying, motivating, building, and enabling a diverse range of women leaders to hone their talents and bear formidable challenges.

“To reconcile is to renew and restore relationships. AEWA offers the space to interpret the multiple meanings of the theme and apply them practically in our contemporary contexts,” Chunakara added.

The opening worship was led by participants from various Asian countries, together with members from the Presbyterian Church in Taiwan, the host. Reverend Henriette Hutabarat Lebang, chairperson of the PGI (Persekutuan Gereja di Indonesia, Church Fellowship in Indonesia) and former CCA general secretary, delivered a homily based on the text Isaiah 32:9-20.

Indian bishop wants state agency probed in baby-selling cases

Suspecting foul play in the increasing baby-selling charges against Missionaries of Charity nuns, a Catholic bishop in eastern India has demanded a high-level probe into the role of a government agency.

Auxiliary Bishop Theodore Mascarenhas of Ranchi made the demand on Nov. 20, days after state police raided a convent in his Jharkhand State in connection with three cases of baby selling registered against the nuns.

He wants India’s top investi-gating agency, the Central Bureau of Investigation, to probe the role of the government’s Child Welfare Committee (CWC) in the cases.

“Police have been registering false cases against innocent nuns for helping beleaguered unwed mothers,” Bishop Mascarenhas told ucanews.

The November 18 raid on a Missionaries of Charity convent in Dumka town was “the latest in a series of calculated attacks on the nuns,” the bishop said.

The police, working under the state government of the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), were “fabricating” the cases, he alleged.

Pope receives Indian nun who brings hope to destitute

Pope Francis on November 18 received Indian nun Sister Lucy Kurien, who has worked more than 20 years sheltering destitute women, men and children in her country. Pope Francis knows Sister Kurien personally as they had met before in the Vatican because of her work to provide love, care and shelter to battered, exploited women, destitute men and street children.

Sister Kurien’s is the founder director of Maher (maternal home), she set up in 1997 at Pune, the second largest city and the cultural capital of Maharashtra.

The organization was born out of a terrible event which left an indelible mark on the Catholic nun’s life. Some years earlier a pregnant woman came to her seeking shelter from a violent husband.

Sister Kurien promised to find her somewhere to stay the following day, but in the meantime, the woman returned to her abusive husband. That very evening, the man set his wife on fire, killing both the woman and her unborn baby.

Fast forward to 2019 and this community and interfaith organization has grown dramatically and now has a number of short-stay and long-stay homes in the Indian States of Jharkhand, Kerala, and Maharashtra.

Maher’s mission is to “create secure and loving homes for women, men and children and enable women to discover their power within and develop self-reliance.”

“Most of the women and children who come to our door, they come with a lot of pain…so naturally we have to make them feel they are very comfortable with us,” Sister Kurien says.

India’s new saint thanked in national celebration

Some 30,000 Indian Catholics, including three cardinals, joined a Mass and public function to give thanks for the life and work of newly canonized St Mariam Thresia at her tomb in a Kerala village on Nov. 16.

The Kerala-born nun was canonized in the Vatican on Oct. 13 along with British Cardinal Henry Newman, Swiss laywoman Marguerite Bays, Brazilian nun Dulce Lopes and Italian nun GiuseppinaVannini.

Cardinal George Alencherry, major archbishop of the Syro-Malabar Church, led the Mass of national celebration along with Cardinal Oswald Gracias of Bombay, president of the Indian bishops’ conference, and Cardinal Baselios Cleemis, major arch-bishop of the Syro-Malankara Church. More than 30 bishops and about 600 priests and nuns joined the national celebration in Kuzhikkattussery village, which houses the nun’s tomb. The area now comes under Irinjalakuada Diocese of the Eastern-rite Syro-Malabar Church.

Peace Award for Archbishop Thomas Menamparampil

The Delhi-based International Human Rights Council has announced an “Ambassador for Peace” Award for retired Archbishop Thomas Menamparampil of Guwahati. The Award conferred on 9th December 2019 in New Delhi in the presence of invitees from all over the country and abroad. One of the earlier recipients of the Award is the Dalai Lama among many other internationally known figures.

International Human Rights Council is one of the world’s leading independent organizations dedicated to defending and protecting human rights. By focusing international attention where human rights are violated, the organization gives voice to the oppressed and hold oppressors accountable for their crimes.

Though a Church man, Salesian Archbishop Thomas believes in social activism and is firm believer of peace building and social harmony who often repeats, “Peace comes when all of us recognize that we need each other.”

“I was drawn into it [peace building] in 1996 when almost two-and-a-half lakh people fled into relief camps around Kokrajhar [Bodoland] having lost their dear ones and property,” recalls Archbishop Menamparampil.

Without hesitation the soft spoken archbishop adds, “Fortunately, like-minded people came together to help from different Churches and communities.”

“It was a people’s effort, of joint action” he says. With the encouragement and support of the State Government and the general public, relief work made progress and an atmosphere for peace was created.

Indian youth appointed to International Youth Advisory Body

Indian Catholic girl, Jesvita Princy Quadras, among others, is appointed to International Youth Advisory Body.

On the Solemnity of Christ the King on November 24, the Dicastery for the Laity, Family and Life of the Roman Curia announced about the establishment of an International Youth Advisory Body made up of 20 young people from different regions on the world and some international movements, associations and communities, said a press note from the Dicastery.

National Geographic honours Kerala’s “rebel” nuns

The US-based National Geographic magazine has honoured Kerala’s five “rebel” nuns by featuring them in its November issue.

The 131-year-old magazine has hailed the endurance of Missionaries of Jesus Sisters Alphy Pallasseril, Ancitta Urumbil, Anupama Kelamangalathuveli, Josephine Villoonnickal, and Neena Rose in their demand for justice for one of their companions, who was allegedly raped by Bishop Franco Mulakkal of Jalandhar.

Indians less charitable than Asian counterparts

India ranked 82nd among 128 countries for generosity over the last 10 years, according to the tenth World Giving Index (WGI).

Up to a third of Indians helped a stranger, one in four donated money, and one in five gave their time volunteering, the report said, attributing India’s low ranking to its strong culture of unorganized and informal giving to family, community and religion.

It recommended more formal mechanisms of donating to charity.

The report, published on-line in October, was based on surveys of 1.3 million people in 128 countries during 2009-2018. It asked interviewees if they had helped a stranger, donated money to charity or volunteered their time in the past month.

The surveys used Gallup World Poll data and were commissioned by Charities Aid Foundation (CAF), a UK charity that provides services and assistance to international charities and their donors.

India’s rank on the Index has yoyoed vastly, the lowest being 134th in 2010 and the highest being 81st last year. This year’s report aggregated data for each country for the last 10 years. India’s overall WGI score this year was 26 percent.

Of the top 10 countries, seven are among the wealthiest in the world. Yet, global generosity is on the decline, stated the report, highlighting that individual giving is now lower in countries with long histories of philanthropy such as the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom.

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