At least 60 Italian priests have died after contracting coronavirus

In the past week alone, more than 3,000 people have died in Italy after contracting the coronavirus. Among the dead are at least 60 priests this month, according to local media reports.

“I pray to the Holy Spirit to give us the gift of light and strength. Everyday I do the Via Crucis asking the Lord … to carry this cross with us,” Bishop Gianni Ambrosio of Piacenza-Bobbio said in an Italian interview. Avvenire, the newspaper owned by the Italian bishops conference, published the names of 51 diocesan priests who died after contracting COVID-19, and noted that religious communities in Italy had also reported nine coronavirus related deaths.

The majority of the deceased were over the age of 70 years old, and some of these priests had underlying health conditions.

The youngest priest to die from COVID-19 in Italy was Fr Paolo Camminati, who died in the hospital on March 21 at age 53. Fr Camminati was known for his dynamic youth ministry, service to the poor, work with Catholic Action, and passion for the mountains. He was the parish priest of Our Lady of Lourdes in Diocese of Piacenza, where five other priests with COVID-19 have died.

Among the dead in Piacenza is Fr KidaneBerhane, a Cistercian monk originally from Eritrea, who resided in the historic Chiaravalle Abbey in Lombardy. Also deceased are 87-year-old twin brothers, Fr Mario Boselli and Fr Giovanni Boselli, who died within a day of each other.

Pope’s visit to Indonesia off, Vatican insider says

Indonesian Catholics have called on the Vatican to re-schedule Pope Francis’ visit to Indonesia after it was cancelled due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Though the Vatican never confirmed the pope would be visiting Indonesia, Timor-Leste, and Papua New Guinea this September, diplomatic sources had said the visit was planned. However, officials have now said that due to the Covid-19 pandemic the visit has been called off.

“The cancellation is understandable because now the whole world is fighting Covid-19 and it will remain a serious threat over the next few months,” Father Antonius Benny Susetyo, a member of a presidential unit promoting communal tolerance, told UCA News on March 15.

However, the former executive secretary of the bishops’ interfaith committee hoped the Vatican would reschedule the pope’s visit for next year “because his visit is very important for Indonesia.”

“His visit will have a positive impact on Indonesia, particularly in strengthening interreligious dialogue,” he said.

Hermawi Fransiskus Taslim, a Catholic lay leader, expressed a similar view.

Filipina nun who worked in India dies in Spain due to covid-19

A Filipina Benedictine nun has succumbed to coronavirus in Spain, her congregation reported on March 28.

Sr Maria Gratia Balagot, who was the superior of their community in India, was only visiting Spain to renew her visa when she was infected with Covid-19. “And while there, (she) contracted the virus,” the US-based Missionary Benedictine Sisters – Norfolk Priory said in a Facebook post. “Please pray for her and for her community in India and for the whole congregation during this difficult time,” the post reads. Sr Balagot, who is originally from Aringay, La Union, died at the age of 71. She has been a missionary in India since 2016.

Heed PM’s call, join people’s curfew: Cardinal Gracias

Cardinal Oswald Gracias, head of the Catholic Church in India, on March 20 urged his people to cooperate wholeheartedly with the people’s curfew called by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to contain coronavirus epidemic. Cardinal Gracias lauded the prime minister’s public appeal to India’s more than 1.3 billion people to observe a self-imposed curfew on March 22.

“Last evening the prime minister made an appeal to all of us to stay at home on Sunday March 22 in a self-imposed curfew. It is evident that the deadly coronavirus is spreading posing an extremely danger to all,” Cardinal said in a video message circulated through YouTube channel and the Bombay archdiocese’s website.

The cardinal said he has decided to heed the premier’s call and cancel all public Masses in the archdiocese of Mumbai from March 20 to April 4, “in the larger interest of safety of our people which is truly paramount.”

On March 19 at 8 pm, the prime minister appealed Indians to observe the “Janata curfew” (people’s curfew) as a test run for social distancing over the next few days to fight the spread of coronavirus. As part of the self-curfew, Modi said everyone must stay home from 7 am to 9 pm that day and abide by it.

The premier also cautioned citizens against hoarding and panic-buying, assuring that there would be no shortage of essentials like milk, medicines and food.

COVID-19: Salesian university professor selected for global platform

Vikramjit Kakati, who serves as Associate Professor (Mechanical Engg) at Don Bosco University of Guwahati has been selected as one of the mentors in a Canada-based international panel to fight coronavirus pandemic.

Montreal General Hospital Foundation, Canada, has launched a global Initiative to design a low-cost, simple, easy-to-use and easy-to-build ventilator that can serve the COVID-19 patients, in an emergency timeframe.

This has been supported by Canada’s National Research Council, providing expert support in rapid fabrication and manufacturability.

Dassault Systèmes, providing complimentary access to their 3D experience platform as well as complimentary licenses to Solid Works to contestants.
Fasken Law Firm has been providing legal, compliance, and organizational support.

Globally this challenge is known as Code Life Ventilator Challenge.

There are more than 650 teams signing up, with over 1,800 participants from around the world.

Lockdown: Catholic School Reaches Out To Hungry In Delhi

A Catholic school in Delhi is feeding migrants, destitute, and elderly caught in the in nationwide lockdown to contain coronavirus.

It all started with a desperate Whatsapp call Father Savariraj, the principal of Rosary School at Narela in North Delhi district, received on March 30.

The priest immediately convened a meeting of the school’s teaching staff on Zoom app and appealed them to donate rations.

“They responded positively, generously and willingly,” the priest says.

Meanwhile, Father Savariraj approached the Station House Office of the local police station to seek permission to distribute the groceries. The SHO gave a written permission.

Father Savariraj with Pratap, a staff, on April 3 distributed food to scores people, including residents of Philomena Paradise, an old age home on the Delhi-Uttar Pradesh border.

“We see hundred thousands of migrants staying under flyovers during the lockdown,” Father Savariraj says.

Christian women express outrage over spraying disinfectant on workers

A national body of women belonging to various Christian denominations has expressed shock and outrage over the spraying of disinfectant on migrant laborers.

“Even as the whole country is battling an intense and grueling confrontation with the Corona crisis, we the members of want to express our deep shock and horror at the treatment being meted out to hapless migrant workers who were today,” says a March 30 statement from the Indian Christian Women’s Movement.

Footage on the same day showed a group of migrant workers sitting on a street in Bareilly, a district in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, as health officials in protective suits used hosepipes to douse them in disinfectant, prompting anger on social media.

Coronavirus: Indian Church urged to care for stranded migrants

Catholic bishops of Ranchi, eastern India, have appealed their fellow prelates to reach out to millions of migrant laborers stranded in the country by the 21-day national lockdown.

“These are difficult times and even as we live in lockdown and make every attempt to keep ourselves safe, thousands of migrants are stuck where they are, not knowing where to go or have hit the road with their families and children without transport, monetary means or alimentary provisions,” says the March 28 appeal from Jesuit Archbishop Felix Toppo of Ranchi and Auxiliary Bishop Theodore Mascarenhas.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at 8 pm on March 24 ordered the nationwide lockdown from the midnight of that day as way to prevent spread of the Covid-19. It limits the movement of the country’s 1.37 billion people for 21 days.

The lockdown was preceded by a 14-hour voluntary public curfew on March 22.

Archbishop Felix Toppo The lockdown has caught millions of migrants and daily wagers off guard, leaving them no time to return home. Hundreds of thousands of them are now seen stranded at bus or railway stations or walking to their villages hundreds of kilometers away.

The bishops of Ranchi, who made the appeal a day after Pope Francis conducted “Urbi et Orbi” (to the city [of Rome] and to the world), the most solemn prayer in the Catholic Church.

Catholic religious urged to reach out to lockdown-affected

India’s more than 115,000 Catholic religious men and women have been urged to reach out to the poor affected by a 21-day national lockdown to contain the spread of the coronavirus pandemic.

“We need to move fast. This is an emergency,” says Father Joe Mannath, national secretary of the Conference of Religious India (CRI), the association of the major superiors.

In a March 29 letter to the heads of more than 550 congregations for men and women serving India, the Salesian priest says they should not wait for “perfect or easier” way to help hundreds of thousands poor migrant laborers stranded by the lockdown at various parts of the country.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the lockdown at 8 pm on March 24, just four hours before it was imposed all over the country, taking millions of migrant workers off guard.

Father Joe Mannath says the migrant workers, who now struggle to get back to their home states, urgently require provide shelter and food.

“God waits for our response. He is suffering in our suffering brothers and sisters,” says the CRI official’s letter that lists of a set of “dos” and “don’ts” for the religious to follow to protect from the highly contagious virus.

As on March 29, the coronavirus affected a total of 1,024 people across India. A federal Home Ministry statement said the epidemic has also claimed 27 lives so far.

HC Supports 2 % Reservation For Dalit Christians In Gurukul School Admissions

Stating that a mere conversion of a scheduled caste man from Hindu religion to Christian religion will not make him a Brahmin or a millionaire and hence it is unfair to deny him the reservation facility.

Telangana high court has appreciated the state of Telangana for creating 2 per cent reservations to such converts in social welfare Gurukul school admissions.

The bench of chief justice Raghavendra Singh Chauhan and justice A Abhishek Reddy was hearing a public interest plea filed by P Srinivas of Hyderabad who challenged the notification earmarking 2 per cent reservations for Dalit Christians issued by the social welfare department seeking applications for admissions into 5th Class.

The bench pointed out that the purpose of reservations was to uplift those who were weak and deprived. The petitioner’s counsel Harinath argued that once an SC person converts to Christianity, they cannot be granted a reservation.

Brushing aside this contention, the bench said that the state and the society should never try to keep a person backwards. By conversion, only the nomenclature of the person changes, but not his backwardness, poverty etc. The central philosophy of the reservations is to attend to the more oppressed and backwards, the bench said.

If the State of Telangana decides to be more liberal and provides some space for the converts, there is nothing wrong in it, the bench said. You have to look at the purpose. The state wants to uplift those who were suppressed for thousands of years whose conversion to Christianity will not make them forward, the CJ said. We cannot let these oppressed sections lag behind, he said and posted the case to four weeks. The state’s special counsel Sanjeev Kumar said that these reservations are provided in only social welfare Gurukul schools. The bench told the state counsel to file his counter on these issues.

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