Archbishop Seeks Local Help As Indian Govt Blocks Foreign Aid
Voters Abstain From Polls In India’s Christian-majority State
Pope Francis Will Be In Southeast Asia And Oceania From 2 To 13 September
Over Taxation Of Kenyans: A Matter Of Concern, Says The Kenya Conference Of Catholic Bishops
Cardinal Parolin On Pope Francis’ Pontificate: No Reversals On Reforms
Holy See Urges Solidarity And Action For Ethiopia’s Humanitarian Crisis
Earth Day: Pope Francis Urges Responsibility For Our Common Home
Pope: Red Cross’ humanitarian work shows that fraternity is possible
Prominent Russian Catholics have urged church members to continue condemning human rights violations after the funeral of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, despite warnings people who attended could face police reprisals.
“Although I wasn’t a great fan of Navalny, he was capable of mobilizing large groups wishing to classify themselves as liberal opposition – and he also had courage to highlight theft and corruption among the power elite,” said Daria Drozdova, an associate professor of philosophy.
“Navalny was convicted and declared an extremist, so people inside Russia cannot speak in his defense unless they’re ready to be imprisoned themselves. But Christians abroad must show how his premature death lies on the conscience of those who made his life unbearable,” she said.
The Moscow-based lay Catholic spoke after joining mourners at the March 1 funeral of Navalny. His death Feb. 16 at age 47 — at a strict-regime arctic penal colony, where he was serving a 19-year sentence — was attributed by Russia’s Federal Penitentiary Service to “sudden death syndrome.”
Leave a Comment