Priests in southern states seek ways to implement Dalit Policy

Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India (CBCI) has brought together priests working for dalit rights in southern states seeking ways to disseminate and implement the CBCI dalit policy.

Representatives from Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Pondicherry, Tamil Nadu, Telangana participated in the July 2 workshop at the Indian Social Institute in Bangalore.

The CBCI released the Dalit Policy for the Catholic Church in India in December 2016, aiming dioceses across India formulate an action plan within a year.

While releasing the policy officials said each region, after discussing with parishes and dioceses, was expected to come out before December 2017 with an action plan to empower Dalits, Catholics based on the principles enunciated in the policy.

Salesian college in Kerala attacked 

A Salesian college in Kerala suffered huge losses after miscreants attacked it for taking disciplinary action against a student. The authorities of the Don Bosco College, Sultan Bathery in Wayanad district, have blamed the activists of the Student Federation of India (SFI) and the Democratic Youth Front of India (DYFI) for the July 11 attack.

Catholic communicators in northeast to fight fake news 

The need to highlight truth amid lies and promote peace in a troubled region was stressed at a meeting of Catholic communicators of north-eastern India. Signis (fire) is an international media moment recognized by the Catholic Church. Northeast is one of its 14 regions in India. The region held its annual general body meeting on July 8 at Inspiration building in Guwahati, the commercial capital of Assam State.

Hundreds attend visionary missionary’s funeral 

Sacred Heart Church in Mumbai’s Andheri East suburb was packed with people on July 6 for the funeral Mass of Father Augustine Kanjamala, a renowned theologian and missiologist.
He died at Holy Spirit Hospital, Mumbai. He was 78.

Bishop Chacko Thottumarikal of Indore, who led the Mass, noted that the Divine Word priest served the Church intensely with his visionary leadership in evangelization.

Priest arrested for child abuse

Christian leaders say that a Catholic priest arrested for abusing a child in the central Indian State of Madhya Pradesh has been framed to malign the Christian community in the state ruled by a pro-Hindu party.

On July 10, police arrested Father Leo D’Souza, 56, following a complaint from the parents of an eighth-grade boy of the church-run Amar Jyoti School in India a Hindu nation.

The priest is manager of the school run by Jabalpur Diocese.

Bishop Gerald Almeida of Jabalpur said the accusation and the arrest has “shocked” the diocese. He said hard-line Hindu groups had earlier tried to create trouble for Christians accusing them of converting tribal people to Christianity.

India’s first Jesuit university opens academic year

The Jesuit-run St Xavier’s college in Kolkata city marked its transformation as India’s first Jesuit university when opened its new academic year on July 7, just six months after achieving the new status.

West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee unveiled the plaque of the new building along with business tycoon Lakshmi Mittal, a former student of St Xavier’s, who funded the building.

The Archbishop Thomas blessed the Marble statue of St Xavier after a short prayer at the entrance marking the opening of first academic session of university.

The 157-year-old institution was allowed to build a university in New Town, a satellite city of Kolkata, last December when state legislature unanimously passed a bill –The St Xavier’s University, Kolkata Bill 2016.

Jesuit Father Felix Raj, vice chancellor of the university, told the gathering that they could not have achieved it but for the support of many people. Welcoming the new students he said: “We shall try the best to form them men and women for others. It is only the beginning and we will slowly grow,” he said.

Bombay Court stays demolition of two crosses

The Bombay High court on June 30 by way of interim relief, restrained the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) from demolishing two Holy crosses located in Bandra (W) until further orders.

A division bench of Justice Abhay Oka and Justice Vibha Kankanwadi restrained the BMC while hearing a petition filed by Bombay Catholic Sabha. Senior Counsel Joaquim Reis appearing for the Sabha argued that the cross situated at Chapel Road and near Nandi Talkies, both in Bandra, have been there since a long time and cannot be said to be illegally built. He informed the court that since the Sabha had agreed to remove/relocate the two crosses located in the Khar area on their own, the notice for demolition was not maintainable. The bench, while asking the civic body to file its reply to the petition, posted the matter for further hearing in second week of July. Till then, the BMC cannot take any coercive action. The civic body had issued notices to the Sabha on June 24 asking them to relocate the holy crosses or it demolish them.

Catholics boost Madhya Pradesh’s tree planting drive

Church groups in the central Indian State of Madhya Pradesh have joined a government ini-tiative to plant millions of saplings to arrest climate change and propagate a message of conserving water.

All nine Catholic dioceses in the state joined the government’s 12-hour long tree plantation drive on July 2. The government claimed 60 million saplings were planted in one day; most of them on the banks of the river Narmada, considered a holy river by majority Hindus in the state.

“It was a great move in the direction of protecting the environment, conserving water and promoting greenery, thereby arresting the ill-effects of climate change,” said Bishop Gerald Almeida of Jabalpur.

Bishop Almeida issued a special circular to all parishes and Catholic institutions, urging priests, nuns and the laity to actively participate in the state’s plantation drive, said Father Somy Jacob, a parish priest of Jabalpur.

Why was Mother Teresa’s uniform trademarked? 

For nearly half a century, Mother Teresa, the Roman Catholic nun who worked with the poor in the Indian city of Kolkata wore a simple white sari with three blue stripes on the borders, one thicker than the rest.

Senior nuns who work for Missionaries of Charity, a 67-year-old sisterhood which has more than 3,000 nuns worldwide, continue to wear what has now become the religious uniform of this global order.

On July 10, news washed up that this “famous” sari of the Nobel laureate nun, who died in 1997, has been trademarked to prevent “unfair” use by people for commercial purposes. India’s government quietly recognised the sari as the intellectual property of the Missionaries of Charity in September last year, when the nun was declared a saint by the Vatican, but the order had decided not to make it public.

Biswajit Sarkar, a Kolkata-based lawyer who works pro-bono for the order, says he had applied for the trademark in 2013. “It just came to my mind that the colour identified blue border of the sari had to be protected to prevent any future misuse for commercial purposes,” he told me. “If you want to wear or use the colour pattern in any form, you can write to us and if we are convinced that there is no commercial motive, we will allow it.”

The austere blue-trimmed white sari has long been identified with the nun and her order. The story goes that in 1948, the Albanian nun, with permission from Rome, began wearing it and a small cross across her shoulder. According to some accounts, the nun chose the blue border as it was associated with purity. For more than three decades, the saris have been woven by leprosy patients living in a home run by the order on the outskirts of Kolkata.

Uzhunnalil alive: Yemen deputy prime minister 

Sushma Swaraj, the External Affairs Minister  of India asked her visiting Yemeni Abdulmalik Abduljalil Al-Mekhlafi to secure the safe and early release of abducted Indian priest Father Tom Uzhunnalil after being told he was still alive. In the meeting, Al-Mekhlafi conveyed that, according to available information, Father Uzhunnalil was alive and the Yemen government has been making all efforts to secure his release and assured all coopera-tion in this regard.

Church condemns attack on pilgrims in Kashmir 

The Evangelical Fellowship of India (EFI) on July 10 condemned what it calls “dastardly attack” on Hindu pilgrims in Kashmir.

“To attack people going to worship is to attack the very essence of what makes us human beings,” says a statement issued by the Protestant Church soon after Indian television channels reported the killing of seven people on their way to Amarnath, a pilgrimage centre in the northernmost Indian state.

More than 12 people were reportedly wounded in the attack that occurred at 8 pm on July 10.

“EFI prays for God’s solace to their families so that they can have the strength to bear their loss. EFI continues to pray for peace in our nation,” says the statement issued by Reverend Vijesh Lal, general secretary of the fellowship.

The Reverend also said his Church prayed and hoped that “sanity and peace will return as people learn to resolve differences and demands in a democratic and constitutional manner.”

Religious based targeted violence must have no place in India, he asserted.

Brave nun fights for women’s rights in Pakistan

The year was 1986. Sister Genevieve Ram Lal was being driven away from Lahore High Court when she noticed armed men in a car following her.

“We were fighting a case for abducted Christian brick makers in a nearby district. The Franciscan priest, sitting behind the steering wheel, knew the streets well and managed to lose the attackers.

We know they were brick kiln owners,” recalled the 59-year-old nun of the Sisters of Charity of Jesus and Mary congregation. “Fact-finding missions in brick kilns were always under the shadow of guns. The armed guards of kiln owners circle around as we collected interviews. The victims usually change the narrative by the time human rights workers reach them,” she said.

Presently, 58 nuns from her congregation serve in the fields of education, medicine and pastoral work. According to the latest Catholic directory, 29 women congregations are present in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.

Over the coming years, Sister Genevieve’s resolution as an activist only grew stronger as she became closely associated with the Protestant’s Young Women’s Christian Association and the Catholic Church’s human rights body, the National Commission for Justice and Peace. In 2012, she became the national director of the Catholic Women’s Organization(CWO) which observes its 10th anniversary in July.

Indonesian lay Catholics join priests in demanding their bishop resigns

Lay Catholics have joined dozens of priests in demanding Ruteng Diocese’s embattled bishop quit for allegedly misappropriating more than US$100,000 in church funds and having an affair with a woman.

In a July 1 statement signed by 30 people, they said “resignation” was the best course of action for Flores Island’s Bishop Hubertus Leteng as he had failed to perform his duties.

“The bishop is the shepherd, the representative of Christ, the spiritual leader, the model to live the Gospel value. Since his attitude and behaviour violate the nature and identity of a bishop, we urge him to resign from office,” they said.

If Bishop Leteng refuses to resign, they said, the Holy See must dismiss him.

“I think it would be a disaster if Archbishop Apuron were to return as the bishop of record,” said Coadjutor Archbishop Michael J. Byrnes, because of the extent of the loss of trust among the faithful and the “widespread disarray” left behind in church operations.

Byrnes, a former auxiliary bishop of Detroit, spoke to the press in Agana July 6, offering an update of the canonical investi-gation and trial of Apuron and his own personal thoughts about what would be best for the archdiocese moving forward.

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