www.charlottediocesc.ors
Blessed
is
the
one who has
in
LORD The LORD will
the day of misfortune the
will
deliver him.
leaves lasting
legacy
keep and preserve him; and make him blessed on earth, and not give him over to the
will of
his
NEWS
enemies.
Psalm
FEBRUARY 21,
Mercy
Sister of
regard for the lowly and the poor;
41: 2-3
...PAGE
SERVING CATHOLICS IN WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA IN THE DIOCESE OF CHARLOTTE
2003
North
Carolina
HERALD
&
in
VOLUME
N9
12
16
22
Building Families
Parents and orphans
connect through Catholic Social Services By
KAREN
A.
EVANS
ters filed their initial
Staff Writer
—
CHARLOTTE Ted and Eileen Peters have waited more than two years to baptize their 21 -month-old
two-week trip to China. They brought Anna home Nov. 23. "It was the best Thanksgiving we could have a
They smiled, and Anna cried, Mr. George Szaloney sprinkled
daughter. as Rev.
holy water over Anna's head at Church Feb. 16.
Abandoned
at birth,
ters spent the first
1
8
St.
had," said Eileen.
Ann
The
Peters met their daughter for time Nov. 1 1 in Kunming, capital of the Yunnan province. From Kunming they traveled to Guangzhou, where they obtained a visa through the the
Anna Wei Pe-
months of her
life
Chinese orphanage. China's Family Planning Law allows each married couple to have only one child, and in a society where boys are" valued above girls, girls are often left at orphanages or worse. Anna was just one of the approximate 14 million children, mostly girls, living in Chinese orphanages and one of the hundreds of millions of orphans worldwide. Almost two full years after the Pein a
Photo by Karen A. Evans
Ted Peters with their daughter Anna. The Peters adopted Anna November from China through the International Adoption Program of
Eileen and in
Catholic Social Services.
From mountaintops to
valley soil
[
Catechists take faith
I
journey for
all
By JOANITA M. NELLENBACH
people
By
about community, moun-
This was Catechist Oasis 2003: 'The Well, the Mountain, and All the Seeds Sown," which the Asheville Vicariate Faith Formation Team sponsored at Lambuth Inn Feb. 1415. More than 50 catechists from 10 parishes in the Asheville and Smoky Moun-
and
tain vicariates participated.
LAKE JUNALUSKA
—
the conference room, carrying
water, or walking sticks, or
bowls of dirt. These "journeys"
meant that try
is
tains
catechetical minis-
valleys, diverse soil.
Father Francis pastor of St.
T Cancro,
Eugene Church
'The story of the woman the well
in
Asheville, used the Samaritan
woman
is
at
a love story about
intimate connection and of lives
Transand the sower and
at the well, the
figuration,
See JOURNEY, page 14
THH
13m
wm-i
HOSlS
l000-66Stf ON
mt Zi
ttZS
83
N0U03TI03 OH
Adopted Children Immigrant Visa Unit (ACIVU) at U.S. Consulate General.
Every child who is adopted China must obtain a visa Guangzhou in order to immigrate the United States.
in in
to
More than
5,000 children pass through Guangzhou each year on their way to their new homes. See ADOPTION, page 8
for solutions to Iraqi crisis JOHN NORTON
pope Feb.
News Service
VATICAN CITY
the seed to illustrate catechesis.
Each session began with participants processing through
first
Pope, U.N.'s Annan hope
Catholic
(Correspondent
paperwork with
Catholic Social Services (CSS), their journey to adopt Anna culminated with
— As
the threat of a U.S.-led
war
Pope John and Vatican officials met U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan and held out hope
be
II
for "effective solutions" that Photo by Joanita M. Nellenbach
would spare
Iraqi civilians fur-
Catechist Oasis 2003 attendee pours water into a "well" before the firstsession story of the Samaritan woman at the well, portrayed by Ann Stowe of Mars Hill.
Even
as
the pope
was
meeting with Annan Feb.
In
a
statement
after
Annan's Vatican meetings, pa-
spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls said the pope pal
underscored the "essential role of the United Nations in the
18,
"Hope was expressed
that
just and effective solutions to
Vatican sources confirmed re-
the present challenges can
be found, in respect for international legality of which the or-
ter
Tony
Blair,
a strong advo-
still
cate of military action against Iraq,
was scheduled
to
meet the
Behind Vatican walls,
encourages fighting 'the
officials
good fight'
sympathy for Saddam
4
in
1997.
ports that British Prime Minis-
Catholic evangelize;
...PAGE
would pope since
visit
present hour."
ther suffering.
A
The
becoming prime minister
against Iraq loomed,
Paul
22.
Blair's first to the
Our Lady of Rosary Church wins volunteer
have little
...PAGE
See CRISIS, page 7
service
7
award ...RAGE
9
2 The Catholic
News & Herald
The World
2003
February 21,
Brief
in
New problems, hope seen in global fight against AIDS crisis in Africa
Council for Promoting Christian Unity.
On
14 the Vatican published the
Feb.
texts of the pope's message, Cardinal
WASHINGTON (CNS) — At a Feb.
10 workshop on global health during the
Rasper's speech to Archbishop Christodoulos and the archbishop's
annual Catholic Social Ministry Gather-
speech to the delegation.
workshop's speakers had
Vatican archive opening gets more attention from media than scholars VATICAN CITY (CNS) The
both bad news and good news about the
early opening of Vatican archival records
HIV/AIDS pandemic and efforts to adThe first half of the workshop covered the state of HIV/AIDS in the
related to
won-
ing in Washington, one participant
dered aloud
thing positive
AIDS
dress
crisis.
any upside
"if there's
can
I
The
tell
any-
...
people" about the
—
world today. Every measuring its toll
life
an
interest,
official at
rates, disease infection prevalence, funeral
Secret Archives
grave plots told the same story. According to Catholic Relief Services, more than 70 percent of the
earlier,
world's HIV-positive people live Saharan Africa, though the region
ture.
—
Some
1
home
is one new case every 8 seconds. In many communities more than a third of all
residents are infected.
Pope, Vatican officials meet Aziz, urge Iraqi commitment to disarm WarnVATICAN CITY (CNS)
photo from Reuters
Anti-war demonstrators gather in London's Hyde Park Demonstrators gather in London's Hyde Park to protest against war in Iraq Feb. 15. Millions of people took to parks and streets across the globe to demonstrate against a looming U.S.-led war on Iraq. The protests were said to be the largest of that kind since the Vietnam War.
—
Pope John Paul
equivalent of foreign minister. Vatican
government's willingness to cooperate with the international community, par-
spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls
ticularly in
II
and top Vatican diplo-
met with
Deputy
Iraq's
Prime Minister Tariq Aziz and asked Iraq for "concrete commitments" to respect U.N. disarmament resolutions. Aziz, a Catholic of the Chaldean rite, met pri-
said
the meetings "allowed a broad exchange
intervention in Iraq, which
Catholics, Greek Orthodox to move beyond
troubled past
would add
VATICAN CITY
further grave sufferings for those populations
hour Feb. 14, then proceeded to a 45minute meeting with Cardinal Angelo Sodano, secretary of state, and Arch-
years of embargo." In a statement, he said Aziz,
which are already
who
tried
by long
requested the meetings, as-
sured the church leaders "of the Iraqi
From Our Vantage Point [we see the market clearly] ad campaigns, web
site design,
FARAGHER DESIGN brings your message to
the
Member of St.
photography
market through
innovative, visual communications. Let's get started.
704-502-7445
Patrick
& H
2003
Volume
12
•
Number
February 22
23 STATESVILLE— St.
W. West Acting Editor: Kevin E. Murray Staff Writer: Karen A. Evans Graphic Designer: Tim Faragher
Dinner tonight from 5-7 pm. It will also be a farewell dinner to Fr. Fitzgibbons
Advertising Representative: Cindi Feerick
P.O.
Mail:
St.,
Box 37267,
Charlotte,
Charlotte,
NC 28203 NC 28237
call
E-mail: catholicnews§ charlottediocese.org
The Catholic News & Herald, USPC 007-393, is published Roman Catholic Diocese of Charlotte, 1123 South
by the
NC 28203,
44 times a year, weekly except for Christmas week and Easter week and every two weeks during June, July and August for $1 5 per year for enrollees in parishes of the Roman Catholic Diocese of St.,
cpa
Charlotte,
Charlotte and $23 per year for
all
Second-class Charlotte NC and
other subscribers.
postage paid other
cities.
at
POSTMASTER: Send
The Catholic News & Herald, P.O. Box 37267,
address corrections Charlotte,
NC
to
28237.
will be leaving for
in
details
—
24 CHARLOTTE The Light Weigh is coming to St. Vincent de Paul! The Light Weigh is a 1 2-week
Phone: (704) 370-3333 FAX: (704) 370-3382
Church
who
March. For more (704) 872-2579
Kuwait
Beason
1123 South Church
Philip the
Apostle Church, 525 Camden Dr., will be having their International
Publisher: Msgr. Mauricio
working
year
Marco
News
Service the
in
Europe.
The
pope's
churches, the archbishop said,
Catholic spiritual growth weightloss program designed to help deepen your relationship with Jesus while learning to eat the foods you
enjoy in moderation. An orientation will be offered today at 7 p.m. in Room 4 of the faith formation wing for those considering the program. Come give God's way a chance! If you have questions, please call
at (704) 543-5497.
NEWTON — The Little Flowers Group
May, so no
lines are
"We
expect to have a normal Maiorino said. "Most scholfield have already seen similar
day,"
ars in this
material available elsewhere."
The
material
between the Vatican and Germany from 1922 to 1939 detailing diplomatic relations
mosdy of correspondence, not
in-
ternal Vatican documents; scholars already
have had access to many of the German governments' copies and originals. Church official encourages
faiths to work together on public policy WASHINGTON (CNS) Catholics are more effective in shaping public policy when they work with other
—
churches, said Steven Spreitzer, liaison to
other religions for die Detroit Archdiocese.
do it by ourselves," he said workshop during the Catholic Social Ministry Gathering in Washington. To be effective in working with odier "Cadiolics can't
religions, Catholics
1 1
have to know about be understanding of their concerns, join for prayer services and seek common ground together, said Spreitzer, an official of the archdiocesan Social Ministry Office. Knowing about their faith traditions,
other faiths
is
helpful in finding reasons to
convince religious leaders to cooperate on a public policy issue, he said.
ticipation
is
anonymous and
vidual confession with a priest
is
indiavail-
Catho-
able following the prayer service.. All
ages five and up. The group will be meeting at St. Joseph Church, 720 West 13th St., at 4 p.m. in the
communication is confidential. Men and women of any denomination are welcome. For more information, con-
Holy Family Hall. For more details, Debbie Vickers at (828) 495-2039. 25 TRYON St. John the Baptist Roman Catholic Church, will host Terri Jarina, Diocesan Program Director for Parish Social Ministry on Feb-
tact
Catholic Girls' lic
February 21,
day.
first
bishop Christodoulos of Athens and all of Greece as he formally welcomed a Vatican delegation visiting Greece Feb. 10-14.
24
planner
R A L D
E
full
expected at the doors of the archives the
at a Feb.
Karen Acken
Diocesan NEWS
— Pope
must give a Christian witness to "a Europe that unfortunately day by day grows all the more worldly and secular and continues to distance itself from basic Christian values." The Vatican delegation to the Greek Orthodox Church was led by Cardinal Walter Kasper, president of the Pontifical
logo design, brochures, catalogs, newsletters
faragherdesign.com
told Catholic
concerns were echoed by Orthodox Arch-
The direct mail,
(CNS)
John Paul II said Roman Catholics and Greek Orthodox must move beyond their troubled past and work together to ensure Christian faith and values continue to play an important role
fi~M.
Secretary: Sherill
regard to disarmament."
Pope urges
of views on the noted danger of an armed
vately with the pontiff for about half an
^
He
consists
bishop Jean-Louis Tauran, the African's
officials
was announced a
but as of Feb. 14 only two dozen
are staggered through
CNS
ing of the disastrous consequences of war,
matic
The
scholars' requests to consult the material
1,000 people are infected daily;
that
the archives said.
Maiorino, secretary of the archive's prefec-
to only 10 percent of the world's population.
im-
has gar-
scholars had requested access, said
sub-
in is
II
Feb. 15 opening of records in the Vatican
expectancy, death
costs, available
relations
World War
nered more media attention than scholarly
statistic available for
—
Vatican-German
mediately prior to
it.
is
for all
girls
call
—
ruary 25 at 7 p.m. in the social hall. Ms. Jarina will speak on social justice and peace. All are welcome. For more information, contact Rochelle C. Tyson at (828) 859-9881. 25 CHARLOTTE A Rachel Network Evening of Prayer for PostAbortion Healing will be held today at 7:30 p.m. at St. Gabriel Church, 3016 Providence Road in the daily Mass
—
chapel. This service
who
is
open
to
anyone
experiencing issues related to abortion, whether their own or that of a friend or family member. Your paris
Martha Shuping at 659-1342 e-mail or mshupingO @sprynet.com. Dr.
(336)
1
26 CHARLOTTE - Fr. Andrew Ciferni, O Praem, and internationally recognized liturgist, will be at St. Peter Church, 507 S. Tryon St., tonight at
7pm
in the
Annex
can help us
to share
fully, actively
ways that and con-
sciously participate in the our liturgical celebrations.
For more information
church the (704) 332-2901.
call
27 BELMONT ers
office
'
at
— The Abbey Play-
and Belmont Community Theatre
will continue its presentation of Will-
iam Shakespeare's "Henry V" February 27-March at 8 p.m. in the Haid Theatre, Belmont Abbey College. One of the Bard's best-known works, 1
1
February 21,
2003
The World
The Catholic News & Herald
Brief
in
Pro-life official praises
States, the figure
House committee for passing ban on cloning
125 to one."
U.S. bishops' pro-life
(CNS) The spokeswoman ap-
offers 'care packages' for Catholic troops WASHINGTON (CNS) Spiri-
—
plauded the House Judiciary Committee Feb. 12 for approving a bill to ban hu-
Way
for
the measure to be considered by the
full
man
cloning, which clears the
packages" are now available to Catholic members of the U.S. military from the U.S. Archdiocese for the Military Services, thanks to the generosity of anonymous donors. Each package contains a New Testament, a tual "care
House of Representatives. "The JudiCommittee should be commended for approving a real ban on human cloning," said Cathy Cleaver, director of
ciary
handmade rosary, a religious medal and small crucifix that can be worn on a dog-tag chain, a Catholic prayer book and two holy cards. The packages may be requested by a member of the U.S. armed forces or by his or
planning and information for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' Secre-
The commit-
tariat for Pro-life Activities.
Human
Cloning Prohibition Act, introduced Jan. 8 by Reps. Dave Weldon, R-Fla., and Bart Stupak, D-Mich., in a 19-12 vote. Pope tells Rome rabbi tee passed the
Catholics,
Jews feel need to
pray for peace
VATICAN CITY
(CNS)
the growing threat of a
CNSj»hoto by Nancy Wiechec
— With
war
in
Workers shovel out front of National Shrine in Washington Workers begin to shovel the steps of the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington Feb. 18. A paralyzing weekend snowstorm left area churches, schools and government offices closed for a couple of days. Washington Cardinal Theodore E.
Iraq,
Catholics and Jews feel the need to pray
God
and to commit thempeacemaking efforts, Pope John Paul II told Rome's chief rabbi. The gift of peace, "shalom" in Hebrew, is "a fragile gift which is placed in human hands," the pope told Rabbi Riccardo Di Segni and top representatives of Rome's Jewish community during a Feb. 13 meeting at the Vatican. Christians and Jews have an obligation to safeguard the gift of peace, the pope said. "In these days, the dangerous rumblings of war can be heard," the pope said. 'We, Jews and Catholics, feel the urgent mission of imploring peace from God, the creator and eternal, and of being peacemakers ourto
for peace
selves to
selves."
The audience was Di Segni's first
meeting with the pope since being elected head of Rome's Jewish commuofficial
nity in
November
Poverty, injustice are
weapons of mass destruction (CNS)
— The
weapons of mass destruction
local Catholics a general dispensation
economy
for a reduced group of nations with the exclusion of the majority leads
the world to a dead end," he told del-
egates to the Feb. 9-12 Catholic Social
Ministry Gathering in Washington. "The wealthy North will never have enough steel walls to contain the avalanche of illegal immigrants unless there will be a political will to a real develop-
ment" in the poor regions of the world, he said during a homily at a Feb. 1 morning prayer service. The weapons of poverty
arid social injustice are already
work and
"in a silent
way
deficits
ized
is
are acting
the "ethical deficit" of a global-
economy, the cardinal
said.
Union leader says
"are
not toxic gases or deadly viruses," but "poverty and social injustice," said Car-
reorganization of society needed to fight poverty
dinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga of Tegucigalpa, Honduras. "A globalized
union leader called for "a major reor-
"Henry V"
Church,
is a tale of honor, perseverance, loyalty and romance. King Henry the Fifth of England, thinking he has a right to the French throne, matches military forces against the French. The English forces are out numbered nearly 5-1, but they love their king and are willing to lay their
down for him. Reservations can made by calling (704) 825-6787.
lives
be
28 WINSTON-SALEM Great Catholic Church
St.
Leo the
be celebrating their 75th Anniversary with a Mardi Gras Fundraiser tonight at 6 p.m. in the Bishop Begley Parish Center. There will be lots of food, fun and games for young and old alike. Wear your costumes. We will be awarding prizes for the best costume of children and adults.
28 CHARLOTTE
will
— The
St.
Luke
Church Music/Drama/Dance Ministry presents Marty Haugen's "The Song of Mark: A musical setting of the Gospel of Mark" tonight and March 1 at
7:30 p.m. at St. Luke Catholic
WASHINGTON
Lawyers
13700
more
For
(CNS)
28 ASHEVILLE
— The
A
Road.
information,
(704) 545-1224.
—
call
Eugene present "Tales of Wonder, St.
organize ourselves as a society," Dennis Rivera, president of the Service Employees International Union Local 1199 in New York, told a group of Catholic social ministers meeting in Washington Feb. 10. "It is simply outrageous that the richest country in with 10,000 billionaires the world and a million millionaires has tens of millions of its people living in poverty and despair," Rivera told those attending the annual Catholic Social Ministry Gathering. He noted that the United States has the greatest gap be-
toms," the Vatican's ambassador to Mexico said during a visit. "The local officials are truly building a church that the indigenous people can relate to,"
—
—
tween rich and poor in the industrialized world. "The average CEO in Japan makes 28 times what his workers make," he said. "Here in the United
2
ARDEN —
Ivan Dragicevic, one of
the three Medjugorje visionaries who reportedly is still seeing the Blessed Mother after 21 years, will be at St.
moving story of creation in song, dance and storytelling. The cast is
Memorial Basketball Tournament will be held today and Sunday in honor of
comprised of over sixty individuals ranging in age from seven to seventy. For ticket information call The Parish
Frances Ott, a 21 -year-old Charleston nursing student, who was killed in a car accident this past October. All proceeds will be used to establish a scholarship at Holy Trinity Catholic Middle School in memory of Frances. Girls' games will be played at St. Ann Church and boys' games at Holy Trinity M.S. Games will run from 1 1 am to 9 pm on Sat. and 11 am to 5 pm on Sunday.
a
Eugene
office at (828)
1
CHARLOTTE
—
St.
254-5193.
Gabriel
School, 3028 Providence Rd., will host its
"Everything" Consignment Sale to-
noon and from 1 pm to 3 pm (l/2 price sale on selected items), featuring adult and children's clothing, toys, furniture and household items. For details call Linda Franks at day from 8
am
to
(704) 814-7817.
ery (APO).
SAN CRISTOBAL DE LAS
for details.
St.
be sent per request and only to
locations served by U.S. postal deliv-
CASAS, Mexico (CNS) The Catholic Church in the primarily indigenous
Culvern St., Asheville. This work by noted musical liturgist Marty Haugen
March
may
of poverty and called for churches and unions to form coalitions and campaigns to make it happen. "Poverty is structured into the way we
Barnabas Church, 109 Crescent Hill Drive, from 5 to 8 pm, followed by a reception. 5 pm Mass; 6 pm Rosary; 7 pm Talk. Call 828-684-6098
of
nouncement on the archdiocese's Web site at: www.catholicmil.org/html/ care_req.html. Only one packet
ganization of society" to address prob-
lems
Players will A Musical Celebration of God, the Storyteller" tonight and on Mar. 6 and 7 at 7:30 pm at St. Eugene Church, 72
is
her relatives or friends. "This packet is provided and sent directly to the designated Catholic troop at no cost, as a way of spiritually supporting our Catholics in uniform," said an an-
Vatican official, visiting Chiapas, praises church efforts on Indians
and undermining peace," he said. More important than fiscal and commercial
Honduran cardinal:
real
McCarrick, among others, gave from attending Sunday Mass.
at
2001.
WASHINGTON
now approaching
Military archdiocese
—
WASHINGTON
is
w
1
7
CHARLOTTE — The Frances
WINSTON-SALEM
—
Ott
The
Knights of Columbus will host St. Leo's Fish Fry tonight and March 21
—
state of Chiapas
is
doing "a great job of
incorporating local traditions and cus-
-
Archbishop Giuseppe Bertello,
said
nuncio to Mexico, during a Feb. 10-13 the Diocese of San Cristobal de Las Casas. During a four-hour Mass in the Tzetzel Indian town of Ocosingo, Archbishop Bertello chewed a tobacco concoction, inhaled exotic incense and watched local church officials dance an ancient Indian jig with parishioners. visit to
Archbishop Bertello's visit and comments showed a warming in the relationship between the Vatican and the San Cristobal Diocese, with its so-called "autoctona" or "native church."
to support their seminarians.
more information, 0561.
7
CHARLOTTE
For
call
(336) 724-
—
Programa
Esperanza of Catholic Social Services will present a "Blending Cultures" class today
from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. The Blending Cultures class addresses traditional Hispanic/Latino culture, reasons for immigration, fre-
quently asked questions about Latinos and working effectively with the Hispanic/Latin American community.
To
register contact
Anna M.
(704) 370-3248, email amj udy@charlottediocese.org.
Judy
at
Please submit notices of events for the Diocesan Planner at least 10 days
prior
to
the publication
kaevans@charlottediocese.org.
date
to
4
The Catholic News & Herald
of the Gospel, with a body and a soul like us," he said, stating that St. Padre Pio,
Catholic evangelizer encourages fighting
"one of the greatest warrior in the
By
good fight'
spiri-
weapon. Father Corapi also spent time discussing the "horrific" scandals in the priesthood, and explained the rippling affect it has had on all the clergy. But he encouraged the people to love their priests, even if they are not always loveable; and to pray for them because without a good shepherd, the flock will tual battle," called
'the
2003
February 21,
Around the Diocese
Father Corapi preaches importance ofEucharist, rosary
KATHY SCHMUGGE Correspondent
CHARLOTTE — When St. Patrick Cathedral parishioner Terri de Luca heard about a "no-nonsense" priest who had spoken at her friend's parish in Pennsylvania, she was determined to
his
it
scatter.
Father Corapi warned everyone not
bring him to North Carolina.
to be overly critical or preoccupied with
was Father John Corapi, nationally-known Catholic evangelizer from California, who spoke to over 1,000 people at St. Gabriel Church Feb. 14-15. Over the two-day gathering, Father Corapi condensed major points in "Catechism of the Catholic Church" and brought meaning to the teachings through his personal experiences and
the faults of others, because Jesus said
That
SOLT,
priest
a
humorous analogy. His
that only the sinless could cast the stones.
"The priesthood is under attack from inside and outside of the church," he said, blaming the devil who wishes to get rid of the priests so there would be no Eucharist. Without the Eucharist, said Father Corapi, there is no life. 'The Eucharist is not something, it is somebody," he said. 'The Eucharist is the source and summit of our faith, the essence of our faith that gives meaning to our lives." Father Corapi said he is often ad-
direct style, of-
ten accompanied with a youthful grin,
resulted in spontaneous applause and
occasional laughter; but the audience
was always
attentive, especially
when
he defended teachings not statistically "popular" with many Catholics.
in the
one session, Father Corapi
In
vised not to preach about the negatives
Photo by Kathy Schmugge
Father John Corapi gives a special blessing to Carmen Ziesig, a parishioner of St. Therese in Wrightsville Beach, N.C. who drove to Charlotte to see his talks at St. Gabriel Church in Charlotte Feb. 14-15.
shared his less-than-conventional past that lead him to a 'late in life" ordina-
concentration in Doctrinal Theology.
Father Corapi attributed the Blessed Mother and the rosary for leading him directly to Christ. In a session on Mary, jokingly entitled "Your Mama Wears Combat
Army
during the Vietnam War; auditor Las Vegas hotels and casinos; and millionaire real estate broker for the rich and famous in Hollywood, Calif, a for
Boots" because of Mary's central role in the spiritual war that started with the
fast-paced lifestyle that eventually led
him to drugs and homelessness. At his lowest point, he remembered reaching out to a God he was not sure existed, and was given enough hope to lead him back home.
from heaven, Father Corapi stated that this kind of war was more dangerous than any of the historical wars, even the one brewing in Iraq. "Genesis chapter 3 is a war story; good versus evil. God gave an order not to eat of the fruit or they would die," said Father Corapi. "The devil called God a liar. Adam and Eve were seduced by pride, and pride leads to disobedience, and disobedience leads to death."
fall
He eventually
returned to his Cathoand went on to graduate with high honors from both Holy Apostle Seminary in Connecticut, where he received his master's degree in Sacred Scripture, and later from the University of Nav arre in Spain, where he received a bachelor's, licentiate and doctorate in Sacred Theology with an ecclesiastic lic faith,
Father Corapi added that clared
war on
the serpent
God
when he
de-
is
lost
accentuated,
"Father Corapi that
a
is
young
"In these troubled and strange times of terror and terrorists, remember that fear is useless. What we need
Father Corapi. "So, go fight and one day we will make it to the finish line, and God will say "Welcome good and faithis
trust," said
and fight the good
rosary.
pure power, a prayer
ful servant.'"
PIANOS FOR SALE! PYANO MAN
Steinway Grand, 1926, model "0" Beautiful refinished mahogany; superb quality and tone $16,000 Steinway Upright,
HENRY C. ROZEIX III
1907 mahogany;
52",
unbelievable condition
$3,900
Sohmer Console,
Dark Oak, 1970
Beautiful tone
Story JO Y£AH.s BXPGBJU»NC£
Like All
and
Tony Weis,
adult parishioner at St. Gabriel
Beautiful refinished
HEALING GARDENS RESPECT LIFE MEMORIALS MEDITATION TRAILS
tells it like it is
rare these days," said
Church.
which is spiritual, the physical battle would have more casualties. He said one of the ways to win that spiritual battle and breathe life into the home, the church and the world is through the
said
just
power
is
sides for boldly proclaiming "the truth."
trouble,
is
Not
and the light goes out. Because of this philosophy, Father Corapi describes himself as "an equal opportunity offender" who receives criticism from both
he put enmity between his offspring and the offspring of the Blessed Mother. "We live in catastrophic times with lots of suffering," said Father Corapi. "Look at the suffering in the church, there has never been anything like it." He warned that unless people begin to look at the underlying cause of the
"The rosary
listen. if
the positive
tion in 1991.
Before the priesthood, his diverse occupations included: time in the U.S.
world, but he refuses to
unlike electrical current, he said,
42°,
$2,400
& Clark Console,
new
condition
Medium Oak, 1986
40",
$1,900
pianos guaranteed with
FREE DELIVERY and FOLLOW-UP TUNING
Call
Pyano Man 704-321-5843
RANDAL SCOTT ROMEE, ASLA LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT 336-282-6582
rsromieasla@aol.com
Let stairs be our
specializing hi spiritual &nt> therapeutic $&ft>ens
problem... not yours! Ask about our Stairway
120,000 people will read these words this week! Shouldn't they see
LOW ad rates
-
• Easily •
YOUR COMPANY'S name here?
easy for small businesses
individuals, tool
and
Chair
& Equipment
800 Central Ave. Call (704)
370-3332 now!
.
attached to steps (not walls)
Folds out of the
• Fits
way
most stairways
•
Very affordable
•
We
(straight
& curved)
(rent or buy)
install
Rentals
Charlotte,
lifts.
NC .
& Sales,
Inc.
(800) 333-8431
Member of St. Thomas Aquinas
1
February 21,
2003
The Catholic News & Herald
Around the Diocese
wages, that
Working for workers' NELLENBACH
The Worker Center opened
Correspondent
MORGANTON
— As
Missioners. a student
needs
Lenoir-Rhyne College, Francisco Risso read about liberation theology and developed a passion for peaceand-justice issues. Today Risso, of the at
"We would
in the
out of his home.
'The goal of the Worker Center is to where workers can
try to identify the
community and
try to bring
start a drop-in center
learn about their rights," he said.
Risso
provides "advocacy to help workers ob-
to represent them."
tain their rights, to explain their rights
The workers formed Local 700 of Laborers International Union of North America. The local closed in December
said.
Justo Castro
Lux worked mainly with
the
and
their recourse
and
National Interfaith Committee for
Guatemalan community.
decide
Worker
(NICWJ), lives that passion by helping workers learn
They held
do."
about their rights. A parishioner at St. Charles Borromeo Church, Risso, 31, is director of
immigrant rights and economic issues, and collaborated with other
NICWJ's goal
is
local
Worker
NICWJ's commu-
Center.
While El
still
Tiempo
the
"My
in college, Risso interned
also
It
the workers
what they want
to
2001, but did leave funds, center also pro-
motes worker organization. "By collective organization and bargaining, you could achieve things that aren't covered by the
Glenmary fund-
ing ended.
law," said Risso.
wife and
I
NICWJ,
were
based
in
Chicago, was founded in
thinking about living in
Latino, a Spanish-language
let
The
grassroots Latino groups.
Then
nity to support workers' rights.
at
cultural events,
conducted workshops on
to mobilize the religious
were from Latin America. "They had organized themselves, and it was only after that that some unions came here to organize the workers," Risso said. "They voted for one union
people together to address those issues,"
He and Glenmary Co-Missioner
Justice
as a re-
of the Case Farms strike in 1995. Most of the poultry plant's employees sult
work with the Glenmary Co-
to
them
their rights.
Center established to assist low-income workers By JOANITA M.
doesn't have to treat
or that the workers won't assert
fairly
rights
it
5
commu-
were
some of which
to be used to help immigrants with
legal problems.
NICWJ
visited the area to see if a
Worker Center would benefit the community. The Morganton Worker Center one of the first three centers NICWJ opened in the southern United States last summer. The others are in Fayetteville, N.C., and Bentonville, Ark. In addition to conducting workers' rights workshops, Risso said, "I've been is
Washington, D.C. The community service, and some of Risso's time was spent in a
an intentional
out
this
support workers' rights.
trying to connect with Latino centers in
soup kitchen. He then spent three years at the St. Martin de Porres (now the Father
(NICWJ) job was
start-
Christian, Jewish and
the surrounding communities, and I've
Muslim members com-
worked on
newspaper
in
internship involved
Mulholland)
Charles
Worker House, an munity
nity,"
we
Risso
found
ing, so
I
religious
decided to take
it
Risso's wife, Molly,
com-
teaches English as a sec-
in Raleigh.
"We did hospitality, anti-war activism, anti-death penalty work, and demonstrated at military bases North Carolina," Risso "I'm a pacifist. That's how I describe myself, so that's what motivated this kind of activism." Risso arrived in Morganton in 1998
board of directors.
collectively to organize coworkers.
"for these
people
Although Risso's
NICWJ work
Catholic Social
1123 South Church St. Charlotte, NC 28203 www.cssBC.org
justice
&
Peace:
Joe Purello(7p4) 370-3225 Special Ministries: Gerard A. Carter (704) 370-3250
Services
know
their rights are," Risso said.
who
are
The
is
that
undocumented think they
don't have any rights, but that's not true."
Just as with documented workers
undocumented workers working conditions, overtime pay and the right to work and
citizens,
'Labor laws
Executive Director: Elizabeth Thurbee (704) 370-3227 Refugee Office: Cira Ponce (704) 370-6930
case, still in progress, involves a worker contesting a pay
are entitled to safe
greeting cards.
that we've seen, that people don't
what
need
real
other big issue that we've seen
has been mostly with Latinos so far, the Worker Center is for all low-income workers. While he looks for a space to set up the center, Risso works
several individual cases."
One such
Risso said the employer told the couldn't pay full wages or any bonuses, but then hired two more workers. Twenty workers protested to the employer, who fired the men he considered to be the protest's ringleaders. The Worker Center has filed a complaint with the National Labor Relations Board.
There's a
ond language and works with Manos Unidas ("Hands Together"), a women's economic group that makes and sells
in eastern said.
prise the organization's
Francisco Risso
Catholic
international
1996 to mobilize the community to
'Then
said.
affect all
workers," Risso
said. "If
you take away the
worker,
all
fected.
rights of
one
workers' rights would be
And why
company might undocumented workers believes it can pay them lower
Risso said that a because
it
man he
a learning process," Risso said,
"It's
workers to see what their rights and how, by organizing, they can improve their rights." are,
af-
are they hiring undocu-
mented workers?" knowingly
cut.
hire
Francisco Risso will conduct a worker rights workshop in Wilkesboro on March 17. For details about the workshop or about the Worker Center, contact
him
at (828) 320-6212.
Charlotte Region: 1 123 South Church Street, Charlotte, NC 28203 Area Director: Geri King (704) 370-6155 Western Region: 50 Orange Street, Asheville, NC 28801
Area Director: Sister Marie Frechette (828) 255-0146 Piedmont-Triad: 621 W. Second Street, Winston-Salem, NC 27108 Area Director: David Harold (336) 727-0705
Catholic Gift & Book Store
Creensboro Satellite Office: (336) 274-5577 High Point Hispanic Center: (336) 884-5858
Over 700 Book
Titles, plus Bibles, Rosaries, Statues,
Medals, Tapes, CD, Plaques,
For information on specific programs, please call your local office.
Hours:
9am -5pm
(336)273-2554 fax (336) 273-2441
& much, much more!
Monday
233 N. Greem St.
-
Friday
Greensboro,
NC 2740
Carolina Volkswagen 7800 E. Independence Blvd., Charlotte (704) 537-2336
•
"The mountains shall yield peace for the people."
Psalm 72:3
Lowest
Selection
Prices
JESUIT HOUSE OF PRAYER HOT SPRINGS, NC
Welcoming all Christians seeking prayer and quiet in a busy life Situated
in
9:30am-3:00pm
peace and beauty haven for quiet
offer the perfect
"Nothing Could Be Finer'
prayer and reflection,
Members ofSt. Gabriel I
# 1 Volkswagen Dealer in Charlotte and all the Carolinas for customer sales and service satisfaction!
and
see
why!
Carolina Catholic
Bookshoppe
the heart of Pisgah National
Forest, the area's
in
Sat.
(800) 489-2336
Biggest
C'mon
Mon-Fri ?:30am-5:30p«i
g nation directed retreats
Private retreats ^^^k. Group retreats Call:
828-622-7366
e-mail: vpaul@madison.main.nc.us
t Special Cards t Religious Articles t Unique Gift Ideas
704-342-2878 Fax (704) 334-3313 4410-F Monroe Road, Charlotte,
NC
www.carolinacatholicbooks.com
We welcome mail orders
aiui special orders!
6
The Catholic News & Herald
People
in
Bishop Dudley restored to sex abuse claims
publications and productions are Christo-
pher News Notes, sent free 10 times a year to more than a million people around the world; a syndicated column, 'Light One Candle"; a weekly television series, "Christopher Closeup"; and a daily radio message, "Christopher Minutes," carried
ministry;
unsupported ST. PAUL, Minn. (CNS)
— Arch-
bishop Harry J. Flynn of St. PaulMinneapolis announced Feb. 12 that retired South Dakota Bishop Paul V. Dudley has been returned to active ministry after an eight-month investigation of sexual abuse claims against him came up with no supporting evidence. "I now consider the complaints against Bishop Dudley to be closed and resolved in his favor," the archbishop said in a written statement. Bishop Dudley, 76, has been living in his home town of Northfield, Minn., since he retired in 1995 as bishop of Sioux Falls, S.D. He had been helping out in Twin City-area parishes with Masses and confirmations, but he voluntarily withdrew from all public ministry last May after Michael Flaherty publicly claimed the bishop had abused him several times 45 years earlier, when Flaherty was an altar boy at Annunciation Parish in Minneapolis and Bishop
Dudley was
a priest stationed there.
Church groups hail Indian-born astronaut who died on Columbia
NEW
DELHI,
India (CNS)
—
Church groups were among the many organizations and individuals in India who hailed the Indian-born Hindu woman who died on the Columbia space shuttle as an inspiration to the country's
women and
youth. Several church groups organized memorial services for Kalpana Chawla, 41, one of seven astronauts killed Feb.
1
when Columbia
ex-
was to land on Earth. Indian Deputy Prime Minister L.K. Advani said Chawla brought great fame to India as the first Indian woman to enter space, reported UCA News, an Asian church news agency based in Thailand. 'The entire nation was proud of Chawla. The mishap has come as a big blow to them," he said in a condolence message. The Columbia mission was her second journey into space. Her first was ploded minutes before
it
on 400 radio
WASHINGTON
her Catholic faith her whole
whose new album,
—
Irish heritage ing." "I'm
CNS
photo by Chris Sheridan
Child enjoys celebration of Bronx jazz Mass Alexis Ademisoye, 5, is captivated by Father Jerome LeDoux's dancing during a jazz Mass at St. Augustine's Church in the south Bronx section of New York Feb. 16. The three-hour Mass, filled with stylized music, was held in observance of Black History Month. Several churches in the New York area participated.
bring to the instrument
Parliament
is
WASHINGTON The
Vatican's top official for health
care ministry got a look at U.S.-style health care within a Catholic pastoral framework during a Feb. 1 1 visit to Holy Cross Hospital in Silver Spring. "I've
even given blood here," Cardinal
Heaney, executive publisher of The Tidings, to head The Christophers
—
NEW
a part of you."
member notes
different roles of Catholics in U.S., Britain Catholic
YORK (CNS) Dennis W. Heaney, executive publisher of The Tidings and Vida Nueva, Los Angeles
member
—
(CNS)
A
of the British Parlia-
ment said he was inspired by a visit to a conference of Catholic social ministry workers and by the comparative ease with which the U.S. church can take a role in public life. Lord Daniel Brennan,. an attorney and member of the House of
E. McCarrick of Washington said lightheartedly to Archbishop Javier Lozano Barragan, president of the Pontifical Council for Health Care
archdiocesan newspapers, has been named president of The Christophers. When he starts May 1 he will be the first
Lords, said Feb. 12 that Catholics in poli-
layperson to head the Catholic multime-
counterparts in the United States.
Workers. Archbishop Lozano was
dia organization
Theodore
in
the" Washington area for a three-day
observance of the
1 1
th
World Day of
the Sick.
The new cial
on a permanent
Christophers are priest-director
public
still
who
spokesman
basis.
looking for a
be their
offi-
in their print
and
will
Maryknoll Father founded The Christophers
electronic media.
James Keller in
1945 to stimulate people of all
recognize their
make
abilities
faiths to
and use them to
the world a better place.
Among its
tics in Britain
have a
significantly differ-
ent role in government than do their Catholic Church in the United
The Kingdom
for more than a century, he reminded the participants at the annual Catholic Social Ministry Gathering in Washington. And it has been less than 200 years since Catholics there received
was persecuted
full
rights as citizens.
"It's
only
century that
we have resumed
political
Brennan
life,"
in
the last
a role in
said.
Grieco, a journalist from the Vatican.
Dealerships Serving Charlotte with integrity for over<41 years!
^MITSUBISHI
HONDA
MOTORS
Frank LaPointe, President,
see us play our
News Service in a
telephone interview from New York City. Their performance, she added, "touches people, moves people in a good way. I feel I'm in a good place." She added, "As a practicing Catholic all my life, (the music is) just a part of you. It's a part of the spiritual part of a person. It's part of your soul, part of your personality. What you
50% OFF
Save
and more on over 1 500
PRESCRIPTIONS 1
,000's of
Americans now saving
HUGE
Dollars Buying Directly from
Average
704-531-3131
—
&
her music "a bless-
come and
Prescriptions Direct
Independence Blvd.
calls
music," she told Catholic
Join
E.
"Eileen Ivers
very blessed to see what types
(of people)
We'll beat any advertised price... Let us prove it!
6951
Ivers
life.
Immigrant Soul" fuses the music of contemporary African and Latin American immigrants to America with that of her own
companied by Father Gianfranco
—
Eileen
she was 8 years old. She's been practicing
style
SILVER SPRING, Md. (CNS)
—
(CNS)
Ivers has been practicing her fiddle since
Vatican official gets close look at Catholic health care, U.S.-
1997.
stations.
Irish-American Catholic fiddler calls her music 'a blessing'
It was the first time that the United States had hosted the event. Cardinal McCarrick and Kevin Sexton, president of Holy Cross Hospital, stood inside the glass-doored main entrance and greeted the archbishop when he arrived around 9 a.m. ac-
in
2003
February 21,
the News
7001
E.
R All
Call
of
St.
EVISTA 60
MG
FOSAMAX 70 MG
(4
PILLS)
LIPITOR 20 MG PLAVIX 75 MG ZOCOR 40 MG quotes are
for
30
pills
$86 $98 $74 $105 $133 $124
based on prices
Today or Visit Our Website
at
Compare & Save!
US Price
for
Our Price
$36 $45 $39 $54 $64 $58
90 days as of 10/1/02
www.drugsfromcanada.com
Independence Blvd.
704-535-4444 Member
CELEBREX 200 MG
-
Canada
Gabriel Church
Toll
Free 1-866-763-1234
February 21,
2003
Behind Vatican walls,
The Catholic News & Herald 7
the News
In
officials
CRISIS,
have
from page 1
sympathy for Saddam
little
ganization of the United Nations
is
the
guarantor," he said.
By
What
JOHN THAVIS
Catholic
News Service
VATICAN CITY
— When
Vatican
opened their copies of the bestselling Italian Catholic magazine Farniglia Cristiana in early February, they winced a little. An insert in the magazine showed Pope John Paul II and President George W. Bush sitting back-to-back. Under the heading: "Whose side are you on? With Bush or with the pope?" the magazine officials
was asking readers to vote in a referendum on a new war in Iraq. That kind of juxtaposition of Bush and the pope has made Vatican officials uncomfortable. While opposing a preventive attack on Iraq, the Vatican is worried that it is being mistakenly cast as a foe of the United States and a friend of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. Privately, Vatican officials often begin statements about Iraq with the phrase, "I'm not defending Saddam
should Saddam do? "Go away. And if he's not going to do that, show the kind of cooperation
after Aziz's papal audience
required by the inspection team," the official said.
mitments" the U.N. resolution on disar-
ring to a U.N.
mament.
1991 Gulf
The
Vatican's public diplomatic
moves have sometimes left the impression of a growing gulf between the Holy See and the United States. The pope met with
German Foreign
Minister Joschka
Fischer and Iraqi Deputy Prime Minis-
Tariq Aziz and planned a session with U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan all strong opponents of a preventive attack on Iraq. At the same time, the pope sent a personal envoy to Baghdad to show his
aimed for
Vatican repeated
Such solutions should also "avoid
its
argu-
further grave sufferings to those popula-
ments against war, but pointedly
called
for Iraq to respect with "concrete
com-
tions, who are already tried by long years of embargo," Navarro-Valls said, refer-
before Aziz's arrival, Car-
embargo imposed after the War. Annan met with the pope for about
dinal Roberto Tucci divulged to Vatican
half an hour and separately with Cardi-
Radio an episode that illustrates the Vatican's uneasy relationship with
Angelo Sodano, Vatican secretary of and Cardinal Roger Etchegaray, a retired French prelate who had just returned from a special Vatican mission to deliver a personal papal message to Iraqi
The day
Saddam
Hussein's regime.
A few years ago, Cardinal Tucci was
ter
—
The
balance.
attempting to plan a papal
Abraham
birthplace of
part of modern Iraq.
trip to the
what
in
now
is
nal
state,
President
Saddam Hussein.
was to be the first stage of the pope's Holy Year pilgrimage to the roots of the faith, and because Abraham is also respected by Muslims
Navarro-Valls said that other regions of conflict especially the Middle were raised during the meetings, East and that Vatican officials thanked Annan
officials said it would be presume that diplomatic
as a prophet and patriarch the Vatican foresaw no big problems.
for his "constant personal efforts for peace
dialogue with the United States has been
But when Cardinal Tucci got to Baghdad, a committee of Iraqi officials told him that the pope's "Judeo-Chris-
solidarity with the Iraqi people.
But church a mistake to
cut off or downgraded. Flying in under the media radar in early February were
It
of his pilgrimage was in and that it had to be corrected in
—
—
in different parts
of the world."
Cardinal Sodano, speaking to reporters after the
meeting with Annan, ex-
pressed support for a resolution adopted
tian vision"
Feb. 17 by the European
error,
for the
with protecting the rights of Iraq's
two U.S. officials from the State Department and Department of Defense, who briefed Vatican counterparts on the U.S.
Christian minority, but they recognize
reasons for war.
said Iraq
human
Vatican
Hussein.
..."
They
that his overall
credit his
government
rights record
Moreover, they tend to put most of the blame for the current crisis on Saddam, for failing to demonstrate unequivocally that his regime has stopped
States.
made
But
ball is in
Vatican
this clear to the
United
at this stage in the crisis, the
Saddam
Hussein's court," one
official said
ters said yesterday:
no-fly zones.
the way, but to reach
soon became apparent that Iraq want the visit, and Cardinal Tucci left without ever meeting with Saddam to work out the problems. Vatican officials say they have no illusions that the Holy See may be able to mediate the current crisis in some way. In fact, by mid-February many at
many
U.S.
government
The Aziz bit
of a corner.
in recent days.
The fact
The day before his
in a
arrival
as a
"new
dominate the world.
that Aziz, a Catholic,
hosted by Franciscan a
It
put the Vatican
visit
Rome, Aziz described Bush
day of antiwar
was being
friars in Assisi for
activities also raised
The
terse Vatican statement issued
"We Kleen with a Spirit of Excellency!"
IT
UP CLEANING SERVICE
(serving the entire diocese) COMMERCIAL
FREE Estimates
Offices
New Construction
Apartments
Bi-weekly
Medical Faeilites
Real Estate Clean-up Personal residence
Monthly
Banks Churches
methods and they should
be attempted.
War
initia-
from the pope, such as a new call days of fasting and prayer for peace.
ment
resolutions could lead to war.
for
...
the serious consequences that
tion notice)
S<
NEW
and
address (or cancella-
label,
Hours before meeting Annan, the
Saddam. The Vatican released no
Annan was involved in the
the third leading figure
crisis to
Previous bankruptcy?
come through
Iraqi
the
The pope
Deputy Prime
Minister Tariq Aziz and Feb. 7 with
j
German Foreign Minister Joscka Old address Old
Bad credit?
details
of the briefing.
met Feb. 14 with
Refinancing?
fol-
pontiff was briefed by Cardinal Etchegaray on his Feb. 11-16 mission to Iraq and his 90-minute meeting with
Vatican in less than two weeks.
Name
may
low," he said.
BEFORE you move.
Ifyou have your address
include that, too.
Buying?
not inevitable."
day before his meeting with the pope, Annan urged Iraqi leaders "to choose compliance over conflict," warning that failure to comply with U.N. disarma-
urgency and the gravity of the situation. 'If they were to continue their defiance the members of the (U.N.) Security Council will have to make a grim choice: whether to declare material breach and
to Iraq.
tives
give us your
www.internationalmortgage.net
is
A
that the Iraqi leadership understand the
come
Take us with you!
apply online at:
is
still
people should anticipate spiritual
to
MOVING?
-
there are
pull off a diplomatic miracle, they said,
war was about
336-299-4973
Mortgage
peaceful
it
Instead of expecting the Vatican to
that
Please help us reduce postal fees
international
all
disarmament. This
Speaking to reporters in Brussels, Belgium, after meeting with European Union leaders holding an emergency summit, Annan said, "It is imperative
RESIDENTIAL
Weekly
Licensed - Insured - Bonded 15 years experience
did not
the Vatican seemed resigned to the idea
Vatican eyebrows.
Feb. 14.
KLEEN
cardinal said the goal was "to what the European prime minis-
ing U.S. and British patrols over the two
Hitler" trying to
has
The
had been phone calls between the Secretariat of State and "higher levels" of the
in
it
peaceful means.
obtain
struction.
"The Vatican opposes a new war,
also
ing the pope's safety because of continu-
officials
trying to develop weapons of mass de-
and
They
would have trouble guarantee-
indicated there also
is
atrocious.
light of Islamic interpretation.
Union calling disarmament of Iraq through
Fischer,
whose country holds the
rotating
presidency of the U.N. Security Council. zip
city
Annan, who has met the pope
First-time buyer?
at the
Vatican four times since becoming U.N.
NEW address
secretary-general in 1997, responded to a
BAD CREDIT=N0 MONEY DOWN!
NEW city/state
zip
The
changes
Catholic
to:
News &
Herald
a special visit
U.N. weapons inspections. The accord he worked out with Iraqi officials lasted about eight months. In 2000, Annan received the Path to Peace Award, given by the Vatican's representative to the United Nations, who .
Address Changes 1123 S. Church Street Charlotte,
Or e-mail
NC 28203
cited the secretary-general's special efforts this info to:
catholicnews @ charlottediocese.org
CALL TODAY: Kevin Geter (704) 231-2433
make
to Iraq to resolve a previous crisis over
Date of move/cancellation:
WE CAN MAKE YOUR HOME LOAN EASY! international Mortgage Service
papal plea in 1998 to
Thank
you.
on behalf of peace
in Iraq,
East Timor and
the former Yugoslavia. In 2001,
was awarded the Nobel Peace
Annan
Prize.
The Catholic News & Herald
8
abandon their babies at the hospital." Another perceived advantage of do-
ADOPTION, from page 1
mestic adoption likely to
CSS matches
days weren't easy. "Anna shut down for about three days," she said. "She wouldn't
my
talk or walk. She just sat on clung on to me."
In the three difficult days,
months
Anna
Children placed in foster care are priCourtesy Photo
are available
CSS
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there were 861,789 legal induced abortions in 1999, the lowthe Peters decided to adopt,
they interviewed with several agencies the
most comfortable with the process CSS," said Eileen. "This
is
at
but
realistic
International
Adop-
places children
make
takes several
months
my
life,"
Eileen said.
Anna Wei Peters toddles through her new home, looking for her next so
adventure. Catholic Social Services will reap
afruit-
ful harvest thanks to your contribution Diocesan Support Appeal.
to the
it
perwork and photographs. Adoptive parents wanting a healthy Caucasian baby must also wait up to two years. 'There are sometimes 30 parents on the waiting list and we usually only
gets too long.
CSS sometimes has to close the when the waiting
aplist
In domestic adoptions, adoptive parents often have
more information on
birth parents as
compared
have often been abandoned, with no record of who their parents are or what
or
Evans by e-mail
kaevans@charhttediocese.6rg
Caring for Charlotte Area Catholic Families
is.
"In Russia," Beall said, "single
who
370-3354
to a foreign
about two years for a Chinese child and often less than a year
their family medical history
(704)
the
adoption. Children in foreign orphanages
ers
Contact Staff" Writer Karen A.
calling
due to a number of factors. The wait is
was frusworth the wait. "It
And
to process the pa-
ing through other agencies.
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
so blessed to have this opportu-
"I feel
nity at this point in
sure the children are healthy before
allowing them to be adopted. Finally,
plication process
from Russia. When parents choose to adopt from China or Russia, they "are saving a
Work, Adoption, Pregnancy Support and Material Assistance for CSS.
life in
post-placement services for parent adopt-
for a child
sor for Social
Their Hour of
in
Need
Since 1926
moth-
are struggling economically
Peters, the process
tratingly long, but well
happens the
Eileen said.
The
Program currently
usually shorter
years, according to Jeannie Beall, supervi-
all
in Charlotte handles 12-15 do-
from a
place 15 babies a year," Beall said.
rise
from China usually takes about two
For the
Short-term placement is available for mothers who are not able to adequately
Guangzhou. China.
an orphanage," said Beall. Parents adopting a foreign-born child can provide that child with better opportunities than they would normally have, she said. Chinese adoptees are usually at least a year old when they are placed with a family because first preference goes to Chinese parents. Also, orphanages wait to child
Americans adopted more than
about the adoption process. Adopting a child
the Peters were well
"I
20,000 children from other countries in 2002. International adoptions are on the
the way."
CSS was encouraging
in
from China and Russia. They also provide pre-placement assessments and
a lifelong jour-
support every step of
offers
Anna and
tions each year.
tion
"We were
was wonderful." She
mestic and about 60 international adop-
est rate since 1975.
on CSS.
sure
raved
coming to the Peters. 'They realized that we were adopting Anna, and seemed happy about it," Eileen said. "Anna and I were in the park one day, and an elderly lady gave me a thumbs-up sign."
due the practice of abortion.
ney and CSS
China, Xiulan,"
facilitator in
all
got sick while I was there, and she went to get Chinese herbs for me," she said. The Chinese people were very wel-
variety of causes are attributed to
before deciding
about the
taken care of
number, primarily children whose parents died from AIDS and those abandoned by impoverished parents. In the United States, a significantly
When
'They
made
this
number of children
to adopt through CSS.
Eileen said. "She
Africa.
smaller
room
marily infants, pending their adoption.
care for their children at the time.
world, concentrated primarily in Asia
for adoption
in their hotel
children.
Development, there are approximately 100 million orphans throughout the
A
also pro-
family, especially the birth father.
For every Chinese orphan that is adopted, 25 are not According to The United States Agency for International
and
They
vide support services to the extended
Mother and daughter play
one of the fortunate
adoption services,
offers
sources for birth mothers.
since those first
has thrived and the
emotionally. is
its
pregnancy support and foster care. Pregnancy support includes counseling and referrals to community re-
Peters have become a family. She has picked up English quickly and is healthy and strong, both physically and
Anna
the profiles of parents on the
In addition to
CSS
and
lap
more
approved waiting list to the specifications of the birth parents.
few
first
parents are
choice regarding the parents of their child.
next to the embassy." Eileen confessed that the
is tiiat
be able to adopt an infant.
CSS offers open adoptions, which allows the birth parents to have more
'They call it 'baby central,'" Ted said. 'There were hundreds of parents staying at The White Swan (a western-style hotel)
2003
February 21,
Around the Diocese
way
"It's in
it
is
supposed
God's hands and
I FUNERAL SERVICE, INC.
JOHN T. WEISENBERGER
to," it's
a
Charlotte 704-334-6421
miracle in his time."
Hendrick Acura
While the Peters were still considering whether or not to use CSS, Michele Sheppard, an adoption social worker in the Western Regional Office of CSS in Asheville, invited them to attend a meeting with parents who had recently adopted from China. Those meetings convinced the Peters
Camp
6824
E.
Independence Blvd. NC 28227
Pineville 704-544-1412
Charlotte,
-?0 0A
704-566-2317 704-566-2320 Fax 800-763-7811 Toll Free www.hendrickacura.com
Camp
/
Mint
Hill
704-545-4864
Derita 704-596-3291
A magnificent,
4-year-old, country
French estate nestled
Merr - Mac /Timber lake
Quail Hollow on
i
for girls
1
in
prestigious
acre plus. Pristine
condition with every attention to detail.
Superb
for boys
for
floor plan with
wonderful flow
grand scale entertaining. Gracious
master suite with heated master bath
FIFTY
SUMMERS
OF FUN AND GROWTH IN THE BLUE RID6E MOUNTAINS! www merr - mac com Black Mountain/ NC 28711 .
i
.
828-669-8766
floor
gas
Bookcases galore, large masonry
fireplaces.
Gourmet
kitchen with
charming breakfast room. Elaborate landscaping. $1,095,000.
TRULY A CLASSIC! Bar Harbor Lane, Charlotte Mildred Wolfe, Realtor
Bus.: 704-364-1580
704-227-3292
Prudential CwoOiusj Really
Res.: 704-364-2899
.
2003
February 21,
The Catholic News & Herald 9
Around the Diocese
Our Lady of Rosary Church
Empty threat found
wins volunteer service award
in
By KEVIN
E.
MURRAY
"The church developed
Acting Editor
LEXINGTON
—
Our Lady of
Church was the recipient of the 2002 North Carolina Award for Outstanding Volunteer Service, presented at an awards ceremony held at Trinity Baptist Church in Rathe Rosary
leigh Feb.
The
1 1
statewide award, sponsored
by the United Way of Davidson County, was for the support and hard work of the church's involvement with the Hispanic community. Parish efforts that earned the award include providing space for ESL (English as a Second Language)
By KEVIN
a direc-
tory of county and community services written in Spanish," she said.
"They conducted a cultural awareness workshop for the community providers and vendors." Other parish services included transportation, domestic violence, women and youth groups, HIV prevention, pregnant teen assistance, tax assistance,
school
community development, programs and summer
after school
camps. In a letter to the church, Gov.
E.
graffiti
MURRAY
Acting Editor
CHARLOTTE —
Graffiti caused quite a stir at Charlotte Catholic High School Feb. 19. Students waited patiently outside while police and fire officials searched the building the result of graffiti messages containing racist remarks and the words "bomb" and "10:00." After three sweeps of the campus,
—
housing information, and education and work assistance, according to Donna Lane, the United Way of Davidson County co-
Carolinians who made a difference every day in your local community through selfless acts of service, you represent the true spirit of volunteerism. Your compassion and
Cassidy, principal. As a precaution, he said, "Before 10 o'clock, we took all
ordinator.
exemplary service result
"For the past three years, members of Our Lady of. the Rosary Catholic Church have served the Hispanic community," said Lane. "Dedicating 10-15 hours a week to this ministry, they work to build a greater understanding and trust between the Hispanic and English-speaking com-
surable benefits."
munities."
"It's
in
immea-
two communities coming
to-
gether and working together to satisfy the needs of everybody," said Oblate Father Albert Gondek, pastor. Contact Acting Editor Kevin E.
Murray
by calling (704) 370-3334 or e-mail kemurray@charbttediocese.org.
school bus and fence were
damaged on
also
the property.
Father Cassidy believed the vandalism took place between midnight and 5:30 a.m. Police said other racist and threatening graffiti was discovered on at least 20 cars at a nearby apartment complex. "It seems there was somebody in the area playing pranks," said Father Cassidy. "This wasn't specific to us." The police have no suspects, but they are reviewing surveillance tapes from school hallways cameras that face the windows. Empty spray cans were also discovered near the scene.
inside the school the previous night.
"Everything was checked out thoroughly," said Father Jim
A
dition.
found nothing suspicious and no indication that anyone had been
officials
Mike Easley, who attended the ceremony, wrote, "As special North
classes, health fairs,
Photo by Karen A. Evans
of the kids out of the building until we were sure nothing would happen." Students and staff were soon allowed back to class; however, some parents chose to take their children home for the day. "There was no evidence that anybody got into the building," said Father Cassidy. "In fact, the evidence points the other way." The graffiti was discovered on the outside of windows overlooking a construction area of a new school ad-
Contact Acting Editor Kevin E. by calling (704) 370-3334 or e-
Murray
mail kemurray@charlottediocese.org.
STEWARDSHIP DAY CONFERENCE REGISTRATION FORM
sward
to register phase
send the information requested
below with
awayt%
r
$30 registration fee to:
Diocese of Charlotte Pastoral Center
Development Office 1
123
S.
Church
Deadline
NC. 28203 March 21, 2003
Street, Charlotte,
for registration is
MAKE CHECKS Payable to:
the Diocese of Charlotte
and complete one form
Please print clearly
for each participant
Regional Stewardship
Name
Day Conference
Address
& Savannah
Sponsored by: Archdiocese ofAtlanta, Dioceses of Charlotte, Charleston, Raleigh,
City
Zip
State
Adams Mark Hotel Charlotte, NC 9:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m. -
Saturday, April 5,
2003
Keynote Speaker
"Theology of Stewardship"
For more information
Featured Breakouts
Diocese
& Speakers
i
<
to attend.
(Choose only three topics)
[
Our Lady ofthe Assumption,
L
Check the breakout sessions you would like
"Advancing Parish Stewardship"
by Most Reverend J. Kevin Boland,
—
Parish.
Jim Kelley at the Office of Development (704) 370-3301 orjkkelley@charlottediocese.org
- Presented by
Bishop ofSavannah
call:
J
Advancing Parish Stewardship
NC
Charlotte,
Parish Hospitality
"Parish Hospitality" - Presented by Sacred Heart, Gaffney,
and St. Jude, "Keeping
it
Atlanta,
SC
r
GA
LJ
Alive"
- Presented -by
i
Mrs. LeAnn Powers, Diocese ofAustin,
Keeping
Stewardship Committees
TX Prayer
"Stewardship Committees"
Alive
it
and
Spirituality
-
- Presented by Jim Kelley, Diocese
of Charlotte,
NC
Communicating our Message
"Prayer and Spirituality" -
Presented by Blessed Sacrament, Savannah,
GA
"Communicating Our Message" - Presented by
St.
Catherine of Siena,
Wake
Forest,
NC
$30 Per Person,
Fees Include Continental Breakfast,
Conference Materials, Breaks and Box Lunch
10 The Catholic News & Herald
February 21,
Readings
2003
Book Review
Book offers look at Pope Pius XII Reviewed by
EUGENE News
Catholic
J.
Word to Life
made during the Second World War. Oddly, none of
FISHER
litical
Service
the books attacking this pope (and by
confused by the recent, historically muddled movie "Amen" by Greek director Costa-Garvas or who has read with dismay the glowing reviews of
extension, of course, the Catholic Cnurch as such) even attempts to portray the man himself as a fully rounded human being. Rather, these books, like the movie "Amen," present a cardboard caricature and on that caricature they place virtually the full blame for the Holocaust, which has been well described as the most heinous crime in human history. This, of course, is classic scapegoating. Sister Margherita goes beyond caricature to present this pope as a man of vision, of vulnerability, of hope, and, yes, of compassionate commitment to the poor, the sick, and especially those who were the victims of Nazi and other ideological perversities of the 20th century, such as fascism and communism. With this information readers can begin to appreciate the complex realities he faced. A scholar of modern Italian and Italian-American culture, Sister Margherita was the editor of "Twen-
Pope
Pius XII should read "Shepherd of Souls: A Pictorial Life of Pope Pius
The author, Sister Margherita Marchione, is a member of the Religious Teachers Filippini, professor emerita of Italian literature at Fairleigh Dickinson University and author of 40 previous books, three of which have been in defense of Pius XII. Here, she distills years of study into a short, approachable text augmented with an excellent collection of photographs of Pope Pius and his times. "Sister Margherita offers us a practical understanding of how the play by the German author (Rolf) Hochhuth ("The Deputy," on which the movie "Amen" is based) helped create in popular culture a serious misreading of a great pontiff," Cardinal William H. Keeler of Baltimore wrote in his preface to this timely and XII."
helpful book. "Certainly there
is
room
wide range of informed, scholarly opinion on the record of any pontificate, especially one as long and as seriously challenged by chaotic and destructive world events as that of Pius XII. But we also need to remind ourselves that too often in our own
for a
history as a nation classic anti-Catholicism has expressed itself in attacks on the papacy." In "Shepherd of Souls" Sister Margherita takes us through the life of Eugenio Pacelli before he was elected pope in 1939, scant months before the German invasion of Poland catapulted the world into the unprecedented maelstrom of evil and violence we call World War II. She shows his great (albeit not always successful) efforts first to forestall and then to lessen the human suffering of the war. She shows how his brilliant encyclicals of the 1940s on the nature of the church
("Mystici Corporis"), the Bible ("Divino Afflante Spiritu") and liturgy
("Mediator Dei") and many addresses in the 1950s on social policy issues laid the theological and doctrinal foundations for the great insights of the Second Vatican Council. This larger sense of Pope Pius' spirituality believe,
is
and theological vision,
I
necessary to assess the po-
Parents,.,
Century Italian Poetry: A Bilingual Anthology" (Fairleigh Dickinson Press, 1974) and author of "Americans of Italian Heritage" (University Press of America, 1995). Her recent books have focused on Italy, the Second World War and Pope Pius XII. She wrote "Yours Is a Precious Witness: Memoirs of Jews and Catholics in Wartime Italy" in 1997 and "Consensus and Controversy: Defending Pope Pius XII" (co-written with Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick of Washington) in 2002, both published by Paulist Press. "Shepherd of Souls" should be in tieth
every Catholic parish library, school, and, indeed, home. If I would have a suggestion for Paulist Press, it would be to put this book out in a smaller, mass market paperback edition as inexpensively as possible, even if that would mean cutting back on its pictorial side, so that it could be ordered in bulk for school and parish groups. Fisher
is
an
associate director
of ecu-
menical and interreligious affairs at the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and
an adviser
to the Vatican's
for Religious Relations with "Shepherd
Pope Pius
of Souls:
A
Commission the Jews.
•
But
Febr. 23, Seventh
Sunday
Jesus' power, they decide to risk
in
Ordinary Time
Cycle 1)
2)
B
it,
to
the everlasting gratitude of their transformed friend and those of us inspired by the story thousands of
Readings:
21-22, 24b-25
later. They break open the roof over Jesus' head and lower their help-
Psalm
less
Isaiah 43:18-19,
years
41:2-5, 13-14
comrade before him. It is noteworthy that Jesus
2 Corinthians 1:18-22
3) Gospel:
Mark
moved
2:1-12
is
to forgive this astonishing,
even violent interruption of his By
DAN LUBY
Catholic
preaching, not just by compassion for
News Service
the
Sweating beneath the weight they bear, four men stagger to a halt, stopped by a gathering crowd. They lurch clumsily forward with
murmuring en-
tiny, uncertain steps,
couragement to each other and their paralyzed friend. When they catch sight of the house where Jesus is, people are spilling from every doorway and out into the dusty street. Gently, they lower their suffering burden to the ground, to relieve their aching shoulders and discover a way through the crowd. They strain to hear Jesus, and though they recognize his cadence and tone, they cannot
make out
so far are they from
the"
his
words,
conversation.
On the stretcher between their feet, the paralyzed man's eyes flutter open briefly, watery and seeing nothing. When one of the bearers wonders aloud if they couldn't lower him through the roof, he is greeted with stares of disbelief and snuffles of de-
man on
the litter but also by the and persistence and daring of his
faith
friends.
All of us know, and most of us are from time to time, people so paralyzed by sickness or financial crises or
—
loneliness or fear
—
that they cannot
seem to bring themselves to God. AD of us hope for, and are called to ones in Sunday's faith, daring to cannot move them-
be, friends like the
Gospel, persevering in carry those
who
selves into God's healing presence.
Questions: What's a concrete action you can take to bring someone you love closer to the presence of
God? What immo-
burden do you need help laying at the feet of Jesus? bilizing
in
Scripture to Illustrate:
"When
Jesus
saw
said to the paralyzed
your
their faith, he
man, TVIy son,
sins are forgiven'"
(Mark
2:5).
Weekly Scripture Scripture for the week of February 23 - March 1 Sunday (Seventh Sunday in Ordinary Time), Isaiah 43:18-19, 21-22, 24-25, 2 Corinthians 1:18-22, Mark 2:1-12; Monday, Sirach 1:1-10, Mark 9:14-29; Tuesday, Sirach 2:1-11, Mark 9:30-37; Wednesday, Sirach 4:11-19, Mark 9:38-40; Thursday,
Mark 9:41-50; Mark 10:13-16
Sirach 5:1-8, 17:1-15,
Friday, Sirach 6:5-17,
Mark
10:1-12; Saturday, Sirach
Scripture for the week of March 2 - March 8 Sunday, (Eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time), Hosea 2:16-17, 21-22, 2 Corinthians 3:1-6,
Mark
2:18-22;
Monday
(St.
Katharine Drexel), Sirach 17:19-27,
Tuesday (St. Casimir), Sirach 35:1-12, Mark 10:28-31; Wednesday (Ash Wednesday), Joel 2:12-18, 2 Corinthians 5:20 6:2, Matthew 6:1-6, 16-18; Thursday (Lenten Weekday), Deuteronomy 30:15-20, Luke 9:22-25, Friday (Lenten Weekday), Isaiah 58:1-9, Matthew 9:14-15; Saturday (Lenten Weekday), Isaiah 58:9-14, Luke 5:27-32
Mark
10:17-27;
—
Pictorial Life of
by Sister Margherita Marchione, MPF. Paulist Press (Mahwah, N.J., 2002). 216 pp., $24.95.
why order school uniforms
Becky Thatcher -Tom Sawyer
desperate to ease the and convinced of
paralytic's suffering
XII,"
A+
The
FAITH out of state?
School approved uniforms are as close as a drive to the lake!
Elderwear
feated laughter.
decisions he
Anyone who has seen and been
the spate of best-sellers attacking
Sunday Scripture Readings: Feb. 23, 2003
School Apparel
needs recharging
lie CathCompany Outlet Store Fine Catholic Books
and Gifts
Here's Your Outlet.
Uniforms J2Z233^2U Owner Ann Hoffman, Member of St. Therese
704-895- 7474 www. uniformsdirectl u. com 19725 Oak Street, #4, Oak Street Mill, Cornelius, NC 28031
Thousands of items
in stock!
Take 1-485 to Hwy. 521 South (Johnston Rd) and go south approx. 5 miles. Shortly after crossing the SC state line, turn left at the BP station. Go 3/4 mile and turn left Into Zimmer Business Parts - #228
The Catholic Company Outlet Store 228 Zimmer Road Fort Mill, SC 29715
1
bring this ad and get A
15% DISCOUNT on au. items
Or shop online at STORE HOURS: Mon-Frl: 10 AM to 5 PM PHONE: (704) 341-0854 ext. 226 1 CatholicCompany.com
February 21,
2003
The Catholic News & Herald 11
Entertainment
Get thee behind me,
Devil
'Daredevil' is dark, violent film By GERRI
PARE
O'Connor)
News Service Hoping YORK (CNS)
Catholic
NEW
—
movie
franchise,
Ben
to
new
give "Spiderman" competition as a
Century Fox). The movie's dark tone and chilly characters, however, will probably leave it far from the box office success that "Spiderman" achieved. forcer, , "Daredevil" (20th
set-up
is
nicely accomplished as
12-year-old Matt Murdock by an accidental chemical spill, which motivates his father (David Keith) to return to the boxing ring, only to be murdered for refusing to throw a fight. Matt swears he will avenge the death and devote his life to getting justice for the underdog. As an attorney, Matt defends only the innocent, but by night, using his superhuman, remaining senses and gymnastic vaulting abilities, he seeks out the guilty, such as the rapist he leaves in the path of an oncoming sub-
we
see
(Scott Terra) blinded
way
train.
Matt seeks forgiveness
in
confession but his parish priest (Derrick
YEARS EXPERIENCE
30
condone
brand of
his
Matt be-
comes ambivalent about taking the law into his
own
hands.
A New York
Affleck dons a bur-
gundy cowl and leather suit to pose as New York City's nighttime crime en-
The
will not
vigilante justice. Conflicted,
Post reporter (Joe gives the unknown
Pantoliano)
crimefighter the moniker "Daredevil,"
but no one suspects
could be a blind
it
However, Daredevil's "radar sense" allows him to "see" somewhat by the vibrations made by sound, and barrister.
coupled with his extraordinary other senses his visual handicap is greatly minimized. The city's criminal underbelly is run by Kingpin (Michael Duncan Clarke) whose partner in crime, Natchios (Erick Avari), wants out. Instead, Kingpin orders a hit on Natchios by the rabid killer
Matt has just fallen for Natchios' daughter, Electra (Jennifer Garner), whose
in martial arts equals his
skill
own, something they quickly establish upon meeting. But when her father is murdered, she mistakenly thinks Daredevil is the killer and sets out to slay him, unaware she is Bullseye's next target.
Although writer-director Mark Steven Johnson does pay attention to Matt's moral conundrum, including a very sympathetic portrayal of the priest,
he
is
the
"guardian devil." His character
is
clearly well-intended but continues to
law into
rationalize taking the
his
hands.
and speeded-up editing have the
effects effect
Piano Tuner/Technician
of making the mostly one-dimen-
sional characterizations
all
the
more ap-
Piano Tuning, Repairs, Refinishing
parent.
Some
Pianos Bought and Sold
terous,
and uniformly drab dialogue
of the stunts look prepos-
ther detracts from the movie.
desperately needed
704-321-5843
the 1967 animated classic film lacks the originality and enduring appeal of its precursor, cuttingedge animation and a jazzy score create a charming tale of friendship and family. The USCCB Office for Film & Broadcasting classification is A-I general patronage. The Motion Picture Association of America rating is general audiences.
—
G—
room, however discreetly it is filmed. Based on the Marvel Comics char-
in his red get-up, declaring
city's
FREE ESTIMATES
fun but forgettable film "The Jungle Book 2," a fun-filled sequel to about a boy raised in the wild. While the new 2' is
Visually, the dark lighting, special
is
is
fur-
What
is
a vein of humor to
offset a leaden film-noir
treatment that
not emotionally involving.
The
is
violence
PHOTO FROM BUENA VlSTA PICTURES
in Disney's
own
back
2nd Generation
Mowgli returns
walks the fine line of being so stylized as to look unbelievable while still being brutal in nature. Audiences may find its PG-13 rating generous for a film that could just as readily have been rated R. Farrell's wild-eyed villain is strictly one-note and, Affleck's and Garner's romance looks far too rushed not to mention its unnecessary trip to the bed-
mixed in that Matt agrees seeking vengeance is wrong, but ends up
HENRY C. ROZELL III
Book
'Jungle
Bullseye (Colin Farrell).
the message
PYANO MAN
CNS
Office for
cation
draw
Film
A-IV
&
—
Broadcasting classifiadults, with reserva-
tions. The Motion Picture Association of America rating is PG-13 parents are
—
strongly cautioned.
Some
material
be inappropriate for children under
—
acter created in
is
Pare
director
is
of the
and Broadcasting of the
Office for
Catholic Bishops.
1964, "Daredevil" will
comic book aficionados, but may be a tougher sell to the mainstream audience so accustomed to airy, feelgood movies. sympathetic treatment of some brutal but stylized violence, a discreet sexual encounter to
its
vigilante justice,
and an instance of profanity, the
THE CATHOLIC COMMUNICATION CAMPAIGN
USCCB
Now Your Parents Can
Live At
Home!
We Build Friendships With Families
A
will is
your final answer
Americans
die without a
the laws of the state
who
wilt
receive the
are divided.
Without a
table desires gifts Coii
gave me?"
you
to the question.
valid" will, if
live hi will
will
60-70%
of
you die without a
determine
how your
will,
assets
or other charitable estate plan, chari-
you may have
for
your parish, Catholic school,
We know it isn't easy You'll interview
and
to invite select
someone
any caregiver
At Visiting Angels, character matters
Up
to
24 hour
care.
into your
who we
home
to provide homecare.
refer to you.
in caregivers!
Hygiene assistance, meals,
light
housework, companionship.
agency, diocese or the diocesan foundation will he ignored.
Don
't
let
Roman
your final ansicer be
silence.
Catholic Diocese of C%arlotie
Out caregivers
are thoroughly screened.
Vtiititlfy
Angels.^)
www.MMimyanjzds.com
To receive a free booklet "Belter [-state Planning" contact Gina Rhodes, Director of Planned Giving, 201-370-3320, J 123 6. Church Street, Charlotte. 26203, amrhodesi'l charlotlediocese.org
\C
13.
Film
U.S. Conference of
its
Due
may
V04 549 4010
1
12 The Catholic News & Herald
Editorials
February 21,
& Columns
An encounter with
St. Padre Pio's cousin always marveled at how life brings unexpected surprises, sometimes one that is exactly what you need. Just before Christmas 2002 I met an old acquaintance I hadn't seen in several years. Anthony D'Andrea and I both happened to be visiting the Abbey of Regina Laudis in Bethlehem, Conn. were doing the usual "How's everything?" talk, when D'Andrea handed me a holy card with an unusual likeness of Padre Pio, in profile, as a young priest. I accepted it gladly, telling him I would send it to my son Sterling, a retired Illinois state policeman. Sterling, who has had a defibrilator in his chest for 1 years to control a serious heart condition, is very devoted to Padre Pio. I asked D'Andrea to pray for my I've
The Pope
Speaks
2003
The Bottom Line
We
POPE JOHN PAUL
II
Pope says Bible teaches people to praise God
in
times of difficulty By CINDY
VATICAN
WODDEN
News Service Even in times of diffiCITY
Catholic
—
culty, believers are called to praise
knowledge that he is always near tures, Pope John Paul II said. Christians believe in a us,
God
in the
to his crea-
"God who
is
beyond
able to save us with his power, but also a
God
whose midst he wanted glorious temple,' demon-
close to his people and in to dwell in his 'holy,
strating his love," the pope said Feb. 19 at his
weekly general audience. Continuing his series of talks about the Scripture used in morning prayer, the pope spoke about the "canticle of the three young
men" thrown to
worship an
into the fiery furnace for refusing idol.
The young men's hymn of praise, he
said, "is
last visit to his
son.
He
nodded, and then, surprising me, said, "Padre Pio was my cousin." He explained that the relationship came from his grandfather's side. Then he told me a story about the holy card. Back in 1929, his father took his mother, who was not Italian, to Pietrelcina, the village where Padre Pio
was born, to meet relatives there. She noticed a picture on a mantle and asked who the "holy man" was. "Haven't you told her about Padre Pio, our relative?"
They then took the Mrs. D'Andrea as a gift. In the next 70 years, Padre Pio would become known worldwide as a saintly man who revealed Christ to all around him. Before his death in 1968, he gained a worldwide reputation for such spiritual gifts they asked D'Andrea's father.
picture
down and gave
it
to
as miraculous healings, visions, bi-location (bringing
him
visibly, if n'ot physically, to a
spiritual help),
and,
ANTOINETTE B0SC0 CNS Columnist
person
in
need of
uncanny insights into people's
lives
most astounding of all, receiving the stigmata
—
bearing unexplained wounds like those of Christ. This extraordinary priest was canonized June 16, 2002. The photo given to D'Andrea's mother shows a pensive young man just before he entered the Friary of Our Lady of Grace in San Giovanni Rotondo, on a
mantle
hometown,
in their family
D'Andrea died
in 1984,
"Nobody could make up these stoadding that he now lives according to Padre Pio's axiom, "Pray, hope and don't worry!" ries,"
he
said,
violent and
macabre
face of an with isolating the just one, with mockery and irony, asking with sarcasm, Where is your God?'" the pope is
satisfied
I'm always intrigued
when
a friend
stepped inside a church in 10 years baptize her infant;
Like the three young men, he said, Christians offer the proof of their praise even in times of trial, calling on all of creation the stars, the seasons, all the animals and all the faithful to join in their hymn of thanksgiving. "I invite you all to maintain the firmness of your faith, even in the difficulties of life, always giving thanks to the Lord who created us and has called us to be with him in glory," the pope
denounced
said.
^t) .fnadfiiuii
brtA ".orn idl
•'
child.
said.
—
gnilJsI
jflj
known: Meaningful rituals and symbols strengthen and solidify the foundation of family life, and profoundly impact the sense of security and well-being of a
Our Turn
that the persecutor does not al-
was on a until
sonally witnessed.
*'•'!'
curred frequently in the history of Israel as well as in the history of Christianity."
oppressor, but often
New York
Mrs. and then was passed down to in
D'Andrea, a father of eight, whose wife Pat was afwith two brain tumors. "I prayed specifically to Padre Pio for her life, and she lived two more years," D'Andrea told me. The photo of his revered cousin that he cherished was cracked but intact. At the suggestion of a friend and with the help of his daughter, Monica, a calligrapher, he had the old print restored and the prayer cards printed. Now D'Andrea keeps a list of all of who have asked for prayers to Padre Pio, distributing the card with the unique photo. Amos Miller, director of the Padre Pio Prayer Group that meets at St. John Cantius Church in Chicago, also will be distributing the cards. Thanks to a request from D'Andrea, this group will be praying for my son Sterling, who lives south of Chicago. D'Andrea told me many remarkable stories of Padre Pio's intercession to help someone he has per-
which shines in the darkness of times of oppression and persecution, times which oc-
ways assume the
Pietrelcina. It
flicted
like a torch
"We know
home
THERESE CNS
—
J.
B0RCHARD
Columnist
when
It's
and
ritual after children arrive an interesting trend among my youngadult friends. As soon as couples in their 20s and 30s recite matrimonial vows, nest a little and start their own families, they suddenly appreciate, even demand, a little I've noticed
tradition or ritual in their lives.
That's consistent with recent research about
young
book "Young Adult Catholics," by Dean Hoge, William Dinges, Mary Johnson and Juan Gonzales, documenting focus groups of young adults and a survey of Catholics between the ages of 1 8 to 39. According to their research, about 70 percent of young adults drop all religious activity when they pack their bags for college. About half return to the church upon leaving the maternity ward with a cherubic infant. This group of Catholics weren't interested in rituadults, especially the
als
or tradition or anything holy as soon as they could that decision for themselves, but they surely want
make it
for their
Why?
own
children.
things religious
Because
And good
ritual
for the soul.
children.
Recently Syracuse University psychology professor Barbara Fiese
was part of a group of psychologists
that studied 32 clinical studies of family rituals.
results confirmed
The
what we Catholics always have
hasn't
who
previously
is
some
a natural evolution in
sense: the frighten-
do become our parents. 'The traditional stuff is still the best," my husband said to me one night when we tucked our then-9month-old into bed after we returned from a dinner fact,
party.
He was who
evening
referring to a couple
we had met
that
explained to us that they had no immedi-
ate plans of marrying, even though they'd been with each other for five years. "Maybe when we're 40 and bored," they casually
remarked. For the time being they were content hanging out, playing the guitar and tambourine as part of a late-night band,
and drinking cocktails with boring
married folk like my husband and me. As I packed up my son's binkis, botties, rattles, blankets and diapers, and rushed out the door before 10 o'clock, part of me envied their freedom from attachment: the idea of staying out all night and sleeping in all morning. After two seconds of daydreaming, my senses returned, and I realized that the boring folks with a routine
— with church
in the
night and family activities
and tradition are good for So even if a couple doesn't get anything out of Mass, they'll be there for the families.
who
so anxious to
caught purchasing a children's Bible at the local Christian bookstore; or when an acquaintance trades in his long nights at the pub to say prayers over his daughter's crib. all
ing notion that we, in
Tradition
a colleague
is
—
morning and prayers
at
are really the lucky ones.
We
belong to something larger than ourselves. Our son belongs to something too. And even though he will soon resist all structure and ritual and tradition as part of his adolescence and early manhood, he will one day appreciate it and pass it on to his children.
We should we be so lucky!
February 21,
2003
Light
One
winnings to help those
who
are
most
needful.
"I'm getting really excited, because of the good
can do
Candle
The Catholic News & Herald 13
& Columns
Editorials
witli this.
This
...
will really
do good
He
said:
works
I
for the poor.
goes to especially help people who want to better themselves and to have a better life." He also said that because of bad weather and slow
hope
I
it
Coming of Age
number of his construcworkers just before Christmas. Now, he plans to hire them back. Finally, he said that like any family, he had relatives who didn't always have it so easy. He'd also use his resources to see that no member of his extended family would fall between the cracks. So there you have it. A winner who remembers that (a) every grace is a blessing from God; (b) helping our churches helps them to help others; (c) it's always right business, he'd had to lay off a
tion
MSGR. JIM LISANTE Guest Columnist
Sharing the blessings many ways, he looks like a character actor from central casting. With his oversized 10-gallon hat and country-western wardrobe, Andrew J. Whittaker might make you laugh until you learn that he is the In so
lucky fellow who, already a millionaire by virtue of his construction company, went on to win a lottery prize of
$314.9 million. It's the largest undivided lottery winnings ever. The sheer numbers give you pause. But as happy a story as it is, it's even better when a winner
knows what
do with his wealth. meetings with the press, he has reiterated the same theme. Every blessing, he said, "is a gift from the Lord." And by his determination, God gives blessings so we'll "give many back." And that's what he In
all
to
his
intends to do.
he started writing checks to his churches. He's been a member of three, so he's dividing ten percent of his winnings among the congregations he's prayed with over the years. He figures that since God gave him the blessings, he should remember those who nurtured his relationship with the Lord. Whittaker believes: "I don't have luck, I'm blessed. I just want to thank God for letting me pick the right numbers, or letting the machine pick the right numbers for me." And it's his hope that the churches use his First,
to
remember the people others
who may
not be as richly blessed as we are. will ever have the opportunity for
Andrew
J.
us wouldn't be able to say that
important
Jennifer
used to have a
gifts that
are blessed in
others don't.
And
other people. Someday, Whittaker will
No amount of wealth
little,
but
now
really? one of her songs, "I have a lot," and that's it,
in I
"J-Lo"
makes records and movies, and
is rich,
some
has everything she wants. Except one thing right
our
now: She's not going to get married to Ben Affleck in the Catholic Church. At least not right now. See, they were going to get married on Valentine's Day weekend in the church. But Jennifer Lopez had a problem. She had been married not just
that's
die, like
is
Lopez sings
true.
Whittaker. But few of
we
opportunity: to share the things we've been given with
every
spares anyone from that.
not have been able to carry his lottery
will
Ms.
.
giving on a scale like
one else. And, he
Columnist
How
unemmembers of our
Now, few of us
ways by having
CNS
forget, like the
ployed; and (d) charity should include families
AMY WELBORN
earnings along with him to the judgment seat of God.
But based on his plans these days, I'd say he doesn't have much to fear. Some of the greatest theological minds suggest that what we carry with us to the next life are the generous blessings and gifts we've shared with others here on earth. When your time comes to stand before God, the special good that you have done, the loving-kindness you have shown will be the greatest things you can take
once, but twice before.
The
first
marriage was a Catholic ceremony after it began. The second one was
and ended a year
wedding and ended eight months after it if you're still with me here So if she wanted to get married in the Catholic Church again, the first marriage would have to be annulled. That means the church would look at the origins of the marriage. If it found that the two people a
civil
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
began.
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
getting married couldn't or didn't give their
along.
full,
free
consent to what they were doing, then the marriage,
For a free copy of the Christopher News Note, "Money For All Its Worth, " write: The Christophers, 12 East 48th
New
Street,
York,
NT.
10017;
or
e-mail:
while legal wasn't sacramental in nature.
Once a marriage has been
declared null
by the
church, the people are free to get married again in the church. But not until then.
mail@christophers.org.
Which
is
OK
because Jesus said some serious
What kind of church would we we didn't take it seriously, too? So there's Jennifer Lopez's problem. And if the
stuff about marriage.
Children of interfaith marriages
Question
Q. I would like information about interfaith maram the product of such a marriage. Catholic
My
riages. I
grandfather never spoke
to
Corner
my mother after her marriage
When the children were born, he claimed we were bastards and of no concern to him. I knew him by sight since I resembled him, but when I rode on a bus with him he never spoke. How does this extend God's love to everyone, all of us made in his image? Only the Catholic Church hinders us from being a family. When will I no longer be a bastard in the eyes of the church? Sometime in the 21st century? in 1936.
any consolation, you are not the only one who thought so back in those days. Before going further, we must admit that the Catholic Church's attitudes and policies concerning "mixed marriages" were much more restrictive and severe when your parents were married than they are now. For a long time the marriage of a Catholic and non-Catholic could not be celebrated in the church building; most of them took place privately and informally in the parish rectory. Later, these marriages were permitted in church but could be only at a side altar; and of course no Mass was allowed under any circumit's
stances.
For reasons too lengthy to discuss again here, that policy changed drastically over the years, as everyone knows. Even under the narrowest regulations of the past, however, there was no question, as far as the Catholic Church was concerned, that couples properly entering a Catholic marriage enjoyed a valid marriage union, even if one partner was not Catholic. Their union was even, as now, considered a sacramental marriage if both spouses were baptized. I'm sorry for the distorted understanding of his
if
news reports are correct, she's pretty ticked off about the whole thing, mad that the church won't hurry up and speed through the process.
Now we have to be careful here, because you're really not
J-Lo
is
supposed to judge other people's
CNS
Columnist
that led your grandfather to emotionally abuse his grandchildren over the years. That kind of mistreatment and insult to his family can be
and more scarring, than physical you have discovered. Whatever imperfections the Catholic Church may have suffered in this matter, I hope you can get past blaming it for what your grandfather did to your family. serious,
abuse, as I'm sure
A
free brochure in English or Spanish, answering questions Catholics ask about baptism practices and sponsors,
is
available by sending a stamped, self-ad-
dressed envelope to Father ria,
John Dietzen, Box 325, Peo-
IL 61651. Questions
be sent to
Father Dietzen at the same
address, or e-mail jjdietzen@aol.com.
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
church actually teaches about marriage? Important enough to familiarize herself with what the church asks of people
who want to get married?
How important could it really be then? Lots of us can be guilty of this kind of thinking, even if it's not in relation to marriage, can't we? We could all make a list of things that are really important to us: our families, our friends and even our education. But
how
important are they, really?
Are our families important enough to spend time with? Are our friends important enough to hear the truth about stuff they're doing that's wrong? Is our education important enough to take seriously? Or are our words about how "important" these things are just words, leaving us surprised
when we
from our families, when our friends selfdestruct and when our grades drop? Hope not We hope that we're working hard to make sure that our actions match our words about what's really important to us so that as life goes on we don't get any rude surprises, but lots of joy feel alienated
may
but
life in public. So it's OK to take this questions that don't mess and ask some questions just apply to Jennifer Lopez but to the rest of us too. They say that she's mad because getting married in the church is really important to her. But important enough to try to understand what the
faith
more
lives,
a celebrity, and she doesn't seem to mind
living a lot of her
FATHER JOHN DIETZEN
(Massachusetts)
A. You have never been illegitimate in the eyes of the church, back when you were born or now. If
be
instead!
1
1
14 The Catholic News & Herald
1933
The
JOURNEY,
from
letter
from page 1
asked Pope Pius XI
coming together in a way that changes hearts," Father Cancro said.
condemn Nazism By CINDY
WOODEN
—
man to whom she isn't woman comes to the well
Living with a married, .the
during the day's heat, avoiding neigh-
News Service
VATICAN CITY after
who
bors
ostracize her.
weeks
"Jesus asks her for a drink, and
Father Cancro said. "Jesus chooses to establish an intimate relationship with her (by talking to her). Normally, a man would not talk to a woman. Jesus offers her a gift, something done only to make personal con-
Just a few
—
St Edith Stein a Catholic convert from Judaism who was soon to enter a Carmelite convent wrote to Pope Pius XI asking him to condemn the Nazi ideology.
—
The
saint,
who died in
at the
Nazi death
1942 and was can-
onized in 1998, wrote to die pope April 1933, saying the
ing and hoping that die church of Christ
would make
The
its
letter,
voice heard."
which
Edith Stein re-
St.
was published for the first time in German and Italian newspapers Feb. 19 after scholars were given copies of the original from the ferred to in other writings,
official
idea of writing an encyclical
against Nazi ideas contrary to the faith at the Vatican and at one draft was written, but Pope Pius died in 1939 without completing and pub-
had been discussed
least
lishing it Jesuit Father Pierre Blet, the Vatican's
1999
World War
II,
said in
would have been a mistake
it
publish the draft because while
demned anti-Semitism
it
it
to
said.
We
Is
worrying mil-
She
said the behavior of Hitier
their followers
— among them —
known criminal elements ing the
fruit
Some
Jews, she said, had committed
'Tor weeks not only the Jews, but tiiousands of Catholic faithful in
Germany
—
throughout the world have been waiting and hoping that the church of Christ would make its voice heard against such an abuse of Christ's name," she wrote. I
She
believe,
called the Nazis' "idolatry of race"
nothing other than "an open heresy." And, she said, "this war of extermination of Jewish blood" should outrage Christians because Jesus, his disciples
mother and
his
who
of people and it's
call
OK; but you
"It's
our respon-
look for the gifts
them. If they say have to act."
'no,'
still
the choice to scatter
open
as
we
Contact Correspondent Joanita M. Nelknbach by' calling (828) 627-9209 or e-
We're
vehicle that scatters that seed.
can and not
mailjnell@dnet.net.
Archdiocese of Atlanta
Catholic Schools job Fair 1
March 8, 2003 0:00 am - 1 :00
• Faith-based
•
Education
Strong Parental Support Teaching Positions in Grades Pre-K SACS Accredited Schools Competitive Salaries and Benefits
• •
•
-
J
2
Qualified candidates should bring multiple copies of resumes
]ob
King
Fair Location: Cathedral of Christ the
Atlanta,
GA
30305
2699
Peachtree Road
NE
www.christking.org
looks
Can you answer "YES" 1.
him and
3.
Do you Do you Do you
that "we've got to be willing to
4.
Does your church or organization need good employees?
was a new
idea for
down on
St.
if
need a good buyer for a
If
mountains and valleys: Jesus had healed someone on a mountain, then went to the mountain of Transfiguration, from there to Jerusalem, on a hill, and then to Calvary. Father Cancro told the catechists to
CALL
CATHOLIC NEWS & HERALD to work for YOU! READERS could see your classified ad in this paper
every week
-
for only
Classifieds EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
moun-
and want to stay there, or we get overwhelmed by a valley experience," Father Cancro said. 'Transfiguratain experience
context of what
is
around
it."
Transfiguration, he added, is also about pilgrimage, about not staying in
one place. "We're called to be people of the tent,
not people of the concrete founda-
tion.
We're not supposed to remain com-
one place. We have to be open to conversion and change, to know what we need to be converted from." "I've learned so much," said Barbara Barker, who teaches second-, third- and fortable in
Bryson
in
St.
Joseph
last
church fear die worst for the global image of the church itself if die silence continues,"
"made me
she
mountain."
now
1
1:30pm,
every other weekend, Mon-Fri. Required: supervisory pediatric and/or acute care experience. Great benefits. Rewarding environment. Holy Angels (sponsored by Sisters of Mercy): Residential, children/adult, mental retardation/development disabilities. Belmont. info@holyangelsnc.org, 704-825-4 1 6 Fax:704-825-0401.
Classified
RENTALS 2
OCEANFRONT VACATION CON-
DOS:
both are 2 bedrooms deluxe, sleep
6 max. North Myrtle Beach available 5/ 31 to 6/7. Myrtle Beach available 6/29 to 7/6. Best offer. (704) 374-0973.
ads bring results! Over 120,000 readers! Over 49,000 homes! Rates: $.50/word per issue ($10 minimum per issue) Deadline: 12 noon Wednesday, 9 days before publication
How to order: Ads may be E-mailed to ckfeerick@charlottediocese.org,
City.
who
experienced tragedy year, said that Father Cancro's talk Barker,
but
RN MANAGER: Full time, 3-
home. Your own business! Mail-order/ internet. Full training and support. Free 888info. www.destined2Bfree.com 234-0607
...
fourth-grade faith formation at
are watching the cur-
WORK AT HOME: Earn income from
right, are also
part of personal transfiguration.
50 cents per word ($10 minimum)!
Cindi Feerick at (704) 370-3332 today!
cherish their high points but that the
tend to concentrate on a
etc. ?
so, put THE
Over 120,000
"We
house, property,
society
them."
when nothing goes
car,
need a renter for a vacation place, house, or other property? need qualified employees for your business?
In the second session, Father Cancro described Jesus' Transfigura-
valleys,
to any of these questions?
2.
rent situation as faithful children of the
said.
Even on rocky
effect.
that seed there, and we're part of the called to be as
Murphy.
Eu-
formation at
woman
step into relationships, even
Church
were Jews.
"All of us
"God has made
in
sibility (as catechists) to
at the well as a
faith
tion can't be seen alone, but only in the
businesses.
and,
showed
they are reap-
of die hatred sown," she wrote.
suicide following a boycott of Jewish-run
—
has an
it still
tion as a series of
and his supporters betrayed "total contempt for justice and for humanity, not to mention love of one's neighbor." 'Tor years the leaders of national socialism have preached hatred of the Jews. Now that they have come to power and
armed
lavishly scatter the word.
iam Church
...
love story
which
"I think discernment is one of the things that really struck me," said Carole Hubbell, catechetical leader at St. Will-
the
is still sown. Our God is so good that he allows the seed to be sown so that it has even a short-term effect. Our call is to
all
—
St Edith Stein wrote to the pope, "As a daughter of the Jewish people, who through the grace of God has been a daughter of the CathoUc Church for 1 Christianity that
that will alleviate
soil,
"Communio
Cancro
gene, said the
lions of Germans."
constantly unfolding."
seed
establishes community (communio) with her neighbors when she tells them she has found the Messiah.
enth-grade
dare to express to the father of
or rocky
She
sures against Jews.
I
soil
but water that wells up inside her to change her."
the rights of a state to take certain mea-
years,
good
not water from the well,
firmation classes and fourth- and sev-
scholars Feb. 15.
leading expert on
—
con-
was one of the hundreds of documents involving Vatican-German relations before World War II opened to that the letter
The
"He has a water her difficulties
also recognized
of the archives confirmed
ter if you're
nections.
is sacramental," Father "As a catechist, you need to be a sacramental person participating in the sacraments and being a sign to others. must be people of the word: recognize the word and proclaim the word in our lives. The word of God is bigger than the words on a page or in a book. It keeps flowing through the unfolding of our lives. "The ministry of the word challenges us to live in certain ways, to be truthful people," he said. "Truth-speaking nurtures us. [Part of this is that] we have to be honest about what we can and can't do. Be honest about what you can commit yourself to." Don Schiffhauer, who teaches con-
Vatican Secret Archives.
An
she's perplexed,"
12,
whole world was "wait-
judgmental about how others receive the word. The Catholic worldview is that all is process, not event. All is grace, and all is
think the important element is the Father Cancro said. "It doesn't mat-
ground,
Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany,
camp of Auschwitz
and
hearers that change can
"I
dirt,"
Catholic
its
take place in any kind of soil.
St. Edith Stein
to
third-session story of sower
seed reminds
2003
February 21,
Around the Diocese
realize that
I
was
in the valley,
I'm almost at the top of the
faxed to (704) 370-3382 or mailed Cindi Feerick,
to:
The Catholic News & Herald, 1 123 S. Church St., Charlotte, NC 28203. Payment: For information, call (704) 370-3332.
February 21,
2003
The Catholic News & Herald 15
Around the Diocese
Senior class president
Right on
soars to Eagle Scout
TRACS
Paul Kelley has earned the rank of Eagle Scout, the highest honor in Hoy Scouts. For his project, Kelley redefined
and improved the nature trail at the Nature Museum near Freedom Park.
member of the St. Matthew Church-sponsored Troop 8 since he started as a Tiger Cub at age Kelley, 18, has been a
five.
Kelley
is
senior class president at
Charlotte Catholic High School and plays guitar at Sunday Mass at St.
Matthew.
Courtesy Photo
Bishops' pro-life to
ban
partial-birth abortion WASHINGTON (CNS) — The children."
Secretariat for Pro-Life Activities praised the introduction of the Par-
dure. Rep. Steve Chabot, R-Ohio, in-
Abortion Ban Act of 2003
troduced the bill Feb. 13 with more than 100 co-sponsors. The House has passed bills to ban partial-birth abortions four times, and twice the Senate joined in voting to end the practice, but President Clinton vetoed it both times. President Bush supports a ban.
spokeswoman
"
"
i r" "|"«t
r
I
it
f
|"
•<
!U(
/
tial-Birth
in the U.S.
for the U.S. bishops'
House of Representatives.
is never necessary and has never been accepted by the mainstream medical community," said Cathy Cleaver. "It has no place in a society that cares for women and
"Partial-birth abortion
OF
L|
HOME MOVE YOU!
~? At Pennybyrn, lawn
he 50+ year heritage of Maryfield now includes the vision of independent retirement living with a focus on the comforts of home.
service,housekeeping,
maintenance and gourmet dining are all included - unless you would rather create an outdoor masterpiece garden of your own or
Pennybyrn, the newest continuing care retirement community in the area, offers concierge-style services along with an array of amenities for today's independent, high-energy retirees.
Set
among 66
naturally
signature cuisine in
landscaped acres in the heart of the Piedmont Triad, our cottages and waterfront apartments are designed to accommodate all lifestyles! Explore the spacious one or two-bedroom apartments or make your dream home in one of our elegant cottages which offer the option of a den or a
your beautifully appointed kitchen. desires, the choice
Plus,
High
Q Q
Point,
gourmet meals and
how
special events.
the spirit of home can
move you!
detach and mail back to Pennybyrn at Marvfield, 1315 Greensboro Road,
NC 27260.
Please call
me
Please send
Name
or
phase, you'll become a member of our Charter Residents' Club. This entitles you to great savings, early choices among interior
Don't wait! Call us today and find out in,
always yours!
when you choose an apartment
options,
fill
is
modem and Whatever your
cottage at Pennybyrn during our pre-marketing
two-car garage.
Please,
bill
Knights of Columbus Supreme Knight Carl Anderson also hailed the new bill to ban the proce-
Photo by Susan deGuzman
Varsity cheerleaders from St. Leo School in Winston-Salem have much to cheer about. At the time of this January photo, the school had nearly reached its $40,000 goal for the TRACS (Triad Area Catholic Schools) Education Foundation Campaign. The TRACS Foundation oversees the annual fund drive of the six Catholic schools in the Piedmont-Triad. While tuition assistance is the main focus of the fund, monies may also be used for other educational enhancements such as technology upgrades, structural improvements and teacher in-service programs.
spokeswoman lauds
to schedule
me more
^° 9g9j
'-
my
visit to
Pennybyrn.
infoniration on Pennybyrn
a
and the
spirit
of graceful
M
}3e-KlKIVBVRKl
living.
"
'
M
A
R
Y
F
I
E
L
D
A Continuing Care Retirement Community
Address City
State
Telephone
Age
Zip
tOt CNH020703
1315 Greensboro Road * High Point,
NC
27260 * 336.886.4103
16 The Catholic News & Herald
February 21,
Living the Faith
2003
Catholic nuns
Sister of Mercy leaves lasting legacy
take peace message
in
North Carolina
BELMONT — Mercy Sister Marie Patrice Manley, 92, died Feb. 13 at Maryfield Nursing Home in High Point
where she was a ceived as a Sister
1940, and
was
She was reof Mercy on Feb. 2,
resident.
her 62nd year as a
in
Sister of Mercy.
A
was held Cardinal Gibbons Memorial
Mass of Christian
Feb. 17 at
Burial
Chapel with burial following at the Belmont Abbey Cemetery. Sister Marie Patrice was born Jan. 15, 1911, in Minneapolis, Minn. She was
named Catherine
Irene
Manley
at her
baptism. Following 10 years as a Visitation Sister, she entered with the Sisters of
Mercy on Aug.
15, 1939.
Marie Patrice graduated from Academy in 1929 and graduated from Sacred Heart Junior College. She then obtained her bachelor's degree in education from Belmont Abbey College. She also attended Mount Mercy College in Pittsburgh, Pa., and Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. Sister
Cardome
Visitation
Carolina Funeral &
C C
Cremation Center
C
Dignity Affordability
Simplicity
Holy Angels founder dies at 92
In 1944, she began her ministry at St.
Leo's Military
managed the students
Charlotte,
NC 28212
704-568-0023 vsrww.caroiinafuneral.com
Steven
Kuzma
Owner/Director Privately, Locally
Owned
Member St. Matthew Church and Knights of Columbus
in residence
From 1947^9,
taught eighth grade.
Charlotte Sertoma Club Service to
kind Award, and in 1973 the Belmont
and
Chamber of Commerce named
she
Marie Patrice Distinguished Citizen of
taught at Sacred Heart School in from 1949-1953, she taught at O'Donoghue School in Charlotte; and from 1953-54, at Sacred Heart School in Belmont
in Midwest
Sister
the Year. Sister
Marie
30-second radio spot
Patrice's heart condition
and the sponsored ministry that
it
pro-
urges listeners to pray,
duced proved to all around her that, although her heart was not perfect, it was big enough
before significant heart
problems developed. Advised by her doctor that the classroom was too stressful and strenuous, she responded to the needs of local textile mill workers by caring
encompass many
to
dren
who
chil-
Day
By FRANCISCAN SISTER
CAROL
HOVERMAN
you look into the eyes of God's most precious children who live at Holy
News Service Iowa Hoping to counter the country's moves toward war, communities of women religious in the Midwest are adding their
Angels.
voices to those calling for alternatives
can be seen every time
Nursery, located on the
work for peace
could not have
found appropriate care elsewhere. Her legacy
for their children as direc-
tor of Sacred Heart
Man-
she
Salisbury;
convent grounds.
Upon
her retirement
Later, at the request
Catholic
—
DUBUQUE,
to
war and
toward peace.
efforts
from Holy Angels, Sister of a local doctor, Sister Marie Patrice moved to Marie Patrice was asked Bardstown, Ky., where Mercy Sister to assist in the care of an she could be near the Marie Patrice Manley infant born with spina Trappist Monastery and bifida and hydrocephalis remained there until named Maria Morrow. The child desperhealth problems dictated a move to ately needed full-time care that her young Maryfield Nursing Home in High Point. mother could not provide. Sister Marie She maintained an active prayer ministry Patrice went into action in January 1956 until her death. to obtain permission to care for the mediSister Marie Patrice is the daughcally fragile infant. Thus began Holy Anter of the late William Joseph Manley
30-second radio spot produced by the communities began airing Feb. 13 on and radio stations in Cedar Rapids that cover eastern and central Iowa but also extend into Illinois and Wisconsin. With the music of "Let There be Peace on Earth" as background, the
and Minnie Irene Troendle Manley. She is survived by her godchild, Maria
"Work for peace! Pray for peace! A message from the Catholic sisters of
Morrow.
this area."
gels.
Marie Patrice served as administrator of the facility for 27 years from the day it was founded until 1982. Today, Holy Angels, Inc. houses over 65 residents in three different residential Sister
programs.
—
tal
Memorials may be made P.O.
Box
710,
to
Holy Angels,
6600 E. Wilkinson Blvd.
Belmont, N.C. 28012-8410.
Many of its residents are medi-
cally fragile
5505 Monroe Rd.
Academy where
to radio station
with varying degrees of men-
retardation and physical disabilities.
As
part of their outreach services,
Holy Angels operates a vocational training program Cherubs Cafe and Candy Bouquets in downtown Belmont. These programs provide employment for 12 adults with mental retardation.
THECMDKi' 434 Charlotte Avenue, P. O. Box Rock Hill, SC 29731-1586 (803) 327-2097
n c"T"rj tz AT" r\Cn
7:30
I
I
pm, Wed., April Sun., April
centrally
2—
6
located in llm Piedmont
ofNorth Carolina. Located
Mary Pat Fourqurean
only an hour's drive from
This 4-day Ignatian Silent Retreat will
on
focus attendees a meeting that
meditations
from the and
Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius is
more accessible than
ever.
Being accessible to
the county* sett ing is
only
and a peaceful
a meeting place
we can offer!
the
life
of Jesus. Retreatants will have
Scripture passages, journaling
quiet time
as
and
resources for the
Ignatian journey. Spiritual direction
Trinity
Hickory,
Lane
NC 28602
Spiritual Director for
retreats at
5-day Ignatian
Georgetown University
and experienced the 30-day (828) 327-7441
Spiritual
Exercises.
www.catholicconference.org
all
we all love, we all we all grieve in the
laugh, bleed,
same language.
Violin music for the spot was played by Sister Marie Therese Kalb, a member of the Dubuque Franciscans, and J.L. Brimeyer, accompanist. The spot originated with communications personnel from the 13 religious congregations of the upper Mississippi Valley that make up Sisters
United News. The group came together in 1993 to have maximum im-
women
religious
who
City; Sisters
of Charity of the Blessed Virgin
Mary, Dubuque;
Sisters of Humility,
Davenport; Sisters of Mercy, Cedar Rapids; Sisters of St. Francis, Clinton; St. Francis, Sisters of
and Sisters of
the Presentation, Sisters of the Visitation and Trappestine Sisters, all of
The other members are. the Benedictine Sisters of Rock Island, and from Wisconsin, the 111., Sinsinawa Dominicans and the Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration of LaCrosse. The group
Toll-free (888) 536-7441
ccc@twave.net
we
Dubuque.
included.
Mary Pat Fourqurean served as 1551
cry,
all
man Dominicans, Iowa
three major cities assures
meeting planners and
says:
"We
are living the Gospel message in today's world. Last year the group sponsored billboards around the state that urged people to "welcome the immigrant you once were." Iowa communities of women religious that belong to Sisters United News are: Carmelites, Eldridge; Ro-
GUIDED IGNATIAN rvC
is
message
FM
contemporary
1966, she received the
The Center
586
AM
pact in publicizing the ministries of
During her ministry at Holy Angels, Sister Marie Patrice was a highly sought after speaker. In
1 1
A
Cost: $240 — overnight $120 — commuters
message
in
also plans to air the
LaCrosse and Madison,
Wis., as well as in Clinton, and western Iowa.
Dubuque