OVERSEAS CHILD SPONSORSHIP
7
AIDING CANADIAN NEWCOMERS
8
SERVING IN UKRAINE
17 PIERCE RETURNS FROM AFRICA
12 JANUARY 2015 Volume 33, Number 1
INSIDE this issue: Take our survey Cuba leader expects greater We want to hear from you! Share your opinions and be entered to win a $100 reach for The Salvation Army. Amazon gift card.
SURVEY PAGE 2
Intersection of faith
A unique collaboration keeps the Marian Pritchett School in Boise for pregnant and parenting young women going. SCHOOL PAGE 4
Youth homelessness
The Salvation Army works to curb the effects of a problem that saw an increase of 8 percent in the U.S. last year. HOMELESSNESS PAGE 6
Territorial measures
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Compare the West’s 2014 People Count numbers to 2013 and see how the territory measured up. COUNT PAGE 10
BY CHRISTIN DAVIS
F
ollowing years of reported behind-the-scenes talks, largely influenced by Pope Francis, the recent shift to mend U.S.-Cuba relations opens a new door of opportunity for The Salvation Army in Cuba. A member of the Cuban Council of Churches, The Salvation Army in Cuba today operates more than 20 corps and two social service projects—a senior home and an addictions recovery program. “The opening of the relations between the USA and Cuba has an effect on all social classes…in such a way the doors for an interchange with the American people can open and find beneficial solutions for both countries,” said Major Julio Moreno, CUBA PAGE 12
US-CUBA RELATIONS OPENS OPPORTUNITY
Downtown Havana, Cuba
|Photo by Christin Davis
General Cox and Pope Francis meet at the Vatican Occasion marks the first meeting of its kind.
The Salvation Army
P.O. Box 22646 Long Beach, CA 90802-9998
T
he first-ever private meeting between a General of The Salvation Army and a Pope occurred Dec. 12 at the Vatican with General André Cox and Pope Francis as the culmination of conversations held between Salvation Army and Vatican representatives from 2007 to 2012 that are newly published in “Conversations with the Catholic Church” (Salvation Books, 2014). When The Salvation Army group—including Commissioner Silvia Cox, world president of women’s ministries; Commissioner William Cochrane, international secretary to the chief of the staff; Lt. Col. Massimo Tursi, officer commanding, Italy and Greece Command; and Captain Scott Linnett, private secretary to the General—entered the private rooms of the Pope, Tursi said the
Terrence Hughes
|Photo by John Docter
Meet Terrence Hughes General Counsel for the West General André Cox and Pope Francis pray together in the first-ever private meeting between leaders of The Salvation Army and the Catholic Church, flanked by Commissioner Silvia Cox (left) and a member of Francis’s delegation. |Photo © Servizio Fotografico - L’Osservatore Romano
Pope moved quickly toward them, warmly greeting each visitor. “He listened attentively to the greetings brought by the General, which underlined the many things uniting Catholics and Sal-
vationists and spoke of the experiences of cooperation between priests and Salvation Army officers in many areas of the world,” Tursi said. POPE FRANCIS PAGE 14
Like the lead man in the 1950s crime drama, “Perry Mason,” in which a defense attorney handles difficult cases for his accused clients, Terrence Hughes maintains a high bar of success. “Perry seemed to always win and to always help the underdog,” Hughes said of his favorite TERRENCE HUGHES PAGE 14