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Catholic News 2

Washington D.C., Sep 6, 2016 / 11:51 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Nearly 200 years after hosting a slave sale on campus in order to pay off school debt, Georgetown University has announced its intention of making amends to the descendants of those impacted by the sale, as well as to the broader community.Along with the Archdiocese of Washington and the Society of Jesus in the United States, Georgetown will offer a Mass of Reconciliation for the school’s actions.The university will also give descendants of the slave sale preferential consideration, treating them with the same consideration as the children of faculty, staff and alumni.Furthermore, the school will create a memorial to the people sold in the sale. It will rename two residence halls – originally named for the Jesuit priests who orchestrated the sale – after Isaac Hawkins, the first man sold in the 1838 sale, and Anne Marie Becraft, a local African American free woman from Washington D.C. who worked to found a s...

Washington D.C., Sep 6, 2016 / 11:51 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Nearly 200 years after hosting a slave sale on campus in order to pay off school debt, Georgetown University has announced its intention of making amends to the descendants of those impacted by the sale, as well as to the broader community.

Along with the Archdiocese of Washington and the Society of Jesus in the United States, Georgetown will offer a Mass of Reconciliation for the school’s actions.

The university will also give descendants of the slave sale preferential consideration, treating them with the same consideration as the children of faculty, staff and alumni.

Furthermore, the school will create a memorial to the people sold in the sale. It will rename two residence halls – originally named for the Jesuit priests who orchestrated the sale – after Isaac Hawkins, the first man sold in the 1838 sale, and Anne Marie Becraft, a local African American free woman from Washington D.C. who worked to found a school for African American girls and who later became a religious sister with the Oblate Sisters of Providence in Baltimore.   

“This community participated in the institution of slavery,” said Georgetown University President John DeGioia in a September 1 presentation. “This original evil that shaped the early years of the republic was present here,” he continued. “We have been able to hide from this truth, bury this truth, ignore and deny this truth.”

But now, the president said, the Georgetown community must recognize its past actions and make amends for them. “As a community and as individuals, we cannot do our best work if we refuse to take ownership of such a critical part of our history. We must acknowledge it.”

Reconciliation efforts will be presented “within the framework of the Catholic tradition,” DeGioia stated. “Our moral agency must be channeled to undo this damage.”

The September 1 presentation described the findings of a recent report on Georgetown University’s relationship with slavery and the impact of those actions, along with recommendations for moving forward.

The 104-page report was compiled by a 16-member Working Group, which began its research efforts in September 2015. The group has also compiled a digital archive of historical documents relating to the sale and other slaves owned by the Maryland Province of the Jesuit order, held discussions with the Georgetown community, and reached out to the descendants of slaves sold in the 1838 sale.

The sale of 272 slaves owned by the Maryland Province of Jesuits was organized by two priests, Fr. Thomas Mulledy, SJ, who was head of the Jesuit order in the U.S., and the Fr. William McSherry, SJ, to pay off some of the school’s debts. The slaves were sold for $115,000, which is equivalent to about $3.3 million today. Most of the slaves were sold to owners in Louisiana, where, according to the school’s report, “they labored under dreadful conditions on cotton and sugar plantations.”

The first slave listed on the bill of sale was a 65-year-old man named Isaac Hawkins.

The Vatican placed conditions on the sale, ordering that families not be separated, that the money not be used to pay off the school’s debt, and that the religious practice of the slaves – many of whom were baptized Catholics – be respected.   

Fr. Mulledy met none of these conditions, separating families and using their sale to support the school. In addition, investigators had found that slaves on the plantation did not have access to a Catholic church for worship after they reached Louisiana.

While the prominent members of the province were engaged in orchestrating the sale, some Jesuits at the time helped some of the slaves escape during the sale and transfer.

Because of the scandal, Fr. Mulledy ended up resigning from his post as head of the order in the U.S., and was called to Rome to defend his actions to the superior of the Jesuit order or face dismissal. Fr. Mulledy was allowed to remain in the order, and was allowed to return to the United States in 1843, founding the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts upon his return and later serving a second term as the president of Georgetown University.

The report notes that while the sale was one of the best-documented of the time, due to the presence and transfer of sacramental records, many of the slaves were sold again, and their subsequent sales and transfer have made it difficult to find out the conditions that they lived in and the fate of them and some of their descendants.

Regardless of the state of the records, the report reinforced the brutal and dehumanizing reality of slavery in the early United States and explained that Georgetown University, the Jesuit Order, the city of Georgetown and many other early American Catholic figures all benefited directly from the institution of slavery.

The report also stressed the importance of wrestling with the truth of the university’s history, as well as the moral implications of cooperating with the institution of slavery and its long-reaching consequences of structural injustice and racism that persist to this day – both within the Church and within society at large.

“Neither love for Georgetown nor any manner of local contextualization can begin to justify the actions that were taken,” the report reads. “Indeed the early nineteenth-century context included less shameful, even good alternatives that were rejected and moral resources that were neglected.”

“The opposition to the sale, the scandal it caused, and the abrupt resignation of Fr. Mulledy are a few of the indirect indicators of how real the other options for the Maryland province and Georgetown College were in 1838.”

“In the face of such wrongdoing, contrition is imperative, and the goal of reconciliation – the healing of estrangement between people and the restoration of friendship – is indispensable,” the report stressed.

These efforts for reconciliation and contrition are framing Georgetown’s steps going forward, President DeGioia said. “We can be blocked by our past or we can be strengthened by recognition and reconciliation with it,” he told the assembly of students, faculty, staff and descendants of the slaves sold.  

The university’s past, he said, should be seen as a “touchstone” as the school moves forward, along with the input from the descendants of people held by the Maryland Jesuits as slaves, to seek reparative justice and to repair the relationships within the Georgetown community.

DeGioia pointed to the example of St. John Paul II in “seeking forgiveness and reconciliation” as one model and resource out of many from the Catholic faith that the school will draw upon in continuing its steps towards reconciliation for its actions.

Georgetown will also engage more deeply with modern issues whose roots are found in the institution of slavery.

While important steps forward, like the Civil Rights Act, have been made, DeGioia said, “we still live with the implications of the original failure to address the evil that framed the founding of our nation” as well as the continued discrimination of Jim Crow.

He pointed to gaps in life expectancy, health disparities, housing discrimination and disproportionate poverty rates affecting African American communities as part of this continued legacy of slavery in the United States.

This continued engagement with social issues and disparities impacting African-American communities is especially important for universities to grapple with, the president said, because of the American university’s role in constructing the idea of race in the United States.  

“Scholars of our universities had the effect of justifying the enslavement of our fellow human beings,” DeGioia explained. “And while all of this may have happened two centuries ago, we live with the consequences today.”

Thus, DeGioia stressed, the publication of the report and apology of the school “does not bring an end” to Georgetown’s involvement in the issue but instead is “opening a chapter” of new involvement on issues of race and slavery’s legacy.  

“This is a moment we must seize,” he said. “There is an urgency to address this issue now. We will never fulfill the promise of this university, we will never fulfill the promise of this nation, we will never fulfill the promise of each one of us as long as this legacy is unreconciled.”

 

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Scottsdale, Ariz., Sep 6, 2016 / 01:25 pm (CNA).- Parents are outraged after religious pranks at a football game in Arizona included vandalism of a statue of Mary and a dancing Jesus on the football field.  A white statue of the Virgin Mary sits on a lit pillar at the entrance of Notre Dame Prep Catholic high school in Scottsdale, Arizona, greeting all who enter the grounds.Last week, ahead of a Friday night football game with rivals Desert Mountain, vandals placed a mask of Hillary Clinton over Mary’s face, an attached a sex toy lower down on the statue."It's beyond offensive. There's nothing worse than to desecrate an image of [Mary]," parent Lisa Gregory told a local CBS affiliate.  "It's probably high school hijinx, but [the vandal] needs to understand that it was bigotry and intolerance. He probably doesn't realize that," she added.The Hillary mask and sex toy were quickly removed, replaced by a vase of flowers at the base of ...

Scottsdale, Ariz., Sep 6, 2016 / 01:25 pm (CNA).- Parents are outraged after religious pranks at a football game in Arizona included vandalism of a statue of Mary and a dancing Jesus on the football field.  

A white statue of the Virgin Mary sits on a lit pillar at the entrance of Notre Dame Prep Catholic high school in Scottsdale, Arizona, greeting all who enter the grounds.

Last week, ahead of a Friday night football game with rivals Desert Mountain, vandals placed a mask of Hillary Clinton over Mary’s face, an attached a sex toy lower down on the statue.

"It's beyond offensive. There's nothing worse than to desecrate an image of [Mary]," parent Lisa Gregory told a local CBS affiliate.  

"It's probably high school hijinx, but [the vandal] needs to understand that it was bigotry and intolerance. He probably doesn't realize that," she added.

The Hillary mask and sex toy were quickly removed, replaced by a vase of flowers at the base of the statue.

But the pranks continued at the football game, when someone dressed as Jesus led the crowds in cheers and danced with someone dressed like the devil.

"Jesus isn't a mascot. He's a religious figure," Gregory said.

Parents say they complained to the security guard, but the prank continued throughout the entirety of the game.

"He was dancing with the devil and mocking what we as Christians consider holy and sacred," parent Mike Williams said.

The parents said while they don’t blame the kids for the incident, they blame school officials for not stepping in and stopping the pranks. They said they hope the students learn that the pranks were too offensive and crossed a line.

"Kids are young and dumb and make mistakes, but if you can't pray in a public school, you shouldn't be able to mock [Jesus] in a public school," Williams said.

The local news station did not receive comment from school officials over Labor Day weekend.

 

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IMAGE: CNS photo/John Riley, EPABy Junno Arocho EstevesVATICAN CITY (CNS) -- The last three months of the Year ofMercy include jubilee celebrations for the imprisoned and for homeless people. Releasing a schedule of liturgical celebrations over whichPope Francis will preside, the Vatican included Holy Year Masses for prisonersNov. 6 and for the homeless Nov. 13. The schedule, released at the Vatican Sept. 6, also mentionshis planned trips to Georgia and Azerbaijan Sept. 30-Oct. 2, and to Sweden Oct.31-Nov. 1 to commemorate the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation. The pope also will preside over Mass with canonizations inSt. Peter's Square Oct. 16, World Mission Sunday. The pope will declare six menand one woman saints, including the Argentine "gaucho priest," Blessed Jose Gabriel del Rosario Brochero, and Blessed Jose Sanchez del Rio,a 14-year-old Mexican boy martyred for refusing to renounce his faith duringthe Cristero War of the1920s.Also on the calendar:-- Sept. 25:...

IMAGE: CNS photo/John Riley, EPA

By Junno Arocho Esteves

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- The last three months of the Year of Mercy include jubilee celebrations for the imprisoned and for homeless people.

Releasing a schedule of liturgical celebrations over which Pope Francis will preside, the Vatican included Holy Year Masses for prisoners Nov. 6 and for the homeless Nov. 13.

The schedule, released at the Vatican Sept. 6, also mentions his planned trips to Georgia and Azerbaijan Sept. 30-Oct. 2, and to Sweden Oct. 31-Nov. 1 to commemorate the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation.

The pope also will preside over Mass with canonizations in St. Peter's Square Oct. 16, World Mission Sunday. The pope will declare six men and one woman saints, including the Argentine "gaucho priest," Blessed Jose Gabriel del Rosario Brochero, and Blessed Jose Sanchez del Rio, a 14-year-old Mexican boy martyred for refusing to renounce his faith during the Cristero War of the 1920s.

Also on the calendar:

-- Sept. 25: Jubilee Mass in St. Peter's Square for catechists.

-- Oct. 8: Jubilee Prayer Vigil in St. Peter's Square with delegations from Marian shrines around the world.

-- Oct. 9: Jubilee Mass in St. Peter's Square in honor of Mary.

-- Nov. 4: Memorial Mass in St. Peter's Basilica for bishops and cardinals who have died in the past year.

-- Nov. 20: Mass in St. Peter's Basilica for the closing of the Holy Year of Mercy.

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Kids may get more of a sting from flu vaccination this fall: Doctors are gearing up to give shots only, because U.S. health officials say the easy-to-use nasal spray version of the vaccine isn't working as well as a jab....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Kids may get more of a sting from flu vaccination this fall: Doctors are gearing up to give shots only, because U.S. health officials say the easy-to-use nasal spray version of the vaccine isn't working as well as a jab....

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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- The Latest on the abduction and killing of Jacob Wetterling (all times local):...

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- The Latest on the abduction and killing of Jacob Wetterling (all times local):...

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Lawmakers returning to Washington after a seven-week break picked up right where they left off - feuding about legislation to battle the mosquito-borne Zika virus and deadlocked over the defense budget....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Lawmakers returning to Washington after a seven-week break picked up right where they left off - feuding about legislation to battle the mosquito-borne Zika virus and deadlocked over the defense budget....

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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- A Minnesota man confessed Tuesday to abducting and killing 11-year-old Jacob Wetterling nearly 27 years ago, recounting a crime that long haunted the state with details that included Jacob asking right after he was taken: "What did I do wrong?"...

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- A Minnesota man confessed Tuesday to abducting and killing 11-year-old Jacob Wetterling nearly 27 years ago, recounting a crime that long haunted the state with details that included Jacob asking right after he was taken: "What did I do wrong?"...

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PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Prosecutors said Tuesday that they want 13 other women who said they were intoxicated when Bill Cosby assaulted them to testify at his upcoming felony sex assault trial....

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Prosecutors said Tuesday that they want 13 other women who said they were intoxicated when Bill Cosby assaulted them to testify at his upcoming felony sex assault trial....

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BEIRUT (AP) -- Expelling the Islamic State group from the last territory it controlled along the Syrian-Turkish border has effectively cut the militants' supply lines from the outside world. That could affect their ability to protect their last bastions - the cities of Raqqa in Syria and Mosul in Iraq....

BEIRUT (AP) -- Expelling the Islamic State group from the last territory it controlled along the Syrian-Turkish border has effectively cut the militants' supply lines from the outside world. That could affect their ability to protect their last bastions - the cities of Raqqa in Syria and Mosul in Iraq....

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(Vatican Radio) Archbishop Eamon Martin has invited Irish believers to share the names and work of individuals who put the corporal and spiritual works of mercy into practice in their daily lives so  they can be remembered in a special #BeMercy Mass of Thanksgiving  he is scheduled to celebrate on 24 September.Eamon Martin, who is the Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland, issued his call on Monday evening at a Mass of Thanksgiving for the canonisation of Saint Teresa of Calcutta.In his homily Archbishop Eamon said “The canonisation  of Saint Teresa of Calcutta challenges us all to #BeMercy and also to give thanks for those who live the works of mercy as she did.  In the coming three weeks I invite you to pray with me in thanksgiving for people you know who put the corporal and spiritual works of mercy into practice in their daily lives”.He pointed out it may be someone very close like a relative or carer or neighbour who quietly cares for...

(Vatican Radio) Archbishop Eamon Martin has invited Irish believers to share the names and work of individuals who put the corporal and spiritual works of mercy into practice in their daily lives so  they can be remembered in a special #BeMercy Mass of Thanksgiving  he is scheduled to celebrate on 24 September.

Eamon Martin, who is the Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland, issued his call on Monday evening at a Mass of Thanksgiving for the canonisation of Saint Teresa of Calcutta.

In his homily Archbishop Eamon said “The canonisation  of Saint Teresa of Calcutta challenges us all to #BeMercy and also to give thanks for those who live the works of mercy as she did.  In the coming three weeks I invite you to pray with me in thanksgiving for people you know who put the corporal and spiritual works of mercy into practice in their daily lives”.

He pointed out it may be someone very close like a relative or carer or neighbour who quietly cares for a sick or anxious person , it may be a nurse, doctor or teacher “who goes beyond the call of duty to reach out to someone who would otherwise be forgotten”.

Archbishop Eamon said it may even be “a group like Alcoholics Anonymous or Saint Vincent de Paul Society whom you have experienced making a real difference to those who are in particular need of encouragement or help”

And he said that on the evening of 24 September, the Feast of Our Lady of Mercy, he will offer a #BeMercy Mass of Thanksgiving in the Cathedral for all those in our diocese and beyond who like Mother Teresa ‘do something beautiful for God’.  

Please find below the full text of Archbishop Eamon Martin’s homily at Mass of Thanksgiving for Saint Teresa of Calcutta

         “Please share with me by letter, email, or on social media using the hashtag  #BeMercyIreland or the dedicated Facebook page ‘Be Mercy Ireland’ and the Instagram page www.instagram.com/BeMercyIreland, the names and work of those individuals or groups you would like to be remembered at our upcoming Mass of Thanksgiving” – Archbishop Eamon

Mother Teresa shows us how to #BeMercy.
 
A key theme of Pope Francis' Jubilee Year of Mercy has been his call on all of us to 'be merciful', as God, our Heavenly Father, is merciful.  We all know people who are inspired by the life and teaching of Jesus to do corporal and spiritual works of mercy in the world today - who reach out to relieve poverty, hunger and homelessness; who bring the joy of the Gospel into our world and invite others in turn to come to know Jesus in their lives. 

The corporal and spiritual works of mercy are set out in that challenging reading from Matthew's gospel which ends with words of Jesus that were at the heart of the mission of Saint Teresa of Calcutta: 'as often as you did it to the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did it to me'.  I am grateful to have met many good and saintly people who 'do mercy'.  No doubt you too can think of women and men who care for the sick and suffering in our community, who feed the hungry, clothe the naked, welcome the stranger - and often do so quietly behind the scenes, without seeking any recognition or reward. 

In the canonisation of Mother Teresa, the Church is offering us a modern day 'model of holiness' or 'icon of mercy' - someone we can look to as an example and an encouragement for ourselves to 'do mercy', to 'be mercy', especially for those who are most rejected or forgotten in our world. 
For me there are three particular ways in which Mother Teresa illustrates how to #BeMercy in today's world. 

Firstly, she was inspired to 'do something beautiful for God'.  I do it for Him, she often said.  Being merciful begins with a desire to be a better person and to offer our gifts and talents to God who loved us first. 

Secondly, Mother Teresa opened herself up completely to what God wanted of her.  In fact she once made a vow never to refuse God anything that God wanted of her.  She simply wanted to be 'like a little pencil in God's hands' and allow God to 'write mercy' into the world through her.  Being merciful is about allowing God to work his miracle of mercy through us, about not getting in the way of what God wants of us, but being open to letting God use us as God's instruments of love, peace, goodness, generosity, forgiveness, encouragement to others.

Thirdly, Mother Teresa was able to 'see the face of Jesus' in those to whom she brought God's love and mercy.  She saw the face of Jesus in the poorest of the poor, those with AIDS, those with terrible disfigurements and disease, those abandoned and dying on the streets from malnutrition.  She once said, "When I wash the face of lepers, I am washing the face of Jesus himself".  It did not matter to her if the person in need was Catholic or other Christian or Hindu or Muslim.  For her Calcutta was everywhere - she even joked that if there are poor people on the moon, 'we will go to the moon too'!  She teaches us that when we 'do mercy' it opens up for us a window through which we can see the face of Christ in all those who suffer in the world. 

I am very grateful to the sisters of Saint Teresa's congregation, the Missionaries of Charity, who have lived and worked among us here in Armagh since 14 June 1996 when Mother and her sisters arrived here from Dublin to set up home at 17 Arthur's Villas, Armagh. 

The sisters stayed at Arthur's Villas until 2 May 1999 before moving to Cathedral Road where they had established a convent and a hostel for women suffering from alcohol addiction.  After a couple of years the hostel became a men's hostel, not only offering refuge from alcoholism but also from drug addiction and homelessness.  The sisters have become a familiar sight on the streets of Armagh, praying the Rosary for the intentions of those who ask for their prayers.  Today they spend much of their time visiting the sick and the elderly here in Armagh, praying with them and for them. 
Saint Teresa's sisters also provide faith development programmes and Catechism classes for children and adults in our community.  Just a few weeks ago I was delighted to join the leaders of their summer scheme for local children in which they are greatly helped by students who travel here each summer from Malta. 

Following Saint Teresa's example and devotion to the Blessed Eucharist, the sisters here in Armagh encourage people to come and spend some quiet time in prayer at the convent chapel where they have Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament two evenings a week.  Above all, in response to the Gospel, the sisters "make hospitality their constant care".  In the hostel they are greatly helped by some local 'co-workers' from the Armagh region who volunteer to come and stay overnight and offer care and support to those staying at the hostel.  I am very grateful to the team of lay men and women in this parish who assist the sisters in their valuable work of mercy and I encourage any of you who would like to volunteer your time and gifts to help the sisters to make contact with them. 

The canonisation  of Saint Teresa of Calcutta challenges us all to #BeMercy and also to give thanks for those who live the works of mercy as she did.  In the coming three weeks I invite you to pray with me in thanksgiving for people you know who put the corporal and spiritual works of mercy into practice in their daily lives.  It may be someone very close to you, your granny or carer or neighbour who quietly cares for a sick or anxious person you know.  It may be a nurse, doctor or teacher who goes beyond the call of duty to reach out to someone who would otherwise be forgotten.  Perhaps you know a group like Alcoholics Anonymous or Saint Vincent de Paul Society whom you have experienced making a real difference to those who are in particular need of encouragement or help.  On the evening of 24 September, the Feast of Our Lady of Mercy, I will offer a #BeMercy Mass of Thanksgiving in the Cathedral for all those in our diocese and beyond who like Mother Teresa 'do something beautiful for God'.  These are the people who today allow themselves to be the pencils through which God writes mercy in the world.  They are privileged to see the face of Jesus in those to whom they minister.  

Please share with me by letter, email, or on social media using the hashtag  #BeMercyIreland or the dedicated Facebook page ‘Be Mercy Ireland’ and the Instagram page www.instagram.com/BeMercyIreland, the names and work of those individuals or groups you would like to be remembered at that Mass of Thanksgiving. 


 

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