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Catholic News 2

Kenya's interior minister Joseph Nkaissery says the government will close Dadaab refugee camp which has hundreds of thousands of Somali refugees and is often referred to as the world's largest refugee camp.Nkaissery said Wednesday that Daadab camp compromises Kenya's security because it harbors Somalia's al-Shabab Islamic extremists and is a conduit for smuggling weapons. He said al-Shabab planned three large-scale attacks from Daadab, which hosts more than 328,000 refugees, mainly from Somalia.Last week the Kenyan government announced it intends to close Daadab and Kakuma, a refugee camp housing 190,000 people, mostly South Sudanese fleeing civil war. But on Wednesday Nkaissery said Kakuma will not be closed because it does not present a security risk.The U.N. has urged Kenya to reconsider its decision to close Dadaab camp.(AP)

Kenya's interior minister Joseph Nkaissery says the government will close Dadaab refugee camp which has hundreds of thousands of Somali refugees and is often referred to as the world's largest refugee camp.

Nkaissery said Wednesday that Daadab camp compromises Kenya's security because it harbors Somalia's al-Shabab Islamic extremists and is a conduit for smuggling weapons. He said al-Shabab planned three large-scale attacks from Daadab, which hosts more than 328,000 refugees, mainly from Somalia.

Last week the Kenyan government announced it intends to close Daadab and Kakuma, a refugee camp housing 190,000 people, mostly South Sudanese fleeing civil war. But on Wednesday Nkaissery said Kakuma will not be closed because it does not present a security risk.

The U.N. has urged Kenya to reconsider its decision to close Dadaab camp.
(AP)

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(Vatican Radio) In 1917 while the rest of the world was at war in a tiny hamlet of the Portuguese countryside three young children had  a vision of  Our Lady. That apparition on the 13th May sparked off the devotion to Our Lady of Fatima, an inspiration for millions to work and pray for peace. Since that time not only have millions prayed the Rosary and done penance but have also made the pilgrimage to Fatima.Among them Saint John Paul II who believed it was through her intercession that his life was spared when he was shot at in Saint Peter's Square.The last time he went to Fatima on pilgrimage was on the 13th May 2000 during the Jubilee Year when he entrusted the third millennium to her Immaculate heart.Listen to this programme presented and produced by Veronica Scarisbrick: Veronica Scarisbrick witnessed this event which was attended by the last of the shepherd children Lucia, who has since passed away. In this programme you can listen to a recording of her little...

(Vatican Radio) In 1917 while the rest of the world was at war in a tiny hamlet of the Portuguese countryside three young children had  a vision of  Our Lady. That apparition on the 13th May sparked off the devotion to Our Lady of Fatima, an inspiration for millions to work and pray for peace. Since that time not only have millions prayed the Rosary and done penance but have also made the pilgrimage to Fatima.

Among them Saint John Paul II who believed it was through her intercession that his life was spared when he was shot at in Saint Peter's Square.The last time he went to Fatima on pilgrimage was on the 13th May 2000 during the Jubilee Year when he entrusted the third millennium to her Immaculate heart.

Listen to this programme presented and produced by Veronica Scarisbrick:

Veronica Scarisbrick witnessed this event which was attended by the last of the shepherd children Lucia, who has since passed away. In this programme you can listen to a recording of her little voice as well as to one of a rather frail voice of John Paul II as he beatifies the other two visionary Fatima children Jacinta and Francisco Marto.

On this occasion the Polish Pontiff asked his Secretary of State, Cardinal Angelo Sodano to reveal the so called third secret of Fatima...

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Nigeria’s Archbishop of Abuja, Cardinal John Onaiyekan has spoken out against elements of Nigerian society bent on fanning the flames of religious discord in his country.On 28 April, Cardinal Onaiyekan himself survived an attempt on his life while travelling on the Benin-Uromi road in Nigeria. Gunmen shot at his vehicle. No one was hurt in the incident. Nevertheless, the bullets shattered the passenger window glass and made huge holes on the panel of the door.Speaking in the wake of recent massacres attributed to Fulani herdsmen in the southeast of Nigeria, the Cardinal was quoted by Agenzia Fides calling on Moslems and Christians not succumb to those inciting hatred."There is a terrible wind blowing around our country right now. There are so many people who are fanning the flames of discord and hatred, and it is becoming very difficult to preach unity and mutual natural love and there are those who are already envisaging a clash between Christians and Muslims".Car...

Nigeria’s Archbishop of Abuja, Cardinal John Onaiyekan has spoken out against elements of Nigerian society bent on fanning the flames of religious discord in his country.

On 28 April, Cardinal Onaiyekan himself survived an attempt on his life while travelling on the Benin-Uromi road in Nigeria. Gunmen shot at his vehicle. No one was hurt in the incident. Nevertheless, the bullets shattered the passenger window glass and made huge holes on the panel of the door.

Speaking in the wake of recent massacres attributed to Fulani herdsmen in the southeast of Nigeria, the Cardinal was quoted by Agenzia Fides calling on Moslems and Christians not succumb to those inciting hatred.

"There is a terrible wind blowing around our country right now. There are so many people who are fanning the flames of discord and hatred, and it is becoming very difficult to preach unity and mutual natural love and there are those who are already envisaging a clash between Christians and Muslims".

Cardinal Onaiyekan continued, "There are those who are interpreting the conflict between herdsmen and farmers as the front line of this battle. Some are sharpening their cutlasses getting ready for the big battle," he said.

The Cardinal pointed out that, "One of the primary duties of government is to ensure the security of life and property of all Nigerians which means that when you have any group of people, whether they are herdsmen or kidnappers, or armed robbers, the government should devise ways of effectively ‘check-mating’ them."

Nevertheless, the Cardinal was optimistic about the fact that not all Nigerians were determined to kill their fellow countrymen.

"Thanks be to God,” he remarked, “there are many Nigerians who believe that we are not doomed to kill one another and that there is hope for us to live together as fellow Nigerians."

Cardinal Onaiyekan also said he was proud to be a Nigerian.

"I will go all over the world boasting of this, telling them that in Nigeria, we have not less than 80 million Christians, 80 million Muslims, living side by side, day by day at every level of our lives."

The Cardinal reminded Nigerians that common evils such as Ebola or corruption, affect without distinction all Nigerians.

 "We all suffer because of corruption; we have a common task to insist on a good government, to insist also on honesty in government. To do this we must come together and fix our common and shared challenges," the Cardinal emphasised.  (Source: Agenzia Fides) 

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Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, May 11, 2016 / 06:49 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Last year, Sandra Raquel Nogueira Pereira was diagnosed with uterine cancer.But while the months that followed were filled with the pain and fear typical to a cancer diagnosis, Sandra’s story was also one with intense joy, as she finally fulfilled a longtime wish of marrying her boyfriend of 16 years.  Several months into her hospital stay, Sandra married Sérgio Pereira da Silva on May 2, according to the Diocese of Crato, Brazil. The couple has three children.The diocese said in a statement that she had been admitted to the Cariri Regional Hospital in the city of Juazeiro do Norte, located in Ceará State in northeast Brazil.While at the hospital, Sandra shared with the staff her greatest dream: to get married. Everyone decided to help make her wish come true.Ticiane Oliveira, the hospital social worker, was responsible for organizing the ceremony, and Zilma Casimirio, a member of the Legion o...

Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, May 11, 2016 / 06:49 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Last year, Sandra Raquel Nogueira Pereira was diagnosed with uterine cancer.

But while the months that followed were filled with the pain and fear typical to a cancer diagnosis, Sandra’s story was also one with intense joy, as she finally fulfilled a longtime wish of marrying her boyfriend of 16 years.  

Several months into her hospital stay, Sandra married Sérgio Pereira da Silva on May 2, according to the Diocese of Crato, Brazil. The couple has three children.

The diocese said in a statement that she had been admitted to the Cariri Regional Hospital in the city of Juazeiro do Norte, located in Ceará State in northeast Brazil.

While at the hospital, Sandra shared with the staff her greatest dream: to get married. Everyone decided to help make her wish come true.

Ticiane Oliveira, the hospital social worker, was responsible for organizing the ceremony, and Zilma Casimirio, a member of the Legion of Mary movement, worked on getting the necessary documents.

Palliative care doctor Patricia Mauriz said that during the ceremony, the doctors gave Sandra the necessary medications to alleviate pain.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="es" dir="ltr">Paciente con cáncer contrae matrimonio en hospital. Fotos: Patrícia Silva - Diocese de Crato <a href="https://t.co/R0W8HqL6p0">https://t.co/R0W8HqL6p0</a> <a href="https://t.co/B0SxR8myUF">pic.twitter.com/B0SxR8myUF</a></p>&mdash; ACI Prensa (@aciprensa) <a href="https://twitter.com/aciprensa/status/729474516116766721">May 9, 2016</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Before the wedding, the couple made their confessions to Father Joaquim Ivo Alves dos Santos, treasurer of the Diocese of Crato, and Father Antônio Romão, vicar of Our Lady of Sorrows Basilica. Both priests married the couple.

Their eldest daughter was the maid of honor, and she scattered rose petals along the path her mother was to travel. When the wedding march sounded, Sandra entered in a wheel chair, accompanied by a doctor and one of her two other children.

During the ceremony, Father Alves dos Santos said that “we are here representing the Church that Pope Francis is calling for, a Church that goes out. We have to go to the people who are in need and we are here today to bless and ask for the sanctification of this couple.”

When the wedding was over, the eldest daughter presented a statue of our Lady of Fatima, and the whole family consecrated themselves to her.

Sandra said that this was a day of joy and she was thrilled to have realized her dream in the month of Mary and of mothers.
 
“I've already cried a lot, so today I'm not going to cry. I imagined what the wedding would be like, but this is even better than what I hoped for,” she said.

Sérgio said that he has faith that the marriage will help his wife to recover.

Photo credit: isak55 via www.shutterstock.com.

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IMAGE: CNS/Paul HaringBy Carol GlatzVATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Salvation has nothing to do withthe tidy business of bartering -- earning God's love in return for goodbehavior, Pope Francis said."If you do well you get a reward; if you do poorlyyou get punished. This is not the logic of Jesus," whose ability to love andforgive is unconditional and infinite, the pope said May 11 during his weeklygeneral audience.The pope reflected on the Gospel parable of the prodigalson, which teaches everyone is a child of God not because of one's merits oractions, but because of God's "unchanging love and ready forgiveness."The father patiently waits for his sinning son andrejoices with a celebration when he returns home, the pope said.Even though the son tells his father, "I no longerdeserve to be called your son" because of the extent of his sins, thefather immediately seeks to restore "the signs of his dignity,"because in his eyes, he never stopped being his child, the pope said.No one can take away...

IMAGE: CNS/Paul Haring

By Carol Glatz

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Salvation has nothing to do with the tidy business of bartering -- earning God's love in return for good behavior, Pope Francis said.

"If you do well you get a reward; if you do poorly you get punished. This is not the logic of Jesus," whose ability to love and forgive is unconditional and infinite, the pope said May 11 during his weekly general audience.

The pope reflected on the Gospel parable of the prodigal son, which teaches everyone is a child of God not because of one's merits or actions, but because of God's "unchanging love and ready forgiveness."

The father patiently waits for his sinning son and rejoices with a celebration when he returns home, the pope said.

Even though the son tells his father, "I no longer deserve to be called your son" because of the extent of his sins, the father immediately seeks to restore "the signs of his dignity," because in his eyes, he never stopped being his child, the pope said.

No one can take away this dignity of being a child of God, "not even the devil," the pope said.

The father responds to his repentant son with tenderness and love; he doesn't say, "'You'll pay for this.' No. The father embraces him, he waits with love."

The parable also talks about the older son, who never strayed from the father and worked hard, obediently serving him.

This older son, however, lacks the tenderness and understanding of the father, and he speaks with disdain and resentment, the pope said.

"He only thinks about himself. He boasts about having always stayed by the father's side and served him; and yet, he never lived this closeness with joy."

"Poor father. One son left and the other had never been truly close" to him with his heart and love, the pope said.

The older son needs the father's mercy, too, he said. The older son represents the self-righteous, he "represents us when we ask ourselves whether it's worthwhile to work so hard and then we get nothing in return."

"Jesus reminds us that you stay in the house of the father not to get compensation, but because you have the dignity of being a jointly responsible child. It's not about 'bartering' with God, but following Jesus who gave himself on the cross."

God only follows the logic of love and mercy -- not the mindset of the younger son, who "thought he deserved punishment because of his sins," or of the older son, who "expected a reward for his service," the pope said.

The parable, he said, does not explain what happened between the two brothers, who can "decide to join in the father's joy or refuse." The fact that it is open-ended can inspire people to reflect on what they would do, he said.

The parable teaches that everyone needs to "enter in the house of the father and share in his joy, in his celebration of mercy and brotherhood." He said, "The greatest joy for a father is to see his children recognize each other as brothers and sisters."

It teaches people to open their hearts to be merciful like the father, and it offers encouragement to parents whose child has strayed onto dangerous paths, to pastors and catechists who wonder if their efforts are in vain, and to prisoners and all people who have made mistakes and believe they do not deserve forgiveness and mercy.

No matter what happens, "I must not forget that I will never stop being a child of God, of a father who loves me and waits for my return. Even in the ugliest of situations in life, God waits for me, God wants to embrace me, God expects me."

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Follow Glatz on Twitter: @CarolGlatz.

 

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CANNES, France (AP) -- The 69th Cannes Film Festival has opened amid stormy skies, heightened security and the premiere of a new Woody Allen film that prompted a letter from his son Ronan Farrow questioning the festival&apos;s and the media&apos;s continued embrace of the 80-year-old director....

CANNES, France (AP) -- The 69th Cannes Film Festival has opened amid stormy skies, heightened security and the premiere of a new Woody Allen film that prompted a letter from his son Ronan Farrow questioning the festival&apos;s and the media&apos;s continued embrace of the 80-year-old director....

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NEW YORK (AP) -- There&apos;s little doubt: Zika is coming to the continental United States, bringing frightening birth defects - and, most likely, newly urgent discussions about abortion and contraception....

NEW YORK (AP) -- There&apos;s little doubt: Zika is coming to the continental United States, bringing frightening birth defects - and, most likely, newly urgent discussions about abortion and contraception....

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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- A Minnesota doctor questioned by investigators in Prince&apos;s death is an experienced family care physician who worked for a Minneapolis-area health care system until recently....

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- A Minnesota doctor questioned by investigators in Prince&apos;s death is an experienced family care physician who worked for a Minneapolis-area health care system until recently....

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TAUNTON, Mass. (AP) -- A man described by his family as mentally disturbed went on a stabbing rampage hours after leaving a hospital, killing two people and assaulting and stabbing more in a house and a shopping mall before being fatally shot by an off-duty sheriff&apos;s deputy, authorities said....

TAUNTON, Mass. (AP) -- A man described by his family as mentally disturbed went on a stabbing rampage hours after leaving a hospital, killing two people and assaulting and stabbing more in a house and a shopping mall before being fatally shot by an off-duty sheriff&apos;s deputy, authorities said....

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BAGHDAD (AP) -- Three separate car bombings in the Iraqi capital Wednesday killed at least 93 people and wounded at least 165....

BAGHDAD (AP) -- Three separate car bombings in the Iraqi capital Wednesday killed at least 93 people and wounded at least 165....

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