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Catholic News 2

(Vatican Radio)  Pope Francis’s scheduled visit to the northern Italian town of Carpi on 2 April will include a meeting with communities struck by the 2012 earthquake and a visit to the badly damaged Cathedral of Mirandola.A communiqué released by the Holy See Press Office provides details of the Pope’s 1-day journey to Carpi, a town counting some 70,000 inhabitants in the Modena area of the Emilia Romagna region.Over 20 people were killed and dozens of farms, castles, churches and other buildings were destroyed or damaged in the 5.8 magnitude earthquake that struck the region in May 2012. The Holy Father is scheduled to celebrate Mass, pray the Angelus, give his blessing to three new diocesan buildings, talk to priests and religious, and visit sites of the earthquake such as the Duomo di Mirandola. Pope Francis, who will be travelling by helicopter, will depart from the Vatican at 8.15 am and arrive in Carpi at 9.45am at the “Dorando Pietri...

(Vatican Radio)  Pope Francis’s scheduled visit to the northern Italian town of Carpi on 2 April will include a meeting with communities struck by the 2012 earthquake and a visit to the badly damaged Cathedral of Mirandola.

A communiqué released by the Holy See Press Office provides details of the Pope’s 1-day journey to Carpi, a town counting some 70,000 inhabitants in the Modena area of the Emilia Romagna region.

Over 20 people were killed and dozens of farms, castles, churches and other buildings were destroyed or damaged in the 5.8 magnitude earthquake that struck the region in May 2012. 

The Holy Father is scheduled to celebrate Mass, pray the Angelus, give his blessing to three new diocesan buildings, talk to priests and religious, and visit sites of the earthquake such as the Duomo di Mirandola. 

Pope Francis, who will be travelling by helicopter, will depart from the Vatican at 8.15 am and arrive in Carpi at 9.45am at the “Dorando Pietri” rugby field. 

The Bishop of Carpi, Francesco Cavina, will welcome the Pope who is to start his day celebrating Mass in Carpi’s central Piazza Martiri.  At the end of Mass, Pope Francis will bless the first stones of three new buildings of the diocese: Saint Agatha Parish in Carpi, Saint Antonio retreat house in Novi, and the “citadel of charity” in Carpi.

The Pope will have lunch at the Episcopal Seminary with bishops and elderly priests who reside there. Afterwards, he will meet with diocesan priests, religious men and women and seminarians in the seminary chapel.  After leaving the chapel Pope Francis will stop briefly at the cathedral before going to the ‘Duomo di Mirandola’ which remains closed since the earthquake in 2012.

In front of the entrance of the ‘Duomo’, at about 4.30pm, he will meet and talk to people affected by the earthquake and visit a floral monument adjacent to the church in honor of the victims of the disaster.  

At 5.30pm the Pope will leave Carpi from a sports field near the Church of San Giacomo Roncole, and he will arrive back at the Vatican at 7.00pm.

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(Vatican Radio) The parable of the poor man, Lazarus, lying at the rich man’s door, was at the heart of Pope Francis’ homily at the Santa Marta Mass on Thursday morning.  The Pope warned of the risks we run if we have the same uncaring attitude towards the poor and homeless people we see around us today.Listen to Philippa Hitchen's report:  Reflecting on the Gospel story of Lazarus, from St Luke’s Gospel, Pope Francis warned against those who place their trust in things of the flesh. Trusting in vanity, pride and riches, he said, will distance us from the Lord. He highlighted the fruitfulness of those who trust in the Lord and the sterility of those who rely only on themselves and the things they can control.Wealth can harden our heartsWhen people live in a closed environment, surrounded by wealth and vanity and trusting in their own devices, the Pope said, those people lose their sense of direction and have no idea of their limitations. Exactly as ...

(Vatican Radio) The parable of the poor man, Lazarus, lying at the rich man’s door, was at the heart of Pope Francis’ homily at the Santa Marta Mass on Thursday morning.  The Pope warned of the risks we run if we have the same uncaring attitude towards the poor and homeless people we see around us today.

Listen to Philippa Hitchen's report: 

Reflecting on the Gospel story of Lazarus, from St Luke’s Gospel, Pope Francis warned against those who place their trust in things of the flesh. Trusting in vanity, pride and riches, he said, will distance us from the Lord. He highlighted the fruitfulness of those who trust in the Lord and the sterility of those who rely only on themselves and the things they can control.

Wealth can harden our hearts

When people live in a closed environment, surrounded by wealth and vanity and trusting in their own devices, the Pope said, those people lose their sense of direction and have no idea of their limitations. Exactly as happens to the rich man in the Gospel, who spends his time at dinner parties and takes no notice of the poor man lying at his door.

Crossing the line from sin to corruption

He knew who that poor man was, he even knew his name, but he just didn’t care, the Pope said. Was he a sinner? Yes, he was, and though the Lord forgives those who repent, this man’s heart was leading him on a one-way road to death. There is a moment, Pope Francis stressed, a line that we cross when sin turns into corruption.

This man was not simply a sinner but a corrupt person because he was aware of all the suffering but he couldn’t care less. Damned are those who place their hope in themselves, the Pope said, because there is nothing more treacherous than a hardened heart. Once we are on that road, he added, it’s very hard for our hearts to be healed.

How do we feel about child beggars?

What do we feel in our hearts when we see the homeless or the children begging in the streets, Pope Francis asked? Do we say, ‘No, those are the ones who steal? What do we feel for the poor or the homeless, even if they are well dressed but they don’t have a job and can’t pay the rent? Do we say this is normal? Do we see the homeless as part of the landscape of our cities, like statues or bus stops or post offices?

Are we touched by the plight of the poor?

We must be careful, the Pope warned, because if we eat, drink and assuage our consciences by simply giving a coin and walking past, this is not the right way to go. Instead, he said, we must realise when we are on that slippery slope from sin to corruption. We must ask ourselves, what do I feel when I see on the news that a bomb has fallen on a hospital and lots of poor children have been killed? Do I just say a prayer and go on my way like before? Is my heart touched, or am I like the rich man whose heart was not touched by Lazarus but only the dogs had pity on him? If that is the case, the Pope said, we are on the road from sin to corruption.

May the Lord look into our hearts

For this reason, he concluded we must ask the Lord to look into our hearts to see if we are on that slippery slope to corruption, from which there is no return. Sinners can repent and turn back, he said, but it is very hard for those with closed and corrupt hearts, so let us pray that the Lord will show us which road we are following.

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(Vatican Radio) Environmental activists have hailed the Bangladesh Supreme Court for ordering Dhaka's billion-dollar tannery industry to move out of the capital city.On Sunday, the three-member bench led by Chief Justice Surendra Kumar Sinha ordered the shutting down of 155 tanneries in Dhaka, and dismissed the petition challenging the court's decision, filed by Bangladesh Finished Leather, Leather Goods and Footwear Exporters Association for a stay on an earlier High Court order.The court ordered the tanneries to shut operations by March 31 and asked ministries of industries and environment as well police to ensure implementation of the order by cutting water, gas and electricity supplies by the deadline. The court's verdict came following a petition by the Bangladesh Environmental Lawyers' Association (BELA).Bangladesh's tannery industry, centered in the Hazaribagh neighborhood next the Buriganga River, consists of 155 factories and employ...

(Vatican Radio) Environmental activists have hailed the Bangladesh Supreme Court for ordering Dhaka's billion-dollar tannery industry to move out of the capital city.

On Sunday, the three-member bench led by Chief Justice Surendra Kumar Sinha ordered the shutting down of 155 tanneries in Dhaka, and dismissed the petition challenging the court's decision, filed by Bangladesh Finished Leather, Leather Goods and Footwear Exporters Association for a stay on an earlier High Court order.

The court ordered the tanneries to shut operations by March 31 and asked ministries of industries and environment as well police to ensure implementation of the order by cutting water, gas and electricity supplies by the deadline. The court's verdict came following a petition by the Bangladesh Environmental Lawyers' Association (BELA).

Bangladesh's tannery industry, centered in the Hazaribagh neighborhood next the Buriganga River, consists of 155 factories and employs about 30,000 workers. The industry earns more than US$1 billion annually from leather and finished leather goods exports, mostly to European markets.

However, the industry is blamed for massive environmental and public health problems. Theophil Nokrek, secretary of Catholic bishops' Justice and Peace Commission hailed the "landmark" court verdict for insisting on environmental protection and labor rights.

"All the concerned parties including the government and owners need to be sincere and aware about environmental protection in the new site, so that it doesn't turn into a second Hazaribagh with regards to pollution," Nokrek told ucanews.com.

"Workers are worried about their accommodation and other facilities in the new place. The owners can offer them what they need and the government must pressurize owners to ensure all the facilities for the workers are received," he said.

In a 2012 report Human Rights Watch documented serious health repercussions to tannery workers and local residents as well as environmental pollution caused by this mostly unregulated industry.

Amid pressure from foreign buyers and multiple warnings from the Bangladesh High Court, the government decided to relocate the industry to Savar, just outside Dhaka, in 2003, acquiring about 81 hectares for the project.

For years, the process stalled due to wrangling over compensation packages and construction issues.

"Tannery owners buy rawhides and machines cheaply and exploit cheap labor but make huge profits, degrading the environment and public health and they have [polluted] Buriganga River. If they move to the new industrial estate they need to invest in modern equipment and infrastructure which they are reluctant to pay for," said Syeda Rizwana Hasan, chief executive of Bangladesh Environment Lawyers' Association, who filed the petition to push the tanners out.

Syeda Rizwana Hasan also told the media on Monday that in October 2010, the High Court gave six months time for the tanneries to move from Hazaribagh, which expired in April 2001. But the government extended it to Mar 31 this year.

Mizanur Rahman, vice-president of Bangladesh Tanners' Association, said they would act according to court order.

"We must obey the court order and move to Savar. We have been appealing to our prime minister to ensure some facilities for us including relocation costs, low interest back loans and easy access to utility services," Rahman, owner of Helena Enterprise Tannery told ucanews.com.

"We are concerned about the environment. If the issue of pollution surfaces again, we might lose our buyers and this industry will be destroyed," he added.

The owners also say the proposed new location does not have the facilities they need. "The water treatment plant and waste management plant are not ready yet," tannery owners' association spokesman Tipu Sultan told AFP.

"Many people will lose their jobs if the shutdown goes ahead. The court should reconsider its decision." Leather and leather goods are the country's second-largest exports after garments.

But the government says the tanneries dump 22,000 cubic litres of toxic liquid waste including the cancer-causing toxin hexavalent chromium into the Buriganga every day. The indiscriminate disposal is destroying the nearby environment leaving the area contaminated with high amounts of hazardous sodium and other heavy metals.

In 2013 the New York-based Blacksmith Institute put Hazaribagh, where most are located, in a list of the top 10 most polluted places on earth and said residents faced elevated rates of skin and respiratory diseases.

Human Rights Watch says the tanneries employ workers as young as 11, and that many become ill because of exposure to hazardous chemicals. Environmental activists have often accused the vast majority of tanneries in Bangladesh of not using any effluent treatment plants, particularly tanneries in Hazaribagh.

The High Court also told the Department of Environment to ensure all the tanneries at Hazaribagh are relocated immediately. The home secretary, industries secretary, Bangladesh Police chief and Dhaka Metropolitan Police chief had been asked to extend all necessary cooperation. It has also instructed the Department of Environment chief to file an update over the matter by Apr 6.

(bdnews24.com; UCANews.com; Deccan Chronicle) 

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(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis will preside over a penitential service at the Vatican in anticipation of the  ’24 Hours for the Lord’ initiative.The service will take place on Friday 17th March, one week before all churches around the world are asked to offer the sacrament of Confession, a request made by the Pontifical Council for the Promoting of the New Evangelization.The theme of the initiative this year comes from the Gospel according to Saint Matthew: ‘I desire Mercy’ (Mt 9:13).On Friday 24th March, the churches of Santa Maria in Trastevere and  Le Stimmate di San Francesco will remain open from 8pm for Confession and Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament. On Saturday 25th March, a service of thanksgiving will take place at 5pm in the church of Santo Spirito in Sassia. Monsignor Rino Fisichella, the President of the Pontifical Council for the Promoting of the New Evangelization, will preside over First Vespers of the Fourth Sunday of Lent.People ...

(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis will preside over a penitential service at the Vatican in anticipation of the  ’24 Hours for the Lord’ initiative.

The service will take place on Friday 17th March, one week before all churches around the world are asked to offer the sacrament of Confession, a request made by the Pontifical Council for the Promoting of the New Evangelization.

The theme of the initiative this year comes from the Gospel according to Saint Matthew: ‘I desire Mercy’ (Mt 9:13).

On Friday 24th March, the churches of Santa Maria in Trastevere and  Le Stimmate di San Francesco will remain open from 8pm for Confession and Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament. On Saturday 25th March, a service of thanksgiving will take place at 5pm in the church of Santo Spirito in Sassia. Monsignor Rino Fisichella, the President of the Pontifical Council for the Promoting of the New Evangelization, will preside over First Vespers of the Fourth Sunday of Lent.

People around the world can show their support for the initiative by using the #24hoursfortheLord hashtag.

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(Vatican Radio) Bishops in Scotland have condemned the comments of a Member of Parliament as “chillingly intolerant” after it emerged recently that he would work with humanists to put an end to Catholic education in the country.Tommy Sheppard is a senior member of the Scottish National Party (SNP) and an MP for the capital city of Edinburgh. He is also a member of the Humanist Society Scotland (HSS), and was recorded while speaking at an HSS event during last year’s SNP conference.The event was promoting the HSS ‘Enlighten Up’ campaign, which seeks to put a stop to mandatory religious representation on local authority committees. Speaking about a secular school system in Scotland, Sheppard said, “Some of the things in the Enlighten Up campaign are, I believe, exactly the way to do that.” He added, “Chip away at the power organized religion has within our school system.”A spokesperson for the Bishops’ Conference of Scotlan...

(Vatican Radio) Bishops in Scotland have condemned the comments of a Member of Parliament as “chillingly intolerant” after it emerged recently that he would work with humanists to put an end to Catholic education in the country.

Tommy Sheppard is a senior member of the Scottish National Party (SNP) and an MP for the capital city of Edinburgh. He is also a member of the Humanist Society Scotland (HSS), and was recorded while speaking at an HSS event during last year’s SNP conference.

The event was promoting the HSS ‘Enlighten Up’ campaign, which seeks to put a stop to mandatory religious representation on local authority committees. Speaking about a secular school system in Scotland, Sheppard said, “Some of the things in the Enlighten Up campaign are, I believe, exactly the way to do that.” He added, “Chip away at the power organized religion has within our school system.”

A spokesperson for the Bishops’ Conference of Scotland told the national Catholic newspaper, the Scottish Catholic Observer, that this was “a blatant attack on religious freedom and chillingly intolerant.”

Explaining that the Registrar General in the country categorizes humanist weddings as part of the ‘Religion and Belief’ marriage statistics, the spokesperson suggested that “they don’t seem sufficiently proud” of their belief system to argue for humanist schools. He added that “advancing the rights of humanists by demolishing the educational rights of Catholics is hypocritical in the extreme.”

Currently, over 20 percent of the school population in Scotland attend Catholic schools, a fact which the Bishops’ Conference of Scotland maintains “reflects the educational values of Catholic schools.”

A spokesperson for the SNP rejected any suggestion that Sheppard’s comments represent the position of the SNP or the Scottish Government, insisting that they were “simply the personal views of Mr Sheppard.”

“The SNP is a strong supporter of faith schools. They play an important part in Scotland’s education system, and the SNP Government believe it’s important for parents and pupils to have the choice to attend a faith school if they want.”

When approached by the Scottish Catholic Observer, Sheppard declined to comment.

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Phoenix, Ariz., Mar 16, 2017 / 06:04 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The Catholic school can be a missionary force to bring Christ to the world, the Bishop of Phoenix has said in a new apostolic letter.“A mark of a truly Catholic school is the fruit that is borne in the lives of its graduates,” Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted of Phoenix said. “That fruit is to be shown in the missionary activity of its graduates, called and sent by Jesus to be salt and light in the culture around them, knowing that people and cultures die without Christ.”The bishop’s apostolic letter “Evangelizing through Catholic Schools” was dated March 3, the feast day of the Catholic educator St. Katharine Drexel.His letter said Catholic schools should be “a place of encounter with Jesus Christ” that can impart a Catholic worldview through the curriculum, help students achieve true freedom, and send them out as “missionary disciples to transform the culture.”Many C...

Phoenix, Ariz., Mar 16, 2017 / 06:04 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The Catholic school can be a missionary force to bring Christ to the world, the Bishop of Phoenix has said in a new apostolic letter.

“A mark of a truly Catholic school is the fruit that is borne in the lives of its graduates,” Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted of Phoenix said. “That fruit is to be shown in the missionary activity of its graduates, called and sent by Jesus to be salt and light in the culture around them, knowing that people and cultures die without Christ.”

The bishop’s apostolic letter “Evangelizing through Catholic Schools” was dated March 3, the feast day of the Catholic educator St. Katharine Drexel.

His letter said Catholic schools should be “a place of encounter with Jesus Christ” that can impart a Catholic worldview through the curriculum, help students achieve true freedom, and send them out as “missionary disciples to transform the culture.”

Many Catholic school students first must have a relationship of trust with someone who is a disciple of Christ, but once that is established  “through hospitality and kindness,” he said, “the most loving thing a Catholic school can do is to share with each person the living Jesus Christ.”

Catholic schools help ensure that all students hear the basic Gospel message and are given “the freedom and help to make a response in faith.” Catholic schools “cannot exist for themselves.” Rather, the gospel demands that when students are well-formed they be sent out “as ambassadors of the truth and love of Christ.”

Bishop Olmsted reflected that true freedom of Catholic education is rooted in the truth and draws from Christ's words from the Gospel of John: “You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.”

“A joyful and evangelized person is truly free to be and to live as a child of God,” he said, criticizing views of freedom that separate it from truth. He contrasted freedom with slavery to sin.

“When Catholic education imparts to students the intellectual and moral virtues to know the Truth and to love the Good (which are both ultimately found in God) it is giving students the gift of true freedom,” he said.

According to Bishop Olmsted, Catholic schools are much more than public schools with religion class and morality added.

“Rather, the ethos of a Christian education vivifies and unites the totality of the school’s curriculum,” he said, praising Catholic educators’ “noble vocation” to help young people discover who they are.

“May the parents, teachers and school children of our local Catholic schools — through their constant contact with Jesus the Word made Flesh — be inspired missionary disciples of His Kingdom,” Bishop Olmsted said.

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Vatican City, Mar 16, 2017 / 09:22 am (CNA/EWTN News).- On Thursday the Vatican announced that Pope Francis has chosen Fr. Steven Biegler, a native of Rapid City, South Dakota, as the next bishop of the Diocese of Cheyenne, WY.A March 16 message posed on the Rapid City diocese’s website wished Fr. Biegler well in his new role on behalf of Bishop Robert Gruss, the clergy, religious and people of the diocese, saying, “we pray that God will continue to richly bless you with wisdom, vitality and the love of Christ and his people.”Fr. Biegler, 58, has been a priest of the Diocese of Rapid City since his ordination July 9, 1993. Most recently, he has held the position as Vicar General of the diocese since 2011 and Rector of the Cathedral of Our Lady of Perpetual Help since 2016.The Diocese of Cheyenne encompasses the entirety of the state of Wyoming and has a total population of 584,153 people, of whom 55,336 are Catholic.The official See of the Cheyenne diocese has been...

Vatican City, Mar 16, 2017 / 09:22 am (CNA/EWTN News).- On Thursday the Vatican announced that Pope Francis has chosen Fr. Steven Biegler, a native of Rapid City, South Dakota, as the next bishop of the Diocese of Cheyenne, WY.

A March 16 message posed on the Rapid City diocese’s website wished Fr. Biegler well in his new role on behalf of Bishop Robert Gruss, the clergy, religious and people of the diocese, saying, “we pray that God will continue to richly bless you with wisdom, vitality and the love of Christ and his people.”

Fr. Biegler, 58, has been a priest of the Diocese of Rapid City since his ordination July 9, 1993. Most recently, he has held the position as Vicar General of the diocese since 2011 and Rector of the Cathedral of Our Lady of Perpetual Help since 2016.

The Diocese of Cheyenne encompasses the entirety of the state of Wyoming and has a total population of 584,153 people, of whom 55,336 are Catholic.

The official See of the Cheyenne diocese has been only been vacant for five months, making Biegler’s appointment a quick one, since bishop appointments typically take at least a year to approve.

The former bishop of Cheyenne, Paul D. Etienne was appointed Archbishop of Anchorage, Alaska by Pope Francis Oct. 4, 2016.  

Bishop-elect Biegler was born March 22, 1959, in Mobridge, South Dakota, in the diocese of Rapid City. After high school, he studied for a year at the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology.

He then entered the Seminary of the Immaculate Heart of Mary in Winona, Minn., and later studied at the Pontifical North American College and the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, obtaining his Bachelor of Arts in Theology in 1992.

In 2007, he received a License in Biblical Theology from the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas in Rome.

After his ordination, Biegler was named Parochial Vicar of the Cathedral of Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Rapid City from 1993-1994, then Parochial Administrator of Immaculate Conception Parish in Bonesteel, Saint Anthony Parish in Fairfax, and Saint Francis Xavier Parish in Ponca Creek from 1994-1996.

From 1996-2003, he was Co-Pastor of Saint Bernard Parish in McLaughlin with the mission churches of Saint Bonaventure in McIntosh, Saint Bede in Wakpala, Saint Aloysius in Bullhead, Assumption in Kenel and Saint Michael in Watauga.

He was a member of the College of Consultors from 1998-2003 and then again since 2009. He was also Director of Pastoral Formation at the Pontifical North American College from 2003-2006.

From 2007-2010 Bishop-elect Biegler was Chaplain of the diocesan Catholic schools, and of the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology in Rapid City and Diocesan Administrator of Rapid City from 2010-2011.

He was Pastor of Our Lady of the Black Hills parish in Piedmonth from 2011-2015.

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IMAGE: CNS illustration/courtesy BaylorBy Dennis SadowskiWASHINGTON(CNS) -- Amir Hussain wants Americans to know that Muslims have always been apart of the history of the United States, starting long before the country gained itsindependence from Great Britain."There'snever been an America without Muslims," said Hussain, quoting from thefirst line of his book "Muslims and the Making of America" during a programat the National Press Club March 14.Atleast 10 percent of the slaves kidnapped in West Africa and brought to the U.S.beginning in the 17th century were Muslim, explained Hussain, professor oftheological studies at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles."Muslimshave been a part of the history of this country since before this country wasthis country," Hussain told the audience. Born in Pakistan, he emigrated with hisparents to go to Canada and he later became a U.S. citizen.As anexample, Hussain's book briefly recounts the story of a Muslim, Estevanico the Moor, in what no...

IMAGE: CNS illustration/courtesy Baylor

By Dennis Sadowski

WASHINGTON (CNS) -- Amir Hussain wants Americans to know that Muslims have always been a part of the history of the United States, starting long before the country gained its independence from Great Britain.

"There's never been an America without Muslims," said Hussain, quoting from the first line of his book "Muslims and the Making of America" during a program at the National Press Club March 14.

At least 10 percent of the slaves kidnapped in West Africa and brought to the U.S. beginning in the 17th century were Muslim, explained Hussain, professor of theological studies at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles.

"Muslims have been a part of the history of this country since before this country was this country," Hussain told the audience. Born in Pakistan, he emigrated with his parents to go to Canada and he later became a U.S. citizen.

As an example, Hussain's book briefly recounts the story of a Muslim, Estevanico the Moor, in what now is Florida in 1528 as a slave who accompanied a Spanish conquistador, Panfilo de Narvaez. In his presentation, Hussain cited literature published in London in 1734 referencing Muslims in colonial America. However, it was not until the late 19th and early 20th century when Muslims who were not slaves began arriving from the Ottoman Empire.

While the numbers of Muslims in the U.S. in the 18th century were small, by 2015 the U.S. Muslim population was estimated at about 3.3 million -- about 1 percent of the total population -- in a January 2016 Pew Research Center report.

Hussain focused much of his talk on two Muslims with large influences on American culture, one Turkish born and another American born: Ahmet Ertegun and Muhammad Ali.

Ertegun arrived in Washington in 1935 as a 12-year-old with his family, including his father, Munir, Turkey's second ambassador to the U.S. Exploring the city as a youngster, Ertegun discovered African-American culture and later teamed with Herb Abramson to found Atlantic Records for gospel, jazz, and rhythm and blues music. Founded in 1947, the label signed performers such as Ray Charles, Aretha Franklin, the Drifters and many others whose work has influenced Americans' musical tastes.

"I don't believe we can understand the history of America without music," Hussain said.

Ali, the famed professional boxer who died June 3, challenged America's thinking about the Vietnam War when he refused induction into the U.S. Army, Hussain said. Born Cassius Clay, he had won a gold medal in the 1960 Olympics and changed his named after becoming a Muslim in 1964.

The move was not popular, Hussain recalled, but Ali went on to become "the greatest" boxer of the era and the most famous Muslim in the world.

Ali's fame allowed him to openly proselytize for Islam, Hussain said, citing how he would hand out informational brochures on the religion with his signature on it to fans. "And you kept it. You didn't just read it because you had his signature," Hussain said.

The program, sponsored by Baylor University Press and the Religious Freedom Project of the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World Affairs at Georgetown University, also examined the long-standing U.S. tradition of religious freedom and how immigrants of different faiths view the First Amendment promise of the free practice of religion.

The First Amendment assures America's commitment to equal rights for people of all faiths, explained Melissa Rogers, who is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and who left her position as executive director of the White House Office of Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships in January.

She said religious freedom has been upheld repeatedly by the courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court, ensuring that there is no discrimination for people who belong to "the most powerful religion in the United States or people in the smallest religion in the United States."

"This feature of our system of religious freedom has made it possible for so many faith groups to call this great country 'our home,' all of us," she said, "and to build institutions and communities here that reflect our beliefs and pass them on to future generations. It's partially because we have been so vigilant about these religious freedoms that we have not only a country that has great religious liberty, we have a country that has great religious diversity, great religious vitality and amazing cooperation across faiths and beliefs."

Rogers also said that as a result, people of faith understand that their beliefs are not to be practiced just in private, but in the public square as well. The wearing of religious garb and other religious practices often intersect with everyday life and all such faith expressions are protected by the U.S. Constitution, she said.

Inherent support for religious freedom is among the factors that attracts immigrants to the U.S., said Rebecca Samuel Shah, senior research professor at the Institute for Studies of Religion at Baylor University.

Shah, who lived for several years in Great Britain, contrasted U.S. understanding of religious freedom with Europe's preference for national identity and symbolism that, she said, often tries to exclude the traditions of newcomers and immigrants.

"For that reason, it is very hard for religious minorities ... to feel fully at home in Europe," said Shah, who is Catholic.

In the U.S., the feeling is different, Shah noted, pointing to the First Amendment and its roots in Virginia law guaranteeing religious freedom as an important right for all people in America, whether citizens or not.

"Muslims in America don't have to deny who they are," Shah said. "They can feel at home in America. For many American Muslims, including many in my family, the founding principles are incredibly consonant with the core principles of Islam, principles of equality and dignity for example."

Challenges for Muslims and other religious minorities in the U.S. remain, though, Rogers and Shah said as recent attacks on mosques and Jewish synagogues illustrate.

Still, they said, America offers great hope for religious freedom and people of faith must work together to assure that right continues into the future.

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Follow Sadowski on Twitter: @DennisSadowski.

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By Junno Arocho EstevesVATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Christians who trust in themselves rather than Godeventually become unsympathetic to those in need and slide down the slipperypath of corruption, Pope Francis said. People who place their trust in their own vanity, pride and riches lose theirsense of direction and "distance themselves from God," the pope saidMarch 16 during his early morning Mass in the chapel of the Domus SanctaeMarthae."When a person lives in his own closed environment,when he breathes that air that comes from material goods, from pleasures, from vanity,from feeling safe and only trusting in himself," the pope said, "heloses his bearings, he loses the compass and doesn't know his own limits."PopeFrancis reflected on the day's first reading from the prophet Jeremiahin which God warns: "Cursed is the man who trusts in human beings, whoseeks his strength in flesh, whose heart turns away from the Lord."To trust in one's own heart, the pope said, is a"slippery path" because...

By Junno Arocho Esteves

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Christians who trust in themselves rather than God eventually become unsympathetic to those in need and slide down the slippery path of corruption, Pope Francis said.

People who place their trust in their own vanity, pride and riches lose their sense of direction and "distance themselves from God," the pope said March 16 during his early morning Mass in the chapel of the Domus Sanctae Marthae.

"When a person lives in his own closed environment, when he breathes that air that comes from material goods, from pleasures, from vanity, from feeling safe and only trusting in himself," the pope said, "he loses his bearings, he loses the compass and doesn't know his own limits."

Pope Francis reflected on the day's first reading from the prophet Jeremiah in which God warns: "Cursed is the man who trusts in human beings, who seeks his strength in flesh, whose heart turns away from the Lord."

To trust in one's own heart, the pope said, is a "slippery path" because "nothing is more treacherous than the heart."

The Gospel reading, in which Jesus tells the story of the rich man and Lazarus, illustrates what happens to those who trust too much in themselves and their own wealth while ignoring the poor at their doorstep, he said.

If the rich man was only sinful, the pope noted, he could be redeemed if he turned away from sin and asked forgiveness. However, "his heart led him on a path of death and from that point there is no return."

"That is when sin is transformed into corruption. And this man wasn't a sinner, he was a corrupt person. Because he knew of (Lazarus') many miseries yet he was happy and he didn't care about anything," the pope said.

Christians, he continued, must think about what they feel when they see a poor or homeless person and they must be wary of the sight of the suffering becoming "normal."

"Are they part of the view, the city landscape? Like a statue, a bus stop, the post office, are the homeless just part of the city? Is this normal?" the pope asked. "Beware. We must beware."

To avoid the slippery path "from sin to corruption," he said, Christians need to pray that God would illuminate their hearts and help them avoid the path from which there is no return.

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