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Catholic News

"My service is much more individual and open to everyone, even nonbelievers," Father Oldrich Chocholác, chaplain of the Czech Olympic team, told EWTN News.

The role of chaplains at the Olympic Games is not just for Catholics and other believers, according to a priest currently serving at the Winter Games in Milan and Cortina d'Ampezzo.

"My service is much more individual and open to everyone, even nonbelievers," Father Oldrich Chocholác, chaplain of the Czech Olympic team, told EWTN News. "It is a service of presence, prayer, and blessing."

The Czech priest, who serves as parish priest in Telnice in the Diocese of Brno, has accompanied his country's athletes to every Games since Rio de Janeiro in 2016. This year, the Czech Republic sent 114 athletes — the largest delegation in the country's Olympic history.

Chocholác told EWTN News his program is quite simple. He comes daily to the Olympic village in Milan to the space reserved for Czech team accommodation and meetings, and can travel to some of the sports venues using athlete transport. It is up to the team members whether they make use of his presence, he said.

A chaplaincy spread across the Alps

But the multisite format of these Winter Games presents challenges. Part of the Czech team is scattered across smaller Olympic villages in the Alps northeast of Milan, meaning Chocholác relies on electronic communication to stay in touch with athletes at distant venues.

"They know they can contact me at any time," he said.

The pastoral work was easier during the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris, he observed. With the Games now spread across multiple locations, chaplains of individual national teams do not meet as they did in France.

Spiritual service among Czech athletes differs from that of more religious countries, where team members come in large numbers to church services, Chocholác noted.

"I am glad that I remain in friendly contact with some of them even long after the Olympics," he said.

Prayer at the Games

Besides national team chaplaincies — a practice established at the Seoul Olympics in 1988 — the Olympic Village in Milan offers a modest prayer room and various religious services for participants. The Basilica of San Babila in central Milan has been nicknamed the "church of athletes" for the Games.

The Olympics press office did not respond to an EWTN News inquiry about how many national teams have chaplains this year.

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The Church should engage with universities about how to take "an ethical approach" to the dignity of unborn life, the president of the Pontifical Academy for Life said.

The president of the Pontifical Academy for Life said Tuesday the Church needs to maintain a dialogue with universities on the issue of abortion.

Monsignor Renzo Pegoraro was responding to a question about controversy over the leadership appointment of a pro-abortion professor at the University of Notre Dame — and whether Catholic universities have a responsibility to uphold Church teaching on unborn life.

Abortion "is not acceptable as a practice," Pegoraro said during a Vatican press conference on Feb. 17.

He added that it is the responsibility of not only individuals but also of society to help women and couples "avoid the idea that abortion could be a solution to a difficult pregnancy or a problem."

Pegoraro addressed journalists during a presentation about the academy's international workshop "Health Care for All: Sustainability and Equity," held in Rome Feb. 16–17.

Pegoraro, who was named president of the Pontifical Academy for Life on May 27, 2025, said convincing people that abortion is not the only solution to a problem "is a big challenge."

"We try to see how to maintain a debate about that, and we try to stress more the ethical and some social aspects, not immediately only the legal aspect of the problem," he added.

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Lent begins on Ash Wednesday, Feb. 18, beginning a season of prayer, fasting, and almsgiving in the Catholic Church.

This year Lent begins on Feb. 18 with Ash Wednesday. As we quickly approach this time of prayer, fasting, and almsgiving, here are five programs to help you grow in your faith this Lenten season.

'Pray 40: The Return' (Hallow)

This year, Hallow's Lent Pray40 prayer challenge is titled "Pray40: The Return." The theme for this year's challenge focuses on returning to God, just like we read in the parable of the prodigal son. To help go further into this idea, listeners will dive into "The Brothers Karamazov" by Fyodor Dostoevsky.

Actor Jonathan Roumie will guide listeners through "The Brothers Karamazov"; Mark Wahlberg and Chris Pratt will provide fasting challenges; Mother Olga will meditate on Scripture; Sister Miriam James Heidland, SOLT, will help listeners take part in imaginative prayer sessions; and Father Mike Schmitz will provide Sunday homilies.

'Crux' (Ascension)

Father Columba Jordan, CFR, will be hosting a daily Lenten program on the Ascension app titled "Crux." Crux invites the faithful to see Lent as a transformative season through a four-part daily system rooted in both physical and spiritual discipline. The four daily challenges include daily reading of Scripture, a nightly examen, one form of physical exercise, and one dietary fast.

"Crux" can be done individually, in parishes, or in small groups. Additionally, for those seeking a screen-free way to take part in the challenge, the "Crux: A Lenten Journey of Surrender" journal is also available.

'Seeking the Inner Room' (Word on Fire)

Word on Fire Institute will be hosting a virtual retreat this Lent led by Sister Miriam James Heidland, SOLT, titled "Seeking the Inner Room." The seven-week series will help participants dive deeper into Scripture and prayer in order to let the Holy Spirit into each of our inner rooms — our hearts. The retreat will also include reflections on "Gate of Heaven: Reflections on the Mother of God."

Lenten Phone Fast Challenge (Real Life Catholic)

Real Life Catholic is inviting people of all ages to put down their phones this Lent to offer prayers and sacrifice to support the renewal of young Catholics. The Lenten Phone Fast Challenge offers participants the opportunity to specifically pray for the spiritual protection of Catholic teens. Participants will also receive weekly messages of support and spiritual guidance from evangelist Chris Stefanick.

Programs offered through the EWTN Religious Catalogue

If you're looking for Lenten devotionals or books you can read during this time, the EWTN Religious Catalogue has a variety of options including "Praying with Jesus and Faustina During Lent," "Lent and Easter: Wisdom From Fulton Sheen," and "Lenten Journey with Mother Mary," among others.

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A leading voice from the Cardinal Newman Society shares how the new accreditation program will accelerate Catholic education reform and help support Catholic families to pass on the faith.

The Cardinal Newman Society — known for its list of authentically Catholic colleges — is now accrediting faithfully Catholic K–12 schools, a move that organizers hope will expand education access for families.

"This is a key step in Catholic education reform and helps ensure that families at faithful schools have access to school choice funds in states that require accreditation," Patrick Reilly, president of the Cardinal Newman Society, told EWTN News.

The organization acquired a Catholic accreditation group, the National Association of Private Catholic and Independent Schools (NAPCIS), which will accredit Catholic schools that are in line with the society's standards for Catholic education.

EWTN News spoke with Dan Guernsey, who serves as the executive director of NAPCIS, about how the new relationship will affect families and education reform going forward.

EWTN News: How do you hope accrediting independent and parochial schools will help Catholic families going forward, particularly in regard to school choice funding in various states?

Guernsey: Catholic teaching holds that the states have a responsibility to ensure families have access to schools in line with their values, including their religious values. More than half of Americans now have access to funding to assist in the attendance at Catholic schools, and the trend is continued growth. There is a danger that state governments may attempt to tie private school funding to state control, but some states avoid this by relying on accreditation to ensure a school's eligibility for school choice dollars.

It will be increasingly important that schools have an accreditor that is cost-effective, efficient, not overly intrusive, and fully credible with faithful Catholic families — with the bonus of achieving Newman Guide recognition.

Daniel Guernsey is the executive director of the National Association of Private Catholic and Independent Schools (NAPCIS), a Catholic accreditation group recently acquired by the Cardinal Newman Society. | Credit: NAPCIS
Daniel Guernsey is the executive director of the National Association of Private Catholic and Independent Schools (NAPCIS), a Catholic accreditation group recently acquired by the Cardinal Newman Society. | Credit: NAPCIS

What role does accreditation play in the bigger picture of Catholic education reform?

In alignment with the Newman Guide, NAPCIS only accredits schools that are serious about Catholic formation, so we can focus on the priorities of faithful Catholic families: Is Catholic teaching and culture bold and completely faithful to the magisterium? Are the academics solid and part of an integral formation in the light of our faith? Is the school safe? Does it have the personnel and resources needed to fulfill its mission?

Accreditation, done rightly, assures families of a school's success in fulfilling its mission. Sadly, most accreditation today places onerous and unhelpful burdens on schools regarding personnel and resources, while not holding schools to their mission — especially the unique mission of Catholic education. This ultimately detracts from a school's mission and misaligns its resources. NAPCIS flips this around, accrediting schools that put their Catholic mission first and then aligning accreditation to that mission.

Accreditors play an outsized role in too many schools today, including many Catholic schools. There is such a thing as "too much of a good thing." Many accreditors, focused on their own excellence and status, "push" schools and claim to be arbiters of school "improvement" rather than simply certifying a school's academics, operations, and mission integrity.

In the worst cases, accreditors demand that schools initiate policies and practices that run counter to a school's mission or values. They may, for example, press for excessive technology, secular/Marxist social justice, or sexual philosophies at odds with Catholic morality, justice, and chastity. NAPCIS provides space for faithful Catholic schools to exercise their autonomy under the principle of subsidiarity, or local control.

What inspired the NAPCIS and Cardinal Newman Society partnership? How will this partnership affect students and families?

I like to think of the new partnership not so much as a marriage made in heaven but as a marriage made for heaven. Both organizations have worked for more than three decades to assist the Church in ensuring her youth are fully activated for this life and the next.

By aligning NAPCIS accreditation with Newman Guide standards, we're helping schools attend to Catholic identity while also reviewing school operations. The Newman Guide focuses exclusively on mission, and it upholds high standards that would be unacceptable to another accreditor striving to recruit large numbers of lukewarm Catholic schools.

Partnered with the Cardinal Newman Society, we'll help schools strengthen their Catholic identity and ensure their religious freedom in a social and educational environment dominated by secularism, relativism, and materialism.

This interview has been edited for brevity.

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The humanitarian situation in Gaza was the focus of a day of the arts at the Lateran Apostolic Palace on Feb. 14, drawing attention to the ongoing suffering of residents in the Gaza Strip.

On Saturday, Feb. 14, the humanitarian situation in Gaza was the focus of a day of the arts at the apostolic vicariate in Rome. In the halls of the Lateran Apostolic Palace, the third edition of the initiative focused on the Gaza Strip, burdened by destruction and loss, where the suffering of its residents calls for ongoing attention.

The apostolic vicariate in Rome dedicated the third edition of its day of the arts to shedding light on the Gaza Strip. | Credit: Photo by Elias Turk/ACI MENA
The apostolic vicariate in Rome dedicated the third edition of its day of the arts to shedding light on the Gaza Strip. | Credit: Photo by Elias Turk/ACI MENA

The event offered an artistic journey divided into four consecutive performances under the title "If There Were Water."

Father Gabriele Vecchioni, deputy director of the University Pastoral Office at the vicariate, explained at the event that art stands in direct opposition to adaptation and forgetfulness. Shedding light on Gaza, he said, means confronting what the world has heard in recent months: the killing of 64,000 people, including 18,000 children — figures that an arts day insists must not be archived but preserved as an active memory.

The apostolic vicariate in Rome dedicated the third edition of its day of the arts to shedding light on the Gaza Strip. | Credit: Photo by Elias Turk/ACI MENA
The apostolic vicariate in Rome dedicated the third edition of its day of the arts to shedding light on the Gaza Strip. | Credit: Photo by Elias Turk/ACI MENA

In the "Hall of Reconciliation," the theatrical work "Gaza: Before the Silence" by Francesco D'Alfonso was performed by first-year students of the National Academy of Dramatic Art Silvio D'Amico. Through poetry, music, international reports, and literary excerpts, the performance restored faces and names to the victims. White shrouds and the stark numbers of the tragedy became signs of a collective responsibility shared by all.

The apostolic vicariate in Rome dedicated the third edition of its day of the arts to shedding light on the Gaza Strip. | Credit: Photo by Elias Turk/ACI MENA
The apostolic vicariate in Rome dedicated the third edition of its day of the arts to shedding light on the Gaza Strip. | Credit: Photo by Elias Turk/ACI MENA

Reflection on the suffering of Gaza's people continued in the "Hall of the Emperors" with the artistic work "Holm" ("Dream"). This project by the National Academy of Dance combined choreography and video. Through the languages of body and image, it opened an intellectual space for reflection on the Palestinian cause, entrusting dance with the task of fostering listening and awareness.

The apostolic vicariate in Rome dedicated the third edition of its day of the arts to shedding light on the Gaza Strip. | Credit: Photo by Elias Turk/ACI MENA
The apostolic vicariate in Rome dedicated the third edition of its day of the arts to shedding light on the Gaza Strip. | Credit: Photo by Elias Turk/ACI MENA

In the Hall of David, "Who Are You? A Beautiful Question," a work within the relational art movement, directly engaged the audience with the issue. Through words, images, and sounds, it unfolded fragments of memory about what has taken place in the Gaza Strip.

The apostolic vicariate in Rome dedicated the third edition of its day of the arts to shedding light on the Gaza Strip. | Credit: Photo by Elias Turk/ACI MENA
The apostolic vicariate in Rome dedicated the third edition of its day of the arts to shedding light on the Gaza Strip. | Credit: Photo by Elias Turk/ACI MENA

In the Hall of the Apostles, the event hosted the Santa Cecilia Music Institute, with Senka Slipac on the violin and Vehbija Hodžic on the accordion. The musicians performed works by Antonio Vivaldi, Dražan Kosoric, and Vittorio Monti.

The artistic journey at the Lateran also included a work titled "Fire," a collective installation created within a workshop sponsored by Caritas Rome.

The apostolic vicariate in Rome dedicated the third edition of its day of the arts to shedding light on the Gaza Strip. | Credit: Photo by Elias Turk/ACI MENA
The apostolic vicariate in Rome dedicated the third edition of its day of the arts to shedding light on the Gaza Strip. | Credit: Photo by Elias Turk/ACI MENA

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Pope Leo XIV has eliminated the Pontifical Committee for World Children's Day, transferring the committee's functions to the Dicastery for the Laity, the Family, and Life.

Pope Leo XIV has eliminated the Pontifical Committee for World Children's Day, established by Pope Francis in November 2024. In a decree published on Feb. 13, the Holy Father reaffirmed the importance of the Church giving special attention to children, in continuity with the intention expressed by his predecessor.

However, with the aim of "fostering greater synergies" and ensuring a more effective organization of this "noble initiative," the decree stipulates that all the committee's functions will be transferred to the Dicastery for the Laity, the Family, and Life, where it has been integrated since August 2025.

The document also establishes the annulment of the acts and regulations adopted to date by the body, which will cease to have legal effect under both canon and civil law.

Likewise, the president, vice president, and other members of the committee are immediately relieved of their duties.

Finally, it states that the prefect of the dicastery, Cardinal Kevin Joseph Farrell, must resolve outstanding matters and submit a final liquidation report to the Secretariat for the Economy.

Pope Francis established this day on Dec. 8, 2023. On that occasion, he announced that the first World Children's Day would be celebrated worldwide on May 25-26, 2024.

Subsequently, Francis established the Pontifical Committee for World Children's Day and appointed Father Enzo Fortunato, also director of communications for St. Peter's Basilica and head of the press office of St. Francis of Assisi Basilica, as its president.

The next World Children's Day will be celebrated Sept. 25–27 and is expected to be a time of encounter, prayer, and celebration involving children and their families from all over the world.

This story was first published by ACI Prensa, the Spanish-language sister service of EWTN News. It has been translated and adapted by EWTN News English.

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Marco Rubio's speech elicited a standing ovation and widespread accolades, including from the bishop of Winona-Rochester, Minnesota.

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio delivered a speech at the Munich Security Conference (MSC) over the weekend that elicited a standing ovation and widespread accolades, including from Bishop Robert Barron of the Diocese of Winona-Rochester, Minnesota.

In his Feb. 14 speech, Rubio said Europe and the U.S. are part of "one civilization — Western civilization" and are "bound to one another by the deepest bonds that nations could share," including shared "Christian faith, culture, heritage, language, ancestry, and the sacrifices our forefathers made together for the common civilization to which we have fallen heir."

"It was here in Europe where the ideas that planted the seeds of liberty that changed the world were born," he said. "It was here in Europe ... which gave the world the rule of law, the universities, and the scientific revolution."

To applause, Rubio said the destiny of the U.S. will "always be intertwined" with Europe's and "the fate of Europe will never be irrelevant to our own."

Rubio recalled that at the first MSC meeting in 1963, "thousands of years of Western civilization hung in the balance" after the devastation of two world wars and before a united Europe and United States eventually "prevailed" against the "evil empire" that was the communist Soviet Union.

He said that after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, it was "foolish" to assume that "every nation would now be a liberal democracy" and "we would now live in a world without borders where everyone became a citizen of the world" thanks to the replacement of nationhood by commerce and trade.

This was a mistake, he said, citing "free and unfettered trade" as the reason for the deindustrialization that has taken place in the U.S. and Europe as well as the "rapid" militarization of countries that are "adversaries and rivals" who have taken over "our critical supply chains."

Mass migration threatens 'cohesion of our societies'

Rubio blamed the pursuit of "a world without borders" for the "unprecedented wave of mass migration that threatens the cohesion of our societies, the continuity of our culture, and the future of our people."

He called for both Europe and the U.S. to "gain control of our national borders," saying enforcing immigration law is "not an expression of xenophobia or hate but rather a "fundamental act of national sovereignty."

"And the failure to do so is not just an abdication of one of our most basic duties owed to our people," he said. "It is an urgent threat to the fabric of our societies and the survival of our civilization itself."

He also criticized what he called "a climate cult" that has led to the self-imposition in Europe and the U.S. of "energy policies … that are impoverishing our people, even as our competitors exploit oil and coal and natural gas and anything else — not just to power their economies but to use as leverage against our own."

He said President Donald Trump refuses to see the "West's age of dominance" as declining, saying that the U.S. has "no interest in being polite and orderly caretakers of the West's managed decline."

Instead, Rubio said the U.S. wants to "revitalize" its alliance with Europe and, together, "renew the greatest civilization in human history."

Looking to the future, Rubio called for the U.S. and Europe to be "unapologetic in our heritage" as both societies rebuild by reindustrializing, limiting immigration, and investing in military defense.

"We made these mistakes together," he said, "and now, together, we owe it to our people to face those facts and to move forward, to rebuild."

The speech received a standing ovation.

Barron's assessment

In an X post following Rubio's speech, Barron said that "what most grabbed my attention was his stress on the common culture that unites Europe and America."

Barron pointed out that "that culture is grounded ultimately in the Christian faith. It is simply the case that reverence for the dignity of the individual, for human rights, for political freedom, and for equality comes, in the final analysis, from the Christian Gospel."

"Basic to his presentation was the conviction that Europe and America will truly flourish when each rediscovers its spiritual mooring," the bishop observed.

Last week, the presidents of the Italian, French, German, and Polish bishops' conferences issued a statement in which they also called upon Europeans to "return to the foundations of their hope."

"Christianity has been one of the essential foundations of our continent," they wrote, and Europe must "rediscover its soul in order to offer the entire world its indispensable contribution to the 'common good.'"

"The world needs Europe," the bishops wrote. "This is the urgency that Christians must embrace in order to then commit themselves decisively, wherever they are, to its future with the same keen awareness as the founding fathers."

The Munich Security Conference

The MSC was founded in 1963 and chaired until 1998 by Ewald-Heinrich von Kleist-Schmenzin, a German publisher, former Wehrmacht officer, and participant in the July 1944 plot to assassinate Adolf Hitler.

The MSC is not a decision-making body but an independent venue for launching diplomatic initiatives and shaping international security policy discourse. It serves as an annual gathering for heads of state, foreign and defense ministers, military leaders, experts, and representatives from business, academia, and civil society to discuss global security challenges in an informal setting.

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Catholic U.S. House Democrats cited Church teaching in defense of the dignity of migrants as Trump administration officials defend immigration enforcement.

More than 40 Catholic Democrats in the House of Representatives signed onto a statement of principles regarding immigration, which urged "solidarity" with migrants and cited Catholic social teaching and the visions of Pope Francis and Pope Leo XIV to back up their positions.

The statement comes as the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) continues to speak out against indiscriminate mass deportations. Lawmakers are also negotiating an end to a partial government shutdown, which was spurred by debates about funding and potential reforms for immigration enforcement.

"We feel called in solidarity to stand with immigrants — especially those who are poor, marginalized, or fleeing hardship — and to ensure they are treated with dignity, justice, and compassion," the statement said.

"As Catholics and elected officials, we believe that addressing long-standing inequities and expanding meaningful opportunities for immigrants is an essential part of our responsibility to community and to those most in need," the lawmakers said.

The statement was led by Rep. Rosa L. DeLauro, D-Connecticut, and signed by former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-California, and 41 other Catholic Democrats. No Republicans signed onto the statement.

The Catholic Democrats said their position is rooted in three principles of Catholic social teaching on immigration: that people have a right to migrate to sustain their lives and the lives of their families, that nations have a right to regulate borders, and that all enforcement must be consistent with justice and mercy.

In their statement, they said Jesus Christ "identifies with the migrant" when he says in Matthew 25:35: "I was … a stranger and you welcomed me." They also cited Pope Leo XIV's encyclical Dilexi Te, commenting on migration, in which he said the Church knows that "in every rejected migrant, it is Christ himself who knocks at the door of the community."

They quoted Pope Francis' 2019 message for the World Day of Migrants and Refugees, in which the former pontiff said the Church's response to immigration can be summed up in four verbs: "welcome, protect, promote, and integrate."

The statement recognizes that regulations on immigration are legitimate, citing the Catechism of the Catholic Church, which teaches that "political authorities, for the sake of the common good for which they are responsible, may make the exercise of the right to immigrate subject to various juridical conditions."

"Catholic social teaching approaches migration with realism: It affirms the right of persons to seek safety and opportunity while recognizing the legitimate authority of nations to regulate their borders," they said. "Sound immigration policy is ordered, humane, and sustainable, balancing solidarity with prudence in service of human dignity and the common good."

The Catholic Democrats said, however, that border enforcement "is never a license for cruelty, indifference, or dehumanization" but instead "must be governed by justice and mercy." They accused Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) of having "failed this moral standard."

"Their actions have separated families, removed law-abiding individuals from our communities, and, tragically, contributed to the deaths of detained migrants and citizens like Renee Good and Alex Pretti," the statement read.

The Catholic Democrats, in their statement, said their position on immigration is "guided by a living Catholic tradition that affirms the dignity of every human life." Despite the USCCB having called "the threat of abortion" its "preeminent priority" in the 2024 election, the Democratic Party supports abortion access, identifying abortion as an essential component of health care.

Negotiating ICE, CBP reforms

The signatories called on Congress to "bear the Church's teachings in mind" when considering reforms to ICE and CBP, which are being negotiated.

On Feb. 14, the government entered into a partial shutdown when Congress did not reach an agreement on funding for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which operates both ICE and CBP.

Many Democrats are proposing reforms that would restrict immigration enforcement as a condition of approving funds. Some have gone further, calling for the abolition of ICE altogether.

Catholic administration officials have rejected the Democrats' characterization that immigration enforcement has violated the human dignity of migrants.

In December 2025, border czar Tom Homan told EWTN News that "we treat everybody with dignity." He said "the most humane thing you can do is enforce the law, secure the border, because it saves lives" and asserted that the administration targets criminals and cited its work to combat fentanyl and sex trafficking.

Nathaniel Madden, principal deputy assistant secretary for communications at DHS, told EWTN News in November 2025 that detainees "are going to be treated like a person, and your dignity is going to be respected." He said dignity and immigration enforcement are compatible and "we have to take into account that laws were broken."

In January, U.S. citizens Pretti and Good were both shot and killed by federal immigration officers in separate incidents in Minneapolis.

In November 2025, the USCCB issued a special message that opposed "the indiscriminate mass deportation of people" and called for an end to "dehumanizing rhetoric and violence, whether directed at immigrants or at law enforcement." The message was approved by a vote of 216-5.

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"Adoption visas are not guaranteed" amid a travel freeze, said lawmakers who have asked the State Department to restore a "categorical exemption for adoption visas."

Lawmakers are urging the Trump administration to offer government exceptions for international adoption visas so that children can be united with their adoptive families and "welcomed into safe and stable homes."

U.S. Sens. Kevin Cramer and Amy Klobuchar, along with U.S. Reps. Robert Aderholt and Danny Davis, asked the Department of State to restore a "categorical exemption for adoption visas," one that was suspended in December 2025 amid government travel restrictions on certain countries.

The suspension of the visas "has introduced uncertainty for children and American parents who have waited years for their adoptions to be completed and were preparing to bring their children home," the lawmakers said.

The letter cited Department of State guidance from 2025 that acknowledged that adoption "involves children in need — some in urgent need — of a loving, permanent home and family."

In that guidance the State Department acknowledged the need to "vigorously engage at both the policy and case levels to protect the interests of all parties involved."

"We strongly urge you to advocate for the restoration of the categorical exemption for adoption visas," the lawmakers said, calling on the department to "move expeditiously to address this situation to ensure these children are united with their adoptive parents."

Difficulty of international adoption changes with governments

Katie Dillon, a spokeswoman for Commonwealth Catholic Charities in Virginia, said international adoptions "typically follow clear, predictable steps," though she said the process is "lengthy."

Like many Catholic charity groups, Commonwealth Catholic Charities offers adoptive families a variety of resources and services to facilitate in both domestic and international adoptions. Dillon said the Virginia group "acts as the home study provider and post-placement agency" for families seeking to adopt from other countries.

Such adoptions "can be a difficult process that ebbs and flows with global policy shifts," she said. "It can be a challenging process for families to navigate."

"Families interested in international adoption work with an in-state agency like Commonwealth Catholic Charities to complete their home study and an international agency to help with the placement of the child," she said.

Child placement agencies must be accredited by the Hague Adoption Convention of 1993, an international accord that established protections for children in international adoptions. Such agencies "have programs in certain countries to legally assist a family in the adoption of a child from that country," Dillon said.

Though there are numerous resources that prospective adoptive families can utilize to help them in their journey, Dillon said international adoption "is often a long process that can take upwards of three or four years." Some countries can require parents to reside in the country in question for anywhere from several months to a year, she said.

Amid the uncertainty at the federal level, Dillon stressed that the difficult process is at times upended by elections in which government rules can shift without warning.

"Parents who are considering international adoption should be aware that adoption policies can change abruptly with changes in government leadership," she said. "There are no guarantees."

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The pope told the Pontifical Academy for Life it is hypocritical to call health a universal value while ignoring policies that drive disparities.

Pope Leo XIV on Monday warned that modern conflicts and widening social disparities are eroding respect for human life and equal access to health care, telling members of the Pontifical Academy for Life that "all lives are not equally respected and health is neither protected nor promoted in the same way for everyone."

Addressing participants in the academy's plenary assembly in the Apostolic Palace, the pope praised the meeting's theme — "Health Care for All: Sustainability and Equity" — and lamented that "in a world scarred by conflicts, which consume enormous economic, technological, and organizational resources in the production of arms and other types of military equipment, it has never been more important to dedicate time, people, and expertise to safeguarding life and health."

He cited Pope Francis' insistence that health care cannot be treated as a luxury, noting that it "is not a consumer good but a universal right, which means that access to health care services cannot be a privilege."

Reflecting on the COVID-19 pandemic, Leo said it "has become clear how much reciprocity and interdependence underpin our health and our very lives," adding that this reality demands collaboration across disciplines, including "medicine, politics, ethics, management, and others."

Turning to global disparities, the pope said that when we examine "life expectancy and the quality of health in different countries and social groups, we discover enormous inequalities" tied to factors such as income, education, and the neighborhoods where people live. He also deplored wars that strike civilian infrastructure, including hospitals, calling them "the most grave attacks that human hands can make against life and public health."

"It is often said that life and health are equally fundamental values for all," he said, "but this statement is hypocritical if, at the same time, we ignore the structural causes and policies that determine inequalities."

Leo also highlighted the "One health" approach, encouraging an integrated vision that recognizes the links between human health, environmental conditions, and other forms of life — an outlook he said aligns with the academy's work in global bioethics.

The pope urged renewed commitment to the common good, warning it can become "an abstract and irrelevant notion" unless it is rooted in strong social bonds. "We need to rediscover the fundamental attitude of care as support and closeness to others," he said, arguing that this is key to building sustainable health systems and restoring trust in medicine amid "misinformation or skepticism regarding science."

Concluding, Leo renewed his call for stronger international and multilateral cooperation, saying such relationships are essential for preventing conflicts and resisting "the mindset of force, whether verbal, physical or military."

This story was first published by ACI Stampa, the Italian-language sister service of EWTN News, and has been translated and adapted by EWTN News English.

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