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The Holy Father's well-educated mom was a devout Catholic, librarian, and accomplished singer of sacred music. The home life she created helped inspire her son's vocation.

Learning about the life of Mildred Martínez, the mother of Robert Prevost, allows one to better understand the family environment that helped inspire the vocation of the man who is now Pope Leo XIV.

In his book "De Roberto a León" ("From Robert to Leo") published by Editorial Mensajero, Armando Lovera, a native of Iquitos, Peru, provides data and insights that illuminate the maternal influence in the life of the pope.

1. Two of Mildred's sisters embraced religious life.

A testament to the importance of the Catholic faith in Mildred's family is that two of her sisters, Louise and Hilda, decided to consecrate their lives to God by joining religious congregations.

Louise Eugenie, born in 1903 in New Orleans, was the first to take this step: at the age of 19, she entered the Sisters of Mercy. Years later, in 1928 at the age of 21, Hilda followed in her footsteps by professing vows in the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

2. Mildred lost her father as a young teen.

Mildred's childhood was marked by the loss of her father, Joseph Martinez, who died on July 31, 1926, when she was just 14 years old. His death left her mother, Louise, a widow who was then compelled to enter the workforce. Mildred's mother, the pope's maternal grandmother, found employment at a nut and candy factory, where she worked as a taster, evaluating the quality of the products.

At the same time, Mildred's older sisters, Irma and Margaret, also assumed responsibility for the family's financial support, thereby enabling the family to stay afloat during a time of exceptional hardship.

3. She was educated to be an independent woman.

In the 1920s, Mildred began her studies at Immaculata High School, a Catholic girls' school founded by the congregation to which Hilda belonged.

The education she received was not limited to academics. The institution sought to prepare women capable of navigating public and professional life, fostering both intellectual development and Christian values, with a clear commitment to women's independence.

4. She had a life dedicated to books and education.

At the age of 27, Mildred began working at a public library, performing administrative tasks. Three years later, she enrolled at DePaul University to study library science. She completed a postgraduate degree in education in 1949.

Her passion for books was not limited to the professional sphere. For years, she volunteered at the parish library: She organized the collections, cataloged books, and arranged public readings to promote culture.

5. She was a sacred music singer and distinguished soloist.

Mildred possessed a deep and powerful contralto voice. This was no mere hobby: she performed as a soloist in numerous sacred music concerts.

In 1941, Mildred even appeared at the prestigious Chicagoland Music Festival, held at Soldier Field before an audience of over 100,000 people. Her repertoire centered on sacred music, and among her performances, her rendition of the "Ave Maria," a demanding piece even for professionals, stood out in particular.

6. The first time her future husband met her family nearly ended in disaster.

The family history also yielded some singular anecdotes. Mildred met Louis, who would become her husband and the father of the future pope, at DePaul University in 1948. However, his first meeting with her family nearly ended in disaster.

Invited to their home, Louis arrived feeling unwell; he took some medication and shortly thereafter fainted in front of everyone. Joking around, one of the sisters declared that he wouldn't be back. But he did return. Months later, on Jan. 25, 1949, they were married at Holy Name Cathedral in Chicago and began their life together in Dolton, Illinois.

7. Her electric organ ended up in Trujillo, Peru.

In addition to singing, Mildred played the piano and actively participated in her parish's music ministry.

Years later, her electric organ was transported by her son, then-Father Robert Prevost, some 3,500 miles to the Augustinian formation house in Trujillo, the city where he worked from 1988 to 1999.

8. Mildred played a decisive role in her son's vocation.

Mildred was a pillar in the spiritual life of the Prevost family, which lived parish life as if it were an extension of their own home. Their home served as a regular gathering place for priest friends, whom she would often invite over for a meal. These gatherings, characterized by simplicity and warmth, helped to kindle in the heart of the youngest of her three sons his desire to be like them.

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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The celebration of the Ascension is an annual opportunity for us to focus on the implications Jesus' return to the Father means for each of his followers.

Christ's ascension is meant to help us to grow to full stature in Christ as we respond to his confidence in making us his missionaries, together with the Holy Spirit, to renew the face of the earth.

The celebration of the solemnity of the Ascension of the Lord is an annual opportunity for us not only to focus on heaven, where the Lord Jesus has gone to prepare a place for us (Jn 14:1-6) and on the joy that "eye has not seen, ear has not heard, nor the human heart conceived," which "God has prepared for those who love him" (1 Cor 2:9; Is 64:4), but also on the implications Jesus' return to the Father means for each of his followers.

Jesus could have stayed on earth until the end of time as the Good Shepherd, crisscrossing the globe after every lost sheep, saving them one by one. As he ascended, however, he placed his own mission in our hands, commanding us to "go into the whole world and proclaim the Gospel to every creature" (Mk 16:15).

He took the training wheels off our discipleship and removed any excuses we might have to pass the buck of sharing and spreading the faith. "You will be my witnesses," he told us, "in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth" (Acts 1:8).

His confidence and trust in us, despite all our weaknesses, is astonishing. He wanted to incorporate us into — actually entrust to us — his mission of the redemption of the world.

But he didn't leave us orphans (cf. Jn 14:18).

St. Luke gives us a beautiful image and detail, that Jesus "led them out as far as Bethany, raised his hands, and blessed them. As he was blessing them, he parted from them and was taken up to heaven" (Lk 24:50-51).

Jesus departed in the very act of blessing us. Pope Benedict XVI in his trilogy "Jesus of Nazareth" commented on how the risen Jesus in heaven is perpetually blessing us.

"Jesus departs in the act of blessing," he states. "He goes while blessing, and he remains in that gesture of blessing. His hands remain, stretched out over this world … [which] expresses Jesus' continuing relationship to his disciples, to the world. … That is why the disciples could return home from Bethany rejoicing. In faith we know that Jesus holds his hands stretched out in blessing over us. That is the lasting motive of Christian joy."

Jesus is continuously blessing us with every spiritual blessing in the heavens (cf. Eph 1:3). He's seeking to transform us into his incarnate benediction of the world.

The great manifestation of that blessing is the descent of the Holy Spirit, for whose renewed coming we pray in the annual decenarium from the 40th to 50th days of Easter. St. Luke recalls Jesus' words: "You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you, and you will be my witnesses" (Acts 1:8). That's the power, the blessing, that came down upon the Church on Pentecost.

During the Last Supper, Jesus said something startling: "I tell you the truth: It is to your advantage that I go away, for if I do not go away, the Advocate will not come to you; but if I go, I will send him to you" (Jn 16:7). He was describing the incredible gift of the Holy Spirit's presence as a blessing even greater than his own. That's what the Church, huddling around the Blessed Virgin Mary, incessantly begs for after the Ascension.

The Holy Spirit helps us to fulfill, and not shirk, the awe-inspiring responsibility Christ has given us. This is the duty to give witness that Christ is alive, that he is the Way, the Truth, the Resurrection, and the Life, that he came to give us life to the full, so that his joy may be in us and our joy may be complete; he came to give and leave us the peace of his kingdom in a war-torn world; he came to help us and others to change our lives, to believe wholeheartedly in the good news, and to follow him, so that where he is we also may be and so that we might recognize that God the Father loves us just as much as he loves Jesus (cf. Jn 14:6; 11:25; 10:10; 15:11; 14:27; Mk 1:15; Jn 16:27; 15:9).

That's a message and a mission that many no longer easily receive.

Whether they think erroneously that science has disproven faith, or the problem of evil has refuted the possibility of a good God, or the clergy sex-abuse scandals have invalidated the Church's witness, or the frigidity with which so many secularized Christians live their faith has revealed its incapacity to inspire, or a score of other possible reasons people cite to deaden the appeal of Christian faith and life, it's clear that proclaiming the Gospel effectively to every creature is challenging work — but so was trying to convince down-to-earth first-century pagans and Jews that a crucified carpenter had not only risen from the dead but also was the Savior of the world. The same blessing of the Holy Spirit that made their joint witness fruitful desires to give tandem testimony with us.

One of the most effective ways to do so is through charity.

Back in 1985, the future Pope Benedict XVI gave a radio address in which he focused on the "delightfully naive pictures" of the Ascension in which the disciples are looking upward as Jesus is passing through the clouds and all we see are Jesus' feet, the same feet the women wanted to grasp onto after the Resurrection. Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger commented that we need to recognize his feet and reverence them in disguise in the feet around us as we follow Christ's example of washing the feet of others just as he cleansed the apostles' feet in the upper room.

"The true ascent of mankind," he stated, "takes place precisely when a man learns to turn in humility to another person, bowing deeply at his feet in the position of one who would wash the feet of the other. It is only in the humility that knows how to bow down that can raise a person up."

In order to ascend, we need first to descend humbly in acts of corporal and spiritual works of mercy, including passing on the faith to those who don't know it or who reject what they mistakenly believe it to be.

Christ's ascension is meant to lead us on an exodus not merely in the future, but here and now: an exodus from the self toward God and others, a journey from fear to trust, a passover from the flat earth of a world without God to the multidimensional reality of Christ's kingdom.

Christ's ascension is meant to lift up our hearts as it helps us to drop to our knees. It is meant to help us to grow to full stature in Christ as we respond to his confidence in making us his missionaries, together with the Holy Spirit, to renew the face of the earth. It is meant to fill us, even now, with lasting joy.

This story was first published by the National Catholic Register, EWTN News' partner and updated for EWTN News English.

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According to Pew's research, 65% of Catholics reported they have a positive view of religion, 12% have a negative view, and 22% have a neutral or unclear view.

A Pew Research Center survey found a growing minority of U.S. adults believe religion is gaining influence in American life, and more than half of adults have a positive view of religion.

The May 14 report found that 61% of U.S. adults said religion is losing influence in American life. In contrast, 37% said it is gaining influence, a figure that has risen 19 percentage points in the past two years.

The data in the report, "How Americans Feel About Religion's Influence in Government and Public Life," was based on Pew's survey conducted April 6–12 that included more than 3,500 U.S. adults with questions about religion's influence in society, Christian nationalism, and the relationship of church and state.

Percentage of U.S. adults who said religion is gaining influence, in a Pew Research Center report released on May 14, 2026. | Credit: Photo courtesy of Pew Research Center
Percentage of U.S. adults who said religion is gaining influence, in a Pew Research Center report released on May 14, 2026. | Credit: Photo courtesy of Pew Research Center

The survey has an overall margin of error of plus or minus 1.9 percentage points. Pew's studies on the public's views about religion's role in public life are an ongoing effort of the center's research and therefore included past data for comparison with the 2026 findings.

The research found that 65% of Catholics reported they have a positive view of religion, 12% said they have a negative view, and 22% they have a neutral or unclear view.

Overall, 55% of U.S. adults expressed a positive view of religion's role in American life and either said religion's influence is growing and this is a good thing (21%) or that its influence is declining and this is a bad thing (34%).

Christian influence in government

The survey found a small increase in the percentage of Americans who said they want the government to declare Christianity the nation's official religion. Overall, 17% of U.S. adults express this view, up from 13% in 2024.

Most Americans said the government should promote Christian moral values without making Christianity the official religion (43%) or that the government should not establish an official religion or promote Christian values (38%).

Of adults, 28% said the Bible should have influence on U.S. law. The majority of Catholics surveyed (55%) also reported it should have influence, compared with the 43% who said it should not.

The survey also found that the public's familiarity with the term "Christian nationalism" has grown since Pew last asked about the topic. There has been a 14 percentage point increase in the share of U.S. adults who reported they have heard or read about Christian nationalism, from 45% about two years ago to 59% in 2026.

Overall there is more of a negative view of Christian nationalism than positive with 31% of U.S. adults who reported they have an unfavorable view of it and 10% who view it favorably.

The survey also asked about the separation of church and state and found there has been a decline from 19% in 2021 to 13% in 2026 in the share of Americans who want the government to stop enforcing separation of church and state, but the percentage of Americans who said the government should enforce it has remained at 54%.

Nearly half of Catholics (49%) reported that the federal government should enforce separation of church and state, and 16% said it should stop enforcing it.

Most people (79%) reported they do not think churches and other houses of worship should endorse candidates during elections. Similarly, 66% also said churches should keep out of political matters.

Political affiliation's influence on views of religion in government

The survey found a large difference in respondents' perspectives based on their political affiliation.

Of Republicans and independents who lean toward the Republican Party, 75% expressed a positive view of religion's influence in American life compared with 38% of Democrats and Democratic leaners who do so (38%).

Similarly, 45% of Republicans and Republican leaners said the Bible should have influence on U.S. laws, whereas 13% of Democrats and Democratic leaners said the same. Most Republicans (74%) and Democrats (84%) agree that churches should not endorse political candidates.

Most Democrats (68%) said the federal government should enforce the separation of church and state, compared with 42% of Republicans.

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At Europe's largest university, the pontiff denounced a culture that reduces people to numbers.

Pope Leo XIV visited Rome's public La Sapienza University on Thursday, the largest university in Europe and one of Italy's most prestigious academic institutions, where he denounced the "great lie" he said is causing anxiety and depression among young people.

Speaking in the university's Aula Magna after a brief moment of prayer in the "Divina Sapienza" chapel, the pope referred to the "spiritual malaise" affecting many university students and recalled that "we are not the sum of what we have, nor matter randomly assembled in a mute cosmos."

"We are a desire, not an algorithm!" he stressed.

Leo XIV strongly criticized "the pervasive lie of a distorted system that reduces people to numbers, heightens competitiveness, and abandons us to spirals of anxiety."

"For everyone there are difficult seasons," he added. "Yet some may have the impression that they never end. Today this depends increasingly on the blackmail of expectations and the pressure to perform."

The pope was welcomed upon his arrival by the university's rector, Professor Antonella Polimeni, who accompanied him through the campus and during his visit to the exhibition "La Sapienza and the Papacy," which explores the historical and cultural ties between the University of Rome and the Holy See.

That bond has not been without tension. In 2008, the university's then-rector invited Pope Benedict XVI to inaugurate the academic year, but a heated controversy, driven by a small group of professors and students, ultimately derailed the visit. The German pope decided not to attend. The address he had prepared, published days later, argued that "the Christian message should always be an encouragement toward truth and thus a force against the pressure of power and interests." The following Sunday, some 200,000 people gathered in St. Peter's Square in a show of support.

The atmosphere Thursday was radically different. Students waited for Leo XIV outside the building, greeting him with enthusiasm and joy while chanting "Long live the pope." Because of the large turnout, many had to remain outside and follow his speech on screens set up for the occasion.

Leo XIV did not mention the 2008 episode. In his address, he described a world "distorted by wars and by words of war," warning against "a contamination of reason that, from the geopolitical level, invades every social relationship."

Correcting the simplification that creates enemies

"It is a contamination of reason that, from the geopolitical level, invades every social relationship. The simplification that creates enemies must be corrected, especially in the university, through care for complexity and the wise exercise of memory," he said.

"The cry of 'never again war!' of my predecessors, so in tune with the rejection of war enshrined in the Italian Constitution, urges us toward a spiritual alliance with the sense of justice that dwells in the hearts of young people, with their vocation not to close themselves off within ideologies or national borders," he added.

In that context, the pope criticized the rise in military spending, particularly in Europe.

"Let us not call defense a rearmament that increases tensions and insecurity, impoverishes investments in education and health care, contradicts trust in diplomacy, and enriches elites that care nothing for the common good," he said.

According to data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, global military spending rose for the 11th consecutive year in 2025, reaching a record $2.887 trillion. Europe accounted for a large share of that increase, with a 14% rise in arms investment, reaching $864 billion.

The Holy Father also warned about the risks of the use of artificial intelligence, both in military and civilian contexts, and urged vigilance so that its development does not "relieve human decisions of responsibility or worsen the tragedy of conflicts."

"What is happening in Ukraine, in Gaza and the Palestinian territories, in Lebanon, in Iran describes the inhuman evolution of the relationship between war and new technologies in a spiral of annihilation," he warned.

Faced with this scenario, the pope issued a direct appeal to young people: "Be a radical 'yes' to life! Yes to innocent life, yes to young life, yes to the life of peoples crying out for peace and justice."

History does not fall hopelessly into the hands of death

Leo XIV also devoted part of his address to ecology, citing Laudato Si', the 2015 encyclical of his predecessor Pope Francis.

"Beyond good intentions and some efforts in that direction, the situation does not seem to have improved," he lamented, encouraging young people to "transform restlessness into prophecy" and not to give in to discouragement.

"Especially those who believe know that history does not fall hopelessly into the hands of death, but is always guarded, no matter what happens, by a God who creates life from nothing, who gives without taking, who shares without consuming," he said.

The pope also criticized the "implosion of a possessive and consumerist paradigm" and encouraged university students to seek a "horizon of meaning" beyond immediacy.

"So little considered by a society with ever fewer children, you show that humanity is capable of a future when it builds that future with wisdom," he told them.

He also emphasized the value of teaching, defining it as a form of charity "as much as helping a migrant at sea, a poor person in the street, or a despairing conscience."

"It means always and in every case loving human life, valuing its possibilities, so that one can speak to the hearts of young people, not only to their knowledge," he added.

For Benedetta Marchiori, a student at La Sapienza, the pope's visit was a moment of encouragement.

"It gave so much joy, so much happiness, so much hope," Marchiori told EWTN News. "It is truly beautiful to hear someone speak who really sees so many different situations every day and brings them back to us — reminding us that we truly have an active role in our own growth, through our study and through being truly centered. It is really beautiful."

Chiara Clementoni, a medical student, said the pope's address was "really encouraging."

"The idea that we are not the sum of what has happened to us, but that through knowledge and study we can also build ourselves as people and open ourselves more to the mysteries that God has placed in nature, that God has placed in everything we can make the object of our study," Clementoni said.

At the end of the meeting, the university gave the pope a reproduction of a stone from the Holy Sepulcher, where a team of La Sapienza archaeologists has been conducting excavations in the basilica in Jerusalem since March 2022.

The project, carried out in collaboration with the various communities that guard the site — the Franciscans of the Custody of the Holy Land, the Latin Patriarchate, and the Greek and Armenian churches — will make it possible for the first time to reconstruct the full stratigraphic history of the building, erected in the fourth century during the time of Emperor Constantine and his mother, St. Helena.

Ishmael Adibuah contributed reporting to this article.

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

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L'Œuvre d'Orient marks 170 years with an appeal for solidarity with Christians in the East and highlights three major challenges threatening the future of Christians there.

Monsignor Hugues de Woillemont, director general of the French organization L'Œuvre d'Orient, said that Eastern Christians, especially Christians in the Holy Land, are facing existential challenges that threaten their historic presence.  Chief among these challenges, he said, are migration, the pressure of economic crises, and war.

The head of the social and humanitarian association told EWTN News on the occasion of its 170th anniversary that the organization was founded in 1856 under the name "Œuvre des Écoles d'Orient," or "Work of the Schools of the East." From the beginning, he said, it was built on the conviction that "the formation of minds is the first act of solidarity."

Monsignor Hugues de Woillemont, director general of the French organization L'Œuvre d'Orient. | Credit: Sanad Sahelia
Monsignor Hugues de Woillemont, director general of the French organization L'Œuvre d'Orient. | Credit: Sanad Sahelia

Since then, the organization has expanded its mission to include education, healthcare, social assistance, humanitarian relief, and the preservation of both tangible and intangible heritage, which he described as "the living memory of Christian communities in the East."

Building on this legacy, he explained that the organization has developed "an organized field presence through local offices and young volunteers." This presence, he said, aims to "bring the voice of Eastern Christians to decision-makers in Europe and at the level of international institutions," helping to strengthen their historic presence and safeguard their future in their homelands.

The challenge of migration

Speaking about the main challenges facing Eastern Christians today, de Woillemont said the current situation "is a cause for deep concern." Political, economic, and military crises, he explained, "weaken entire societies," while Christians often bear these consequences in a particularly heavy way."

"The greatest challenge today is migration," he said. "In several countries, ancient communities face the risk of disappearance because of the lack of economic and security prospects."

Despite this, he emphasized that "Eastern Christians continue to play their role as makers of peace and dialogue in extremely difficult circumstances, even though they are facing wars they did not choose."

Education, he added, remains "at the heart of our commitment because it helps build stable societies and limits migration." He noted that "behind every school that opens or clinic that receives support, there is a family choosing to stay and remain rooted in its land."

Monsignor Hugues de Woillemont visits Beit Afram Home for the Elderly, affiliated with the Latin Patriarchate, in the town of Taybeh in the central West Bank. | Credit: Sanad Sahelia
Monsignor Hugues de Woillemont visits Beit Afram Home for the Elderly, affiliated with the Latin Patriarchate, in the town of Taybeh in the central West Bank. | Credit: Sanad Sahelia

De Woillemont said the organization's work has also expanded to include healthcare and social assistance, "especially amid the weakness of public systems," as well as emergency humanitarian relief in times of war and disaster. He also underlined that preserving heritage is a central part of the organization's mission, because "it is not only about buildings but about the living memory of entire civilizations."

As part of his appeal for solidarity, de Woillemont addressed Christians in Europe and the United States, saying: "Eastern Christians are not only communities that suffer; they are a richness for the whole Church."

"Prayer is essential," he added, "but it must be accompanied by concrete solidarity," including support for educational, healthcare, and social projects, as well as efforts to make their reality known to the wider public.

He also called for a better understanding of Eastern Christians within Western societies and for greater advocacy with decision-makers, noting that "action by the international community can make a real difference."

De Woillemont highlighted the importance of building direct relationships through volunteering and twinning initiatives, saying that such experiences "leave a deep impact on the young people who take part in them."

Looking ahead, he said three major challenges are emerging: the acceleration of migration, the preservation of education and heritage in conflict zones, and the difficulty of mobilizing resources amid multiple crises and declining international attention."

It is becoming difficult to maintain sustained attention and mobilize the necessary resources," he said, adding that this requires broadening the support base and strengthening awareness efforts.

Monsignor Hugues de Woillemont talks with parishioners during a pastoral visit to Christ the Redeemer Latin Parish in Taybeh in the central West Bank. | Credit: Sanad Sahelia
Monsignor Hugues de Woillemont talks with parishioners during a pastoral visit to Christ the Redeemer Latin Parish in Taybeh in the central West Bank. | Credit: Sanad Sahelia

At the conclusion of his remarks, de Woillemont expressed "deep appreciation and lasting closeness" to Eastern Christians, saying that "their fidelity, courage, and hope are a witness for the whole Church."

He stressed that their presence "is essential in their countries," adding: "They are not only heirs to history but also bearers of the future."

In this context, he recalled Pope Leo XIV's call for "a peace that is disarmed and disarming, humble and persevering," emphasizing that such peace must be based on respect for the sovereignty of states and international law."

Let them know that we are at their side for the long term, with determination and trust," he concluded. "We do not forget them, and we remain beside them."

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

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Father Noel Fitzpatrick was shot and killed along with four others including three youth in Belfast on July 9, 1972.

Speaking at a Mass in Belfast, Northern Ireland, following an inquest that found five Catholics, including a priest, were unlawfully killed by British soldiers in 1972, Bishop Alan McGuckian, SJ, of Down and Connor told Corpus Christi parishioners that the verdict "restores dignity to the deceased, and it brings a measure of justice to those who grieve."

Father Noel Fitzpatrick, 42; Patrick Butler, 38; John Dougal, 16; David McCafferty, 15; and Margaret Gargan, 13, were shot and killed in the Springhill/Westrock area of West Belfast on July 9, 1972. The deceased were all Corpus Christi parishioners and their relatives and campaigners for justice were present at the Mass on May 3 to hear McGuckian's words.

The shooting took place at a time of great turmoil and disturbance in the city, with an IRA ceasefire having just broken down. The British Army's position was that it was engaged in a sustained gun battle. The coroner's verdict was that there may have been some "sporadic" firing by the IRA, but those killed were unarmed, posed no threat, and should not have been killed.

The inquest was completed in 2024, just before the British government's controversial Legacy Act shut down inquests in Troubles-related killings. Belfast High Court Judge David Scoffield, sitting as a coroner, stated that the soldiers from the King's Regiment "lost control."

Speaking at the Mass at Corpus Christi Church, McGuckian paid tribute to the perseverance, resilience, and persistence of the victims' families and the parish community.

McGuckian said the legacy of conflict in Northern Ireland continues to cast a long shadow across communities, families, and institutions, adding that this is a "moment of deep significance" for the families of the parish community and for all who carry the memory of the shootings.

He continued: "Three young children, John Dougal, David McCafferty, Margaret Gargan; a father of a young family, Patrick Butler; and a local priest, Father Noel Fitzpatrick, were unlawfully killed by British army soldiers who 'overreacted and lost control' using force that was unreasonable and unjustified. While no legal finding can ever undo the pain of such loss, the public naming of this truth is of profound importance."

McGuckian paid tribute to Fitzpatrick, "a priest of this diocese, who in faithfulness to his pastoral calling stood with you, his people, in a time of fear and violence."

He added that the "path towards reconciliation and recovery in Northern Ireland can only be achieved by walking together in the light of truth and justice."

The inquest found that Fitzpatrick, at the time of his death, was unarmed, posed no threat, and was going to the assistance of others. Butler was killed by the same bullet that killed Fitzpatrick, which struck him after passing through the priest's neck. He, too, was unarmed, posed no risk, and was assisting Fitzpatrick in helping others.

An inquest found that Father Noel Fitzpatrick, at the time of his death, was unarmed, posed no threat, and was going to the assistance of others.| Credit: Down and Connor Diocese
An inquest found that Father Noel Fitzpatrick, at the time of his death, was unarmed, posed no threat, and was going to the assistance of others.| Credit: Down and Connor Diocese

McCafferty, a schoolboy, was likely attempting to recover the body of  Fitzpatrick when he was shot and killed. McCafferty was a member of the junior wing of the Official IRA. The coroner found he was not armed and was not posing a threat when he was shot by the same soldier who killed Fitzpatrick and Butler.

Dougal was an acknowledged member of Na Fianna, the juvenile wing of the Provisional IRA. The coroner found there was suspicious activity in the area that evening and said he was unable to determine whether Dougal had been armed when he was killed. The coroner found that like the other deceased in the inquest, Dougal should not have been shot dead by the army in the circumstances. He was shot in the back as he retreated from the scene.

Thirteen-year-old Gargan was standing talking to friends in the street when she was "shot directly in the face." She was "wholly innocent."

Scoffield said in his concluding comments: "In light of the passage of time, the difficulties in establishing to the criminal standard who fired any lethal shots and the associated difficulties in this case of even establishing the identity of the ciphered soldiers — there is little prospect of any prosecution in these cases if that is what anyone is seeking."

The shooting of Fitzpatrick was the second killing of a Catholic priest by British soldiers within 12 months in Belfast at the time.

Father Hugh Mullan was killed in the Ballymurphy massacre between Aug. 9 and Aug. 11, 1971. An inquest in 2021 found all victims in Ballymurphy to be innocent. | Credit: Down and Connor Diocese
Father Hugh Mullan was killed in the Ballymurphy massacre between Aug. 9 and Aug. 11, 1971. An inquest in 2021 found all victims in Ballymurphy to be innocent. | Credit: Down and Connor Diocese

Father Hugh Mullan was one of 10 people killed in the Ballymurphy massacre between Aug. 9 and Aug. 11, 1971. An inquest in 2021 found all victims in Ballymurphy to be innocent.

Eyewitnesses reported Mullan was carrying a white cloth when he was shot and continued to pray as he lay dying. Prior to his shooting he had telephoned the British Army base to notify them he was going to the scene to assist a wounded man. He was shot in the back by a member of the paratroop regiment. Mullan's sister, Geraldine, told ITV News at the time: "It made me very angry that he had died and nobody seemed to care that this young priest's life had been taken away from him."

Following the Springhill/Westrock verdict, Down and Connor Diocesan Vocations Director Father Conor McGrath pointed to the example of Fitzpatrick and Mullan as men of heroic virtue — both of whom were exercising their priestly ministry when they were shot.

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A new study emphasizes the importance of a comprehensive vision of mental health care that treats the whole person and includes spiritual support as well as medical and clinical.

The Commission of the Episcopal Conferences of the European Union (COMECE) has published a study analyzing the mental health crisis in Europe from an ethical, social, and Christian perspective, and proposed recommendations for EU public policies.

The document, titled "Mental Health in Europe — A Call for Care," states that Europe is facing a growing mental health crisis with increases in depression and anxiety being causes by various factors, such as loneliness, trauma, suicide, job insecurity, aging, digitalization, and forced migration.

The study notes that the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated the crisis while it simultaneously exposed the weaknesses of the European mental health care system.

The document, which advocates for a "comprehensive" vision of mental health that also encompasses social, relational, and spiritual dimensions, was prepared by the COMECE ethics committee.

Loneliness: One of the greatest risks to mental health

Friederike Ladenburger is a jurist, adviser on ethics, research, and health, and secretary of the commission. In an interview with ACI Prensa, the Spanish-language sister service of EWTN News, she emphasized the need to address mental health from a "multidimensional" perspective that takes into account not only biological and psychological needs but also "spiritual support."

She also noted that the document stems from a concern regarding "current, urgent, and pressing" issues such as loneliness, one of the greatest risks to mental health today, which "has evolved into one of the major crises of our time."

Ladenburger clarified that loneliness is defined as "the absence of social contact and the perceived discrepancy between a person's desires and their actual social network," emphasizing that the problem is not solely quantitative. "It is not just about the size of your network, but also the quality of your network," she stated, underscoring the importance of having "meaningful, authentic, and lasting human connections."

The document states that mental well-being depends not only on clinical treatments but also on strong human relationships, social integration, a sense of belonging, and respect for the dignity of every individual.

She noted that the report rests on three fundamental pillars drawn from Christian anthropology: that "the human person is created in the image of God," that this dignity encompasses "both body and soul," and that human beings possess an essential relational and spiritual dimension.

"One of the most important points of our report is the communal aspect of the human person," she said, indicating that the Church can help address social isolation with community events.

Strengthening families

The COMECE study also emphasizes the need for the European Union to promote policies that strengthen families as a fundamental place where care takes place.

The report identifies the family as "the basic cell of society" and, in this vein, warned that Europe is undergoing "an urgent and dramatic demographic change."

Consequently, Ladenburger called for greater financial support for young families: "They need financial support, financial relief, and the opportunity to start a family" as well as "jobs and decent housing."

Technology must not replace human contact

Ladenburger expressed concern regarding the impact of artificial intelligence, particularly among young people, underscoring the need for European regulation to protect individuals from technological abuse, digital addiction, and online harassment.

She warned that the use of digital tools must be "supplementary, not substitutive," acknowledging that digital technologies can improve access to psychological care but emphasizing that technology should complement, rather than replace, human contact.

She said that "the priority is the human being," whose core capacity remains "to express empathy and feel with others."

Spiritual accompaniment

In addition, COMECE called for European policies that include spiritual accompaniment in hospitals and in other vulnerable settings, including reproductive health, palliative and end-of-life care, and migration.

Regarding surrogacy, she explained that the report outlines the psychological risks for both the pregnant mother and the child. Likewise, concerning palliative care, it advocates for comprehensive care that is not limited to the clinical aspect. "Every human being must be treated with dignity, especially those who are suffering," Ladenburger pointed out.

Emphasizing the importance of hospital chaplaincies and of every individual's right to practice his or her religion, especially in situations of suffering or displacement, the bishops' commission noted that effective support would not only be "medical or clinical ... it also entails spiritual support."

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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In his homily, the patriarch of Lisbon, Portugal, said the devotion must transform lives.

Pilgrims from all over the world descended on the Fátima Shrine in Portugal to commemorate the feast of Our Lady of Fátima.

On the eve of the feast of Our Lady of Fátima, May 12, the light of thousands of candles illuminated the night at the spot where Our Lady appeared to three shepherd children 109 years ago.

The faithful filled the shrine, gathering to participate in the recitation of the rosary and the traditional candlelight procession.

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'We come as pilgrims and depart as missionary disciples'

Rui Manuel Sousa Valério, patriarch of Lisbon, Portugal, celebrated the Mass on May 13. In his homily, the prelate emphasized that the pilgrimage "does not end here" but rather Fátima is "a point for sending forth."

This celebration commemorates the first of the six apparitions of Our Lady of Fátima to the three shepherd children, Lucia dos Santos, 10, and her cousins Francisco and Jacinta Marto, 9 and 7, in 1917.

The pilgrimage on May 13 is the most attended, welcoming more than 450,000 pilgrims last year. They gather at Cova da Iria, a neighborhood that was once the field where the three shepherd children pastured their family's sheep and where the Virgin Mary appeared.

The Catholic Church officially recognized the apparitions as worthy of belief in 1930.

"We come as pilgrims and depart as missionary disciples; everything we experience here — prayer, silence, reconciliation, and communion — cannot remain confined within the Cova da Iria," the prelate noted.

He invited the faithful to let the experience of Fátima "enter into our hearts" as well as into all areas of life — our homes, families, workplaces, and schools — and also "into the wounds and joys of daily life."

Sousa emphasized that the message of Fátima is truly embraced "when it transforms into a mission, and what we receive becomes a light for others."

He further recalled that in her apparitions, the Virgin called for conversion and for the responsibility of love: "True devotion to Mary never closes the heart. It opens it; it never isolates, it sends forth; it never sleeps, it awakens."

The Virgin Mary asked the children to pray the rosary every day for the conversion of sinners and to obtain peace for the world, especially an end to the ongoing First World War. She also invited them to make personal sacrifices and offer their sufferings on behalf of sinners.

She promised to return on the 13th day of each month for the next six months and confided that she had secrets to reveal concerning the fate of the world.

To prove that the apparitions were true, Mary promised the children that during the last of her six appearances, she would provide a sign so people would believe in the apparitions and in her message. What happened on that day — Oct. 13, 1917 — has come to be known as the "Miracle of the Sun," or "the day the sun danced."

May 13, 2026, also marks the 45th anniversary of the assassination attempt on Pope John Paul II in St. Peter's Square. For this reason, the Mass in Fátima was celebrated using the chalice that the Polish pontiff donated during one of his visits to the site.

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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Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kansas, who practiced as an obstetrician-gynecologist for more than 25 years, said he is naming the bill the "Bereaved Parents Rights Act."

Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kansas, said he is introducing legislation to ensure hospitals and freestanding birth centers provide clear information about the rights that grieving parents have regarding the cremation or burial of their miscarried or stillborn child.

Marshall, who practiced as an obstetrician-gynecologist for more than 25 years, said he is naming the bill the "Bereaved Parents Rights Act." Rep. Kat Cammack, R-Florida, who personally suffered an ectopic pregnancy, said she is sponsoring a companion version in the House.

Laws on the handling of fetal remains following a miscarriage or stillbirth vary state to state, and many states have no clear legal requirements regarding the disposition of remains, leaving hospitals to rely on internal policies and procedures, according to Marshall.

Students for Life Action backs the measure and is leading lobbying on Capitol Hill to urge lawmakers to back it, said Kristan Hawkins, the organization's president.

The legislation would amend Title XVIII of the Social Security Act "to say that the hospital that she is birthing her child into, whether the child's born stillborn or miscarried … has to notify the parents no less than six hours after the event or before discharge" and "how she can get her baby's body to the funeral home to have a funeral if she would like to," Hawkins said.

A standardized form from the secretary of Health and Human Services would ensure a parent has the right to cremate the child after miscarriage or stillbirth, and it would apply in every state, Hawkins said.

The legislation "is a no-brainer," Cammack said. "This is very simple in my mind. Any parent who has lost a child needs the space, opportunity, and resources to properly grieve that child."

To "provide a burial for your child to recover the remains of your child" is "not a partisan issue," she said. "I believe that is a human issue and something that, if we are serious about honoring life and protecting people, we really do champion and pass this legislation to give closure to so many families around the country."

Bill sponsors said they have been trying to find a Democratic cosponsor for the bill without success.

"There's a culture around the issue that doesn't allow people to get to the facts. And while you are entitled, certainly, to your own opinion, you are not entitled to your own facts," Cammack said.

"And the fact is that these are children, these are human beings that have heartbeats, and they deserve the same dignity that a child who was born and has been lost deserves," she said.

"It should be something very simple that every woman, regardless of where you are in the country, what hospital you find yourself in, is given the exact same rights as a woman who is in a state that values and protects life," she said.

Personal testimonies

"I see tremendous value in women coming together and reaching across the aisle saying, 'We've all experienced loss in some form or fashion, whether yourself personally or you know someone who has,'" Cammack said.

A briefing by Students for Life Action on May 13 included numerous personal testimonials from women who have been affected by miscarriage and stillbirth who are urging lawmakers to advance the bill.

Sarah Wirtz said: "I could not go to the hospital. I actually waited three days to go to the hospital because I just was trying to research … if I was going to be allowed to have my son," she said. "He had passed away, but I still had him inside of me."

"I knew within at least the medical system, after 20 weeks I was afforded more protection" and "I was absolutely terrified what this meant legally for my baby," she said.

Wirtz said she was asking: "Would I be given my baby? When I went in to give birth, would they take him from me?"

Wirtz said she risked her own health to spend time finding resources to ensure she was able to keep her son's body. Once she found Heaven's Gain Ministries, a Catholic organization that helps families with pregnancy loss, she was told "You're very blessed to be in Ohio," because state law ensured she had the right to her baby.

"So I went to the hospital, I gave birth to my son Noah, and I was able to bury him," she said. "But I was also told at the time, if [I] had been in California … I wouldn't be afforded the same rights under the law."

"He would have been deemed as his gestational size, which is under 20 weeks, and I wouldn't have been guaranteed right to disposition and ... what happened to his body," she said.

Language of miscarriage

Hawkins also noted the importance of the language when discussing abortion and miscarriage, and ensuring women know the difference and understand the procedures.

"Something we saw in the fall of the Dobbs … was Planned Parenthood intentionally started changing the language around abortion, direct intentional abortion, and they started using the phrase 'induced miscarriage,'" she said.

"That's largely because of the invention and the shifting of the abortion industry to the chemical abortion pill, where we know at least 70% of these abortions, that are still killing about a million children a year, are being committed using these pills," she said.

"The way they're framing these abortions to many young confused women, very scared women, is you're just going to 'induce a miscarriage. It's going to be just like a miscarriage,'" she said.

"We know those are two very different things. And I think apart from the evil of Planned Parenthood killing children and harming women … this is the third greatest evil they've ever committed, which is trying to use the pain and the tragedy of a miscarriage to then justify and try to change the hearts of millions of Americans on their issue, which is the intentional destruction of a human being," Hawkins said.

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Diamantas was elevated after Commissioner Marty Makary resigned.

Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Acting Commissioner Kyle Diamantas called pro-life organizations to offer reassurance about his commitment to life after some people in the movement raised concerns.

"Acting Commissioner Kyle Diamantas is personally committed to delivering on President Trump's pro-life and pro-family agenda at the FDA," Andrew Nixon, deputy assistant secretary for media relations at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, told EWTN News.

"Both he and other administration officials will continue regularly interacting with stakeholders in this community to inform FDA decision-making," he said.

Diamantas is serving as acting commissioner after the May 12 resignation of Commissioner Marty Makary, who faced criticism from within the pro-life movement for failure to impose stricter regulations on the  abortion drug mifepristone.

Some pro-life leaders celebrated Makary's departure but grew concerned about Diamantas because court records show him serving as legal counsel for a Planned Parenthood affiliate while working at the Baker Donelson law firm. The case was related to a property dispute.

Alex Bruesewitz, an adviser to President Donald Trump, dismissed the concern in a post on X, saying he was a junior associate assigned to the case but removed himself because of his pro-life beliefs.

Within the past two days, Diamantas has reached out to some pro-life advocates, including March for Life President Jennie Bradley Lichter. A spokesperson for Live Action confirmed he had scheduled a conversation with Live Action President Lila Rose as well.

"Within a few hours of being handed this big new job, he was getting on the phone with pro-life leaders and that in itself, I think, is a really encouraging sign of where his priorities are going to be," Lichter told "EWTN Pro-Life Weekly" host Abigail Galván.

Lichter said she spoke with Diamantas about her concerns with mifepristone, specifically about "the lack of safety, the lack of guardrails, [and] its easy availability."

Under Makary, the FDA launched a study to review the 2023 deregulation of mifepristone, but so far no action has been taken to increase restrictions. Rather, in that same month, the FDA approved a generic version of the drug.

Based on her conversation, Lichter said, "I think we're going to see real movement" on that study and "I think that the cause of life is going to have, you know, a real champion at the FDA" under Diamantas' leadership.

"I feel really comfortable that he is bringing in strong pro-life commitments and a commitment to transparency and to moving with all deliberate speed to take a close look at mifepristone and then take decisive action based on what that study shows," she said.

Mark Harrington, president of Created Equal, told EWTN News he had not received a call from Diamantas and expressed hesitations about his leadership of the FDA, saying his efforts "could just be viewed as nothing more than damage control."

"Talk is cheap," he said. "But personnel is policy, and the fact that Diamantas [reportedly] represented Planned Parenthood makes me skeptical that he will advocate for the full mifepristone safety study. We will trust but verify. Action needs to be taken now on the abortion drug."

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