Nottingham Catholic News History
Newspaper for the Diocese of Nottingham
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Aug 2022 edition of the Nottingham Catholic News
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 Catholic  News 20p  20p      WHERE SOLD WHERE SOLD ISSUE 303 ISSUE 303         August 2022 August 2022     MORE THAN 23 YEARS OF BRINGING THE NOTTINGHAM DIOCESE TOGETHER MORE THAN 23 YEARS OF BRINGING THE NOTTINGHAM DIOCESE TOGETHER     Published by  Published by  Bellcourt Ltd, N2 Blois Meadow Business Centre, Steeple Bumpstead, Haverhill, Suffolk, CB9 7BN Bellcourt Ltd, N2 Blois Meadow Business Centre, Steeple Bumpstead, Haverhill, Suffolk, CB9 7BN    Telephone:  01440 730399     Telephone:  01440 730399   Editor John Clawson. Tel:  E-mail johnclwson@icloud.com or david@bellcourtltd.co.uk  Editor John Clawson. Tel:  E-mail johnclwson@icloud.com or david@bellcourtltd.co.uk T h e   c a n d l e   i n   L o u r d e s   r e p r e s e n t i n g   a l l   t h e   p r a y e r s                                 o f   t h e   d i o c e s a n   p i l g r i m s   a n d   o f                         t h e   p r a y e r s   r e q u e s t e d   f r o m                         a l l   o v e r   t h e   d i o c e s e . “, T h e   C a n o n i s a t i o n     o f   t h e     “, U n i v e r s a l   B r o t h e r ”, ,     S a i n t   C h a r l e s     d e   F o u c a u l d . ”,       B y   F r   J o n a t h a n   C o t t o n   S e e   P a g e   1 1 I n September and October this year, the   relics of St Bernadette will journey on   pilgrimage to England, Scotland, and   Wales for the very first time. This very special   once in a lifetime event will provide an   opportunity for people of all ages and   backgrounds to experience the special gifts   and charisms of Lourdes, in a church or   cathedral near them.     St Bernadette’,s Story   St Bernadette was born in 1844 in a small   town in France. Bernadette Soubirous was   one of eight children born into a very poor   family. Although initially unremarkable,   Bernadette’,s life was to inspire generations of   people to journey in faith on pilgrimage to   Lourdes.Between 11 February and 16 July   1858, Bernadette saw the Virgin Mary   eighteen times in a series of Apparitions that   took place in cave on the outskirts of Lourdes,   a place now known as the Grotto of   Massabielle. In the course of these miraculous   encounters, Bernadette, then aged just 14,   became the friend and confidante of Our   Lady, the mother of Jesus.     The Apparitions of Lourdes were   authenticated in 1866 by the Bishop of   Tarbes. In that same year, Bernadette left   Lourdes to live out her religious vocation   within the community of the Sisters of Charity   of Nevers. She died in 1879, was proclaimed   blessed in 1925, and a became a saint in 1933.      Registering to attend the Relic Tour   this Autumn   The churches and cathedrals hosting St   Bernadette’,s relics have a fixed capacity for   visitors. To ensure the comfort and safety of   pilgrims, visitors will be asked to register to   attend with a dedicated timeslot.      Further details of how to book your place will   be shared on our diocesan website in the   coming weeks or visit the St Bernadette Relic   Tour website for more information:   stbernadette.org.uk   Churches in our Nottingham Diocese hosting    St Bernadette relics are:    Saint Bernadette, Scunthorpe: Ashby Road, Scunthorpe DN16 2RS   Arrives: 08:00 06/10/2022 - Departs: 17:00 06/10/2022   Cathedral Church of Saint Barnabas: N Circus St,    Nottingham NG1 5AE   Arrives: 18:30 06/10/2022 - Departs: 10:30 07/10/2022   St Bernadette Relic Tour 2022 2022 Nottingham Diocesan   Pilgrimage to Lourdes     To view more photographs courtesy of  Joe Martin go to   www.flickr.com/photos/dioceseofnottingham/52209717046/in/album-72177720300465270/ A very special once in a   lifetime event 
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 MORE THAN 21 YEARS OF MORE THAN 21 YEARS OF     BRINGING THE BRINGING THE                                                                                                     NOTTINGHAM DIOCESE NOTTINGHAM DIOCESE     TOGETHER TOGETHER The monthly paper for the The monthly paper for the      Diocese of Nottingham  Diocese of Nottingham FRANKLY SPEAKING FRANKLY SPEAKING Page  2 The Catholic News.  August 2022 Editor:   John Clawson   Editorial Office:   Bellcourt Ltd,                                     N2 Blois Meadow Business                                   Centre, Steeple Bumpstead,                  Haverhill,  Suffolk, CB9 7BN   Telephone:    01440 730399    email:  johnclwson@icloud.com or                             david@bellcourtltd.co.uk   Website:   www.bellcourtltd.co.uk   Distribution enquiries:     Nick Layton              e-mail nick@cathcom.org, Bellcourt Limited,   Publication date:   Fourth Sunday of the   month for the  following month. Opinions ex - pressed by contributors are not necessarily   those of the Editor or the Diocese.    P ublishers and Owners :  Bellcourt Ltd,   N2 Blois Meadow Business Centre,   Steeple Bumpstead, Haverhill, Suffolk,   CB9 7BN   Advertising:  tel:  0207 112 6710    Parental permission should be sought   before submitting photographs of                     minors.   Views expressed in The Catholic News   are not necessarily those of the editor SVP –, What We Do It does seem a long time since the month of   August was described as the “,silly season”,.   This was the name given by the media   because most people of importance were on   holiday thus no important news items   would develop. If this was ever true it is   surely not the reality in 2022.     The escalation of prices in our shops has   been increasing all the summer. This simply   means those who have less income or   savings are being hit the hardest. There are   two potential casualties of this which sadly   get little noticed or commented on. We have   many worthy charities some local and   others which may be local but are   supporting national or international causes.   One extract from the Trussell Trust   “,Together magazine”, summer edition. “,Last   year food banks in our network provided   more than 2.1 million parcels to provide   people across the UK.”, That’,s 2.1 million too   many. The other example is a minority   community either not getting support or   having to wait for financial assistance. An   example of this is the role of unpaid carers   described by one politician as an example of   “,backlog Britain”,.     We are told that by mid June the average   clearance time for unpaid caring was 31   working days . At this 2022 mid-summer   time there were 30,688 awaiting a decision.   Go back to November 2020 the average   waiting time was 20 working days  and the   queue was just 17.453. A minority but so was   the Good Samaritan.     It is sadly true that a tough Autumn may be   in store for many in Britain but the world   scene cannot be ignored either. The tragic   war in Ukraine is just one example of what is   in the in-tray when our politicians return   from their holidays. It is so disappointing that   the personal behaviours of a few dominated   so much air time during the summer.   I return to minority issues, Why is it that we   have companies in 2022 which lose business   because we have a skills shortage? When are   our leaders going to link education and   training so we have staffing levels to meet the   demands of a changing world?    My last observations this August is first of   all to thank all those who have opened their   hearts and homes to take in Ukrainian   refugees.     Parliament did debate homes for Ukraine   Child Refugees. One MP did urge the   Government to face up to the reality of   those who have lost everything in the war   and what will happen once their initial 6   months placement is over. This will not be   easy with thousands of people on waiting   lists for social housing.     So in this month of August there is much to   reflect on and we know that after we have   done this, we need to have hope. There are   so many great feasts to help us in the next   few weeks not least the double Marian   feasts - the Assumption and the Queenship   of Mary and let us never forget The Good   Samaritan.     Frank Goulding   Holy Trinity Parish, Newark Wanted    Parish   Correspondents   The Catholic News is looking for a   Parish Correspondent in your parish   to send in local news for publication in   this newspaper. All items to be   emailed to                                               johnclwson@icloud.com                                               before 10th of the month       In this first of a series of ‘,chapters’, chronicling the history of the SVP in this country, we look at its incep - tion in 1844, eleven years after Frederic Ozanam established the first conference in Paris, and the socio- political context in which it was to work.     History of the Society in England and Wales   The first Conference of the Society in England and Wales.   One of the members of Fre ´,de ´,ric’,s Conference   was a young Englishman called George   Wigley who planned to set up the Society in   England. Fre ´,de ´,ric’,s advice was to contact as   many influential people as possible in English   public life.     Wigley contacted Frederick Lucas, editor of   The Tablet and an influential Catholic. As a   result, Lucas published a series of articles   entitled “,French Charity”,. The whole series of   articles had considerable influence, and a   meeting was arranged at the Sablonniere   Hotel, Leicester Square, in London.     The Sablonniere Hotel,    Leicester Square   The hotel was owned by Mr Pagliano, who   attended the meeting with Wigley, Frederick   Lucas, George Blount (later to become   prominent as a long-serving National   President) and eight others. This led to the   foundation of a Conference on 12th February   1844. Brother Pagliano became the first   English SVP President. Before 1845 dawned,   there were five separate Conferences in   London. Five years later in 1849, there were   14 Conferences in England and Wales with a   membership of 274 ‘,brothers’,.     One of the articles in The Tablet, written by   Lucas, described the desperate conditions of   the poor in general. He also referred   specifically to the apathy of the State towards   them, and to the indifference of influential   Catholics, expressing the view that they could   have done much more:       “,Who except the clergy visit the poor? As far   as we laity are concerned, the approved plan   seems to be to manage all by a secretary, to   avoid all dirty work whenever it can be   avoided and to labour by a committee. We   have already endeavoured to introduce to   the favour of our readers a French society for   lay persons. We refer to the Society of St   Vincent de Paul”,.     Although Frederick Lucas simply used the   word “,poor”,, a new expression had come into   use during the 1830s and 1840s. The word   “,pauper”,, which meant “,the poor who need to   turn to others for help”,.     When Fre ´,de ´,ric Ozanam visited The Great   Exhibition at the Crystal Palace in 1851, some   SVP brothers arranged for him to visit the   London slums where, amongst the teeming   poor, lived many of the Irish Catholics. Later   he wrote of these visits, aware of how the well- off could be snubbed by polite society if they   were foolish enough to help the poor, person- to-person: “,What courage the English   brothers need to shake hands with down-and- outs, in an aristocratic land, where contact   with the poor is thought to declass and   degrade”,.     Poverty in General   In the early part of the 19th century, large   workhouses were built with the resources of a   number of smaller areas acting in union –,   Union Workhouses resulted, and were,   generally speaking, forbidding places.   Members of families were segregated.   Workhouse clothes were provided, meals   were often spartan and eaten in total silence,   visitors were not allowed, and smoking and   drinking alcohol were forbidden. Yet,   although it is easy to criticise the workhouse   system, it did at least provide shelter,   clothing, a regular, if meagre, diet and burial   when they died. Outside the workhouse,   conditions for the poorest were often   appalling.     The workhouse   In 1801 some £,4 million had been spent on a   population of 900,000. By 1832, the cost had   risen to £,6 million for a population of 1.5   million. A Royal Commission in 1832   concluded that too much money was being   spent on the poor and that the cost was   ruining the country. The resulting Poor Law   of 1834 was designed to discourage people   from claiming relief.       By 1844, when the infant SVP was set up in   England, relief was refused to people except   in exchange for work. However, those already   in work complained that if work was given to   the inmates of the workhouse, there was a   loss of employment outside. As a result, the   only work available to workhouse inmates   was stone- breaking or oakum-picking (un - twisting thick old ropes to use for waterproof - ing ships).     Oakum   In the next ‘,chapter’,   we will see how the   SVP brought practical   aid and support to   the poor during times   of epidemic illness,   including the cholera   outbreaks.   If you would like   more information   about the SVP please   contact Lance Phil - pott at   lancep@svp.org.uk
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 Subscribe@catholicpost.co.uk   01440 730399   www.catholicpost.co.uk   Monthly   National    Catholic    Newspaper National and   International News   from a Catholic   Perspective with   thoughtful articles   to deepen Faith The UK,s  fi, rst Carbon Neutral                                   National Catholic Paper The Catholic News. August 2022 Page  3 Hermits Celebration!   On Saturday 9th July the Elston  Hermit Benedictine Father`s shared afternoon tea with   friends, parishioners, brother Priests and Religious.     The occasion which took place at the Good Shepherd centre Arnold was a triple celebration to   celebrate St. Benedict`s Day, the anniversary of ordination to the Sacred Priesthood and the   hermits 70th birthday both the previous month.
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 Page  4 The Catholic News.  August 2022 A really vibrant and joyful celebration of the Sacrament of Confirmation   at St Mary’,s Church, Derby. Thanks to Fr Greg and all the clergy,   catechists, music group, servers and everyone else involved.   Congratulations to the newly confirmed!  A surprise farewell             Mass and reception                         for Sean McClafferty                   as he steps down as               CEO of the St Ralph   Sherwin CMAT.      He had only been    told he was going to   lunch! Sean was   presented with the   Diocesan St Hugh    of Lincoln Award    for services to    Catholic education    in the diocese. Around our diocese Feliz Bautismo, Mateo!    Fr Lim Gamsi (@LimGamsi) celebrated the first Baptism from within the   Spanish Mass group who meet in Leicester. Their next meeting is Monday   5th September 7PM at St Peter’,s in Leicester (LE3 0TA) - come along! Thanks to Fr Richard, catechists, choir, music group, server and all who   worked to make the Confirmation Mass at Holy Cross Hucknall so joyful.   Congratulations to all the newly Confirmed. Saint Norbert’,s Catholic   Voluntary Catholic   Academy.      Mrs. Franklin led our   Gospel Worship sharing   God’,s message of   stopping, reflecting and   spending time with   Jesus in our everyday   lives. Can you take time   out today with Jesus? A most joyful celebration of Confirmation on a very hot evening!    My thanks to Fr Stanley, Deacon Anthony, catechists, music group,   organist, servers and congratulations to all the newly confirmed.   + Bishop Patrick It was good to   be at Padley for   the joint   diocesan   pilgrimage to   meet up with   Bishop Ralph   and with Bishop   John Arnold   who preached   the homily at   the Mass.      + Bishop Patrick
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 The Catholic News.  August 2022 Page  5 Concert for Ukraine   Three parishioners from St. Mary’,s Church,   Marple Bridge, Stockport came together with   their good friend, Elaine to form a committee   to organise a concert to raise funds for the   DEC (Ukraine Emergency Humanitarian Ap - peal) which includes CAFOD and to raise   awareness of the current conflict.     Pauline, Jim and Denise had attended the on   line Zoom meeting set up by Paul Bodenham,   Leader for Social Action, Diocese of   Nottingham which explored ways to help our   friends in Ukraine. The idea for the concert   originated from that contact.     The concert which took place in Marple   Cricket Club was a great success. It started   with a tradition Ukrainian song from ‘,Mirage’,   a quartet from the Stockport Ukrainian   Society. One of the group also told the   audience about the conditions in Ukraine at   the present time. Then four local acts took to   the stage. They included, The Hayes Sisters,   Raintown Seers, Lazlo Baby and Taylor   Giocoma. The music ranged from ballads to   authentic Irish and Ukrainian music. The   concert closed with Taylor Giocoma singing   ‘,Imagine’,. It was a poignant ending to a very   thoughtful evening.     The concert raised £,1,955.73. (Which has now   been sent to the DEC). The venue and all the   acts came with no costs.     With thanks to all who helped in any way. Divine Renovation Connect Renewal Day     Last week, Saturday 2 July,  our newly formed   pastoral team attended a Divine Renovation   day which was hosted in our parish centre at   the Good Shepherd Church, Arnold. Divine   Renovation team help explore where your   parish is now and how they can assist you and   your parish begin a journey of   transformation.      A number of parish groups attended the   event. The day started with in inspirational   talk from Fr Dan Mason who leads a parish in   Billericay, Essex. He spoke about how his   parish had started to develop to be more   missionary. The day also included discussions   on how parishes can move forward in terms   of the people and the building of the church.      The day overall was very positive with lots of   thoughts and ideas to take forward.     Submitted by Adriano Staiano. ‘,Mirage’, from Stockport Ukrainian Society  The Chapter   Corner Canon Don   Bowdren It is always good to read those comfortable   gospel passages where Jesus invites us to   share his yoke and to cast our cares on his   back, in coming to him who will give rest for   our souls.     We seem to need that comfortable   reassurance increasingly these days when   so many challenges, whether in the   economy and the cost of living, or just   planning a journey by bus or train, or   maybe even posting a letter can be   problematic.     But there are many whom we meet from   time to time who would seem to have no   need of these comfortable words of our   Saviour. These are the people who greet me   at the checkout with “,no worries!”,, or when   getting on an infrequent bus with “,no   problems!”,.     Much as I may wish that worries were a   thing of the past, or problems non-existent,   I still feel I need to present to my Saviour   all the tangles of my life and ask him for   help. Saint Peter put it another way when   he asked “,Lord to whom else should we go?,   for you have the message of eternal life”,.     Of course our beloved Lord doesn`t want   just to hear of our worries or problems. He   wants our company in prayer, in praise and   thanksgiving –, and maybe even sorrow.   Even if our prayers or shot through with the   distractions of today`s worries or   tomorrow`s problems, he wants us to rest   awhile in his presence. That might be on a   balmy beach in the Bahamas or more likely   when sinking into a familiar sofa at home   after a fretful day.     Or it might be that we find that we are   closer to God in a garden than any place   else on earth. I`m lucky to have a nice   garden but also the presence of the Blessed   Sacrament in my church next door.     I hope that during these topsy-turvey days   you find a quiet place to unload your   problems and untangle your worries in the   presence of the one who is meek and gentle   in heart.  
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 Page  6 The Catholic News.  August 2022 The Sherwin Society Rodsley Pilgrimage   Sunday 26th June saw the 44th Pilgrimage to   Rodsley, a small hamlet between Derby and   Ashbourne, in honour of St Ralph Sherwin,   who was born and grew up there in the 16th   century. For the past 50 years the Sherwin   Society has existed to foster interest in St   Ralph, with two Masses each year, March   23rd to mark his ordination and December   1st to mark his martyrdom in 1581. However   the highlight of the year has always been the   Pilgrimage to Rodsley, to a field close to   where St Ralph lived and grew up.     Over the years, the number attending the   Masses and pilgrimage has varied depending   on weather conditions etc. The Pilgrimage   Mass this year was celebrated by Bishop   Patrick and was well supported. At the end of   the Mass, Sean McClafferty, the CEO of the St   Ralph Sherwin Catholic Multi Academy Trust   which runs 25 Catholic schools in Derby and   Derbyshire, said the Trust would work with   the Sherwin Society to evolve, and make sure   these celebrations of St Ralph continue and   grow. “,Stronger Together”, is the motto of the   Trust and working with the Society will   ensure a bright future.   During the Mass, the Society’,s retiring   President, Tony Bennett, Treasurer, Linda   Bennett, and Secretary, Paul Redfearn, were   each presented with awards by Bishop Patrick   acknowledging 50 years with the Sherwin   Society. They are confident that with the   support of the Trust the Rodsley Pilgrimage   will successfully continue long into the   future.”,   Pope to appoint two women to    Dicastery of Bishops   Pope Francis has announced his intention   to appoint two women to the Dicastery of   Bishops, which is involved in the process   of choosing new bishops.     In an interview with Philip Pullella from   Reuters, who asked about the appointment   of women to positions in the Vatican, Pope   Francis said he was open should an   opportunity arise. He said: “,.. two women   will be going to the Congregation of   Bishops, on the commission to elect   bishops. In this way, things open up a little   bit.",     The Holy Father mentioned that last year   he appointed Sister Raffaella Petrini, to the   number two position in the Vatican City   Governorate, making her the first woman   to hold the position.   Pope Francis has appointed more women to   key roles usually held by men than any of his   predecessors. In January 2020, Pope Francis   named Francesca di Giovanni as   Undersecretary for the multilateral sector in   the Secetariat of State`s Section for Relations   with States and International Organizations,   another first.     Other notable appointments of women by   Pope Francis include Sister Nathalie   Becquart, a French member of the Xaviere   Missionary Sisters, as under-secretary of the   Synod of Bishops and Sister Alessandra   Smerilli, of the Daughters of Mary Help of   Christians, as Undersecretary of the Dicastery   for Promoting Integral Human Development.     Several other women now holding high-level   positions in the Vatican, include Barbara   Sr Nathalie Becquart Jatta, the first female director of the Vatican   Museums, Nataš,a Govekar, Director of the   Theological-Pastoral Office of the Dicastery   for Communication, and Cristiane Murray,   deputy director of the Holy See Press Office,   all of whom were appointed by the current   Pontiff.     During the interview Pope Francis said that   in the future he sees the possibility of lay   people being appointed to lead certain   Vatican departments such as the Dicastery for   the Laity, Family and Life, the Dicastery for   Culture and Education, or the Vatican   Apostolic Library.     Last month, Cardinal Kevin Farrell, prefect of   the Dicastery for the Laity, Family and Life,   joked that, with the promulgation of the new   Constitution on the Curia, he might be the   last cleric to lead that dicastery .
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 The Catholic News.  August 2022 Page  7 Jubilee party at Alfreton   Maureen and Paul Fuller celebrated their Golden Jubilee of 60 years of marriage at Christ The   King Alfreton monthly luncheon recently. As guests of honour they shared their wedding album   pictures with all the guests. Both very creative people , Maureen has put her knitting and   sewing skills to the fore in the parish for years, even to making the Christmas Bazaar banner.   Paul is the parish organist and was instrumental in making the church stained glass window   a few years back.   An extraordinary   day   This year the parish of St Peter and St Paul   Church, Lincoln, had an extra reason to   celebrate the Feast of St Peter and St Paul -   Canon Geoffrey Hunton’,s 20th anniversary   of ordination to the Priesthood. The day   was marked first by morning Mass for   students from St Peter and St Paul`s   Catholic Voluntary Academy, with a parish   ‘,strawberry cream tea’, in the afternoon,   organised by a ladies group called Circle of   Exhibiting wisdom   Every year the Pope asks the faithful to pray   for a specific intention each month and for   July 2022 it was: We pray for the elderly, who   represent the roots and memory of a people,   may their experience and wisdom help young   people to look towards the future with hope   and responsibility.     In the parish of St Peter &, St Paul Church,   Lincoln, approximately forty parishioners of   the older generation had been asked to write   a faith testimony to create a booklet to give to   those receiving the Sacrament of   Confirmation. Led by Bishop Patrick, on 25th   June, almost forty individuals, mostly   youngsters, became adult members of the   Church and each was presented with a copy   of the booklet. To recognise and celebrate the   contribution elders make and to enable the   wider parish community to benefit from the   testimonies, whilst also encouraging prayer   for the Pope’,s intention (as well as hopefully   encouraging conversations amongst   parishioners and within families), it was   decided to hold an exhibition of the   testimonies, for display in the church, during   July. Posters were created and shown over the   course of the month, interspersed with the   posters, were summaries from the Holy   Father’,s recent catechesis on the meaning and   value of old age, as well as prayers.     The display also served as a response to the   invitation from the Vatican to mark the World   Day for Grandparents and the Elderly, which   Pope Francis established to be celebrated   each year on the fourth Sunday of July to   coincide with the feast of Sts. Joachim and   Anne. The pope chose “,They shall bear fruit   even in old age”, from the Book of Psalms   (Psalm 92) as the theme for the second world   day (July 24, 2022). It is by the power of the   Holy Spirit that Christians, of all ages, flourish   and bear fruit, for God`s people, producing   fruit only ceases when life ceases. The   appearance of the fruit produced may change   with time, but as Pope Francis reminds us,   age is not a barrier to playing a vital role in the   life of a parish community and indeed, it is a   wise and forward looking parish that   encourages those advancing in years to   remain connected whilst also encouraging   younger members to connect and learn from   them.     May those who are facing the challenges of old   age, declining health and increasing frailty,   with the understandable fear they can bring   of isolation and abandonment, turn to the   Lord and take comfort from Him, trusting He   is faithful (Isaiah 46:4 Even to your old age   and grey hairs, I am he, I am he who will   sustain you.) and discover anew that in God’,s   Kingdom they are forever His precious child   and, as a result, receive the grace to be, in   their powerlessness, powerful witnesses to   God’,s love, exhibiting wisdom and helping   younger generations in the process.     St Joachim and St Anne, pray for us.   Jo Friends, which over eighty people attended   and ended with an evening Mass, followed   by a social gathering in the parish centre,   where the Canon was presented with a cake   made specially for the occasion. A   determined effort by all involved!   Congratulations Canon Geoffrey and thank   you for your vocation, may God bless you   and your ministry.
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 For all your advertising    requirements please    contact Natasha on   01440 730399   Natasha@cathcom.org Page  8 The Catholic News.  August 2022 OUR LADY QUEEN  OF PEACE  PILGRIMAGE TO  WALSINGHAM   Led by Fr Anthony Meredith IC   (at the Catholic National Shrine)   Monday 29th August 2022   1.15pm    Gathering, Rosary &, Litany of Our Lady                   followed by: Talk by Fr Anthony.                 Break (Sacrament of Reconciliation).   3.45pm    Holy Mass, Adoration of the Blessed                Sacrament and Benediction.    5.30pm   Depart.   Please give advance notice of coach parties  and concelebrating priests to 07710567183 or  email pilgrimsofmary@hotmail.com   “,Dear children I rejoice with you and thank you for  every sacrifice and prayer which you have offered  for my intentions. Little children, do not forget that  you are important in my plan of salvation of  mankind. Return to God and prayer that the Holy  Spirit may work in you and through you. Little  children, I am with you also in these days when  Satan is fighting for war and hatred. Division is  strong and evil is at work in man as never before.  Thank you for having responded to my call.”,  (25 June 2022) Gathering, Rosary &, Litany of Our Lady    followed by: Talk by Fr Anthony.  Break (Sacrament of Reconciliation).  Holy Mass, Adoration of the Blessed  Sacrament and Benediction.   Depart. Brentwood Cathedral listed   as Grade II* building   The Cathedral Church of St Mary and St   Helen, more affectionately known as   Brentwood Cathedral, has been listed at   Grade II* by the Department for Digital,   Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) on the   advice of Historic England.     The cathedral consists of a surviving section   of a Gothic church, built 1860-61, to the   designs of Gilbert R Blount (1819-76) and a   dominant classical addition, built 1989-1991,   to the designs of Quinlan Terry.     The first Catholic church on the site opened   on 20 October 1837 but was soon outgrown   by an expanding congregation. In 1861, a   second church, dedicated to St Helen, was   built, to the designs of Gilbert R Blount, a   well-established Catholic architect. The old   church remained in use as a school, parish   hall and Cathedral Hall. It was listed at Grade   II in 1999.     In 1917, the church was made the cathedral of   the newly created diocese of Brentwood and   was refurbished to reflect its new status. In   1974, a new addition, built to the designs of   John Newton, of Burles and Newton, enabled   the cathedral to seat 1,000 people.     In the late 1980s, a major anonymous   donation allowed for the possibility of   rebuilding the cathedral. Bishop Thomas   McMahon, Sixth Bishop of Brentwood,   commissioned designs from the architect   Quinlan Terry. Terry prepared plans for the   replacement of the 1974 addition, working on   the same footprint, but this time to a classical   design.     Bishop McMahon requested a plan with a   central altar to allow for maximum   congregational participation. Terry’,s classical   designs took inspiration from the early Italian   Renaissance fused with the English Baroque   of Sir Christopher Wren.     I was a great admirer of the   Christopher Wren churches in   London and how Wren had adapted   each church for the site and space   available. In the same way I felt such   a style could be adapted for the   renewed liturgy of Vatican II and   offer a noble simplicity .     Rt Rev Thomas McMahon,    Bishop Emeritus of Brentwood     His involvement extended to every detail of   the new cathedral as well as to improvements.   He designed new gate piers and railings,   updated and partially remodelled the original   church (the Cathedral Hall), remodelled the   cathedral offices with a neo-Georgian   entrance bay, and converted and extended the   old convent chapel for the choir school, the   last of these works being completed in 2001.     Days of Creation   Recurring throughout the design of the   internal fittings is the number eight, which   signifies the seven days of material creation   and the ‘,eighth day’, of the new creation, the   order of grace created through the death and   resurrection of Jesus Christ. As with the   external elevations, Terry designed every   detail of the cathedral’,s interior, even down to   the boards for hymn numbers, the central   heating grilles and fire exit signs.     The main space of the church resembles an   Italian Renaissance court, framed by an   arcade of five bays on the longer north and   south sides and three bays on the east and   west sides     .The rebuilt cathedral was opened on 31 May   1991.     The Right Reverend Thomas McMahon,   Bishop Emeritus of Brentwood, said: “,My   decision to choose a Classical design for   Brentwood Cathedral, one of the first   cathedrals to be built after the second Vatican   Council, was influenced by a number of   reasons. There was a long tradition of Church   architecture across Europe in this style. I was   much influenced by Cardinal Vaughan’,s   decision to build Westminster Cathedral in a   different style from Westminster Abbey and   St Paul’,s Cathedral so that each would be   judged on its own merits. I was a great   admirer of the Christopher Wren churches in   London and how Wren had adapted each   church for the site and space available. In the   same way I felt such a style could be adapted   for the renewed liturgy of Vatican II and offer   a noble simplicity.”,     “,From my time as an assistant priest in   Colchester, I became very familiar with the   work of Raymond Erith and Quinlan Terry   whose practice was close by. By 1985 Quinlan   Terry was already considered by many as the   leading architect of Classical architecture both   in this country and beyond. I feel our   extremely good working relationship has been   reflected in the actual building and Quinlan   Terry has been enormously successful in   achieving our vision for the cathedral.”,     Heritage Minister Nigel Huddleston said: “,It   is fantastic that the magnificent Brentwood   Cathedral has been listed at Grade II*. The   first classical cathedral built in the country   since St Paul’,s, its stunning design deserves   this recognition and the listing will help to   preserve the Cathedral for generations to   come.”,     Matthew Cooper, Historic England Senior   Listing Advisor, said:“,This beautifully   designed building gives a sense of serenity   and calm that we can all appreciate in these   challenging times. The cathedral’,s classical   design, unusual in modern churches, is   testament to the architectural skill and vision.   It is a remarkable achievement.”,     Fr Martin Boland, Dean of the Cathedral and   priest for the Parish of St Mary and St Helen,   said: “,We are delighted that Brentwood   Cathedral has received a Grade II* listing and   that Quinlan Terry’,s unique vision has been   recognised. His design combines both   tradition and modernity in a striking fashion.   The listing also recognises the Catholic   community’,s role in the history of Essex and   the Cathedral’,s place as a sanctuary of hope   and prayer for so many people.”,       Architect Quinlan Terry said:“,I’,m delighted   that Brentwood Cathedral has been listed at   Grade II*. When we consider the history of   my design which was refused planning   permission and only obtained approval   following an appeal nearly 40 years ago, we   begin to realise that the attitude towards   serious classical architecture has now   changed considerably.“,     To me there is no doubt that the credit for this   independence of mind and the courage to   disagree with powerful prevailing attitudes   goes not only to a number of individuals, but   particularly to the architects and advisors   working at English Heritage and now at   Historic England.
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 The Catholic News.  August 2022 Page  9   Solicitors to the Diocese of  Nottingham     Offering you a full range of legal  services:     ,   Wills &, Power of Attorney  ,  Probate &, Trusts  ,   Company &, Commercial Law  ,  Commercial Property  ,  Commercial/Property Litigation  ,  Residential Conveyancing  ,   Employment Law, and more    Telephone:  0115 851 1666    At 15 Victoria Street, Nottingham &,  Tudor Square, West Bridgford   E-mail: law@massers.co.uk   For all your advertising    requirements please    contact Natasha on   01440 730399   Natasha@cathcom.org    07801 940 759   07806 798 191   Like2move@hotmail.com Reassembling Services  Packing Services  Courier Services  House Removals  Home Cleaning  Office Removals       Local Removals New Bishop Chair for the    Holy Land Coordination   Bishop Nicholas Hudson, auxiliary   Bishop of Westminster and long-term   bishop delegate of the Holy Land   Coordination, has been named the   new chair of the group.     The Holy Land Coordination, made up of   bishops from across Europe, North America   and South Africa, was set up at the end of the   twentieth century at the invitation of the Holy   See. The purpose was to visit and support the   local Christian communities of the Holy Land.     The Coordination’,s main remit is often   expressed using four Ps: Prayer, Pilgrimage,   Pressure and Presence.     The bishops are present every year, and by   their presence they hope, above all else, to   remind the ‘,living stones’, –, the Christians of   the Holy Land –, that they are not forgotten by   their brothers and sisters in other parts of the   world.   Bishop Hudson’,s predecessor in the role,   Bishop Declan Lang, stood down at the end of   the May 2022 Coordination.     In an interview given from a rooftop   overlooking the holy city of Jerusalem, Bishop   Hudson talked about his previous visits to the   Holy Land and why he’,s so passionate about   the region and its people.     Transcription   Interviewer:  Bishop Nicholas Hudson,   standing here with me in this holy city,   looking out across Jerusalem, and it’,s a   beautiful view, actually, in a city that means   so much to us. You’,re here as part of the Holy   Land Coordination and you’,ve been here half   a dozen times or more now. Tell us where   your passion comes from for this wonderful   place…,     Bishop Nicholas Hudson:  I think I’,ll   always remember the first pilgrimage I came   on when we visited Bethlehem and   Jerusalem, and I was deeply, deeply touched   by it. It had more of an impact on me than I   even expected, really, to be in the places that   we don’,t just associate with, but actually are   the places of Jesus’,s life, Passion, death and   Resurrection. And it was deeply powerful.     I remember as well, part of the pilgrimage was   going out to a refuge for elderly women where   we were made truly welcome. It gave me a   sense of something that I began to discover   more through the Holy Land Coordination,   just how much social outreach Palestinian   Christians do –, especially for those who are   more on the margins of society. Then I was so   pleased to be asked to be part of the Holy   Land Coordination and began to get a deeper   sense of what life is like for Palestinian   Christians. When we talk about the Holy Land   Coordination, we talk about the three Ps that   describe the essence of what it is –, prayer,   presence and pressure.     Interviewer:  Meetings with people making   a really big difference in society, those on the   margins, whether it’,s migrants, asylum   seekers, the undocumented, those have no   status in this country –, these are very   important meetings. But it is actually those   parish visits, isn’,t it? Standing alongside   people, learning from them and   understanding them a little bit more,   understanding the pressures on their lives…, I   found that the most moving aspect, despite   the fact that both components are important.     Bishop Hudson:  That’,s very well said.   There’,s something deeply touching, not least   the fact that you’,re aware in some places that   the parish communities have become quite   small. And when, with respect and gentleness,   you talk to the parish priest about it, he’,ll tell   you, well, yes, a lot of families left because   they felt they needed to plan for their   children’,s future. But one of the signs of hope   that we’,ve seen during this Holy Land   Coordination is the number of people,   especially young people, who are saying,   “,whatever happens, we’,re going to stay”,. Now,   that’,s a very significant statement for us to be   hearing out of Palestine’,s Christian   community, and we’,re going to have to see to   what extent that remains a possibility for   them.     The other thing that I find really touching, is   when we actually go and pay visits to some of   the communities who are being cared for by   members of those parish communities. I think   a real highlight was when, a few years ago, we   were in Bethlehem and we went to visit   L’,Arche.     L’,Arche means the Ark, Noah’,s Ark, and is a   community founded about 60 years ago to   welcome people with learning disabilities.   There’,s a centre just behind the Nativity   Grotto very, very close to where Jesus was   born, in Bethlehem. What I find really   impressive about it is that it’,s a mixed Muslim   and Christian community. There in the heart   of Bethlehem, they’,re welcoming Muslim and   Christian people with disabilities and really   giving them life. The name of this community   in Arabic is Ma’,an lil-Hayat, which means   ‘,together for life’, and that really is part of the   essence of what L’,Arche is. L’,Arche says to   someone with learning disabilities, you can   stay with us forever.     On another occasion we visited one of the   sites which is thought to be the place of the   Emmaus story called Abu Ghosh. Emmaus   may have actually been in one of three places,   but Abu Ghosh is one of the places where the   story is revered. And I was so touched that   alongside the church was another home   where women, many of whom have learning   disabilities, are welcomed and, again, they’,re   being valued and given life. We had another   experience of going to a refuge for children of   migrant workers. So there’,s a great deal of   Christian social outreach taking place and it   truly warms one’,s heart.     Interviewer:  It has been said, but it   probably bears being said once more, that a   lot of the Christian charity projects aren’,t just   for Christians, are they? This is a complicated   region in many ways –, a beautiful one, but a   complicated one. You must be heartened, as a   bishop, to see the Christian communities   under pressure, providing for way more than   just themselves.     Jerusalem, Israel, Old Town, Walls Bishop Hudson:  I really am, and I think   this is certainly a feature of those   communities I’,ve mentioned, but it’,s writ   large in the schools, the Christian schools   under the care of the Latin Patriarchate,   where they are truly open to having Muslims   who want to send their children there. One   hears from Muslims who do send their   children to these schools something similar to   what we hear from Muslims who want to send   their children to our Catholic schools in   England and Wales. That is “,we like your   values”, and implicitly, therefore, “,we want   those values to communicate themselves and   be communicated to our children.”, So it’,s writ   large, particularly in the schools, yes.     Interviewer:  Now, it would be remiss of me   not to point out that this is a bustling, busy,   chaotic city. We can hear the trams, we hear   the noise, we hear the beautiful bells, and, to   be honest, the muezzin, the Islamic call to   prayer, the Jewish life and culture is   imprinted all over the city as well. It is a lovely   place, but many people in England and Wales   may not be able to come here. It’,s not easy to   come here. What would you say to them in   terms of bringing a little bit of these holy   lands back to England and Wales?     Bishop Hudson:  Well, I’,d want to say   straight away, that Jerusalem belongs to all of   us, and there are 13 Christian denominations   in Jerusalem, and it belongs to all Christian   men, women and children. But we have to be   careful when we say that and how we say that.   Because one of the lessons of this   Coordination, which has been focusing on   Jerusalem the city, as a sacred city, is that   we’,ve been sensitised to the fact that we’,re not   the only ones who say “,this is our city”,.     The Jews say “,this is our city”,, the Muslims   say “,this is our city”,. I think we’,ve woken up   as a group to the reality that this is a Jewish   city, this is a Christian city, this is a Muslim   city. And that calls for us to be deeply   respectful, but it also calls us to witness as   Christians in and around this city to our   conviction about all that Jesus says in the   Gospels about loving your neighbour as   yourself, to be respectful to those of other   faiths, but also to have a special care for the   poor. Christians, both in Jerusalem and   around Jerusalem, are exemplary in that   regard. DAILY:         Holy Mass at 9am                     Adoration and Evening Prayer from 6pm –, 7pm           WEEKLY:   Every TUESDAY 7pm –, 8.30pm.                      BIBLE STUDY: A study of the ACTS OF THE                      APOSTLES, a handbook for the Church of today                                             Tuesday 7th June: Acts 1, 1-26         LECTURES IN SEPTEMBER     Holy Mass at 9am   Midday Prayers at 12 noon   Rosary Adoration and Evening Prayer                 from 5.45pm –, 7pm Every TUESDAY 7pm –, 8pm.    BIBLE STUDY:   The book of the                                 ACTS of the Apostles, a handbook for                   the Church today   (No meetings on Tuesday 26 July and   during August. Back on Tuesday 6   September). Thursday 8th September 2.30pm –, 3.30pm   DO WE HAVE A SPIRITUAL SOUL OR   ARE WE MERELY MATERIAL BEINGS?   PART II   (Many schools of Philosophy today tell us   that there is no evidence that we have a   spiritual soul or mind: are they right?) Rosmini Centre, 433 Fosse Way,    Ratcliffe on the Wreake, Leicester, LE7 4SJ   Tel. 01509 81 3078, Mob: 07828781537,    aabelsito@hotmail.com   Why not join our ZOOM group from the comfort of your - home? Send us your e-mail and we shall send the link.
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 Page  10 The Catholic News.  August 2022 Our Global Community EU Churches highlight   humanitarian response                           to Ukraine   Bishops of Eastern Africa   start plenary with focus on   environment   Church delegates at the seminar The humanitarian response from the   European churches to the Ukraine crisis was   highlighted by Slovakian Bishop Peter Mihoč,   at a seminar held on 12 July at the European   Parliament in Brussels. He shared insights   about challenges faced by local churches in   providing support to those fleeing the war in   Ukraine, as well as strengthening efforts to   build peace in the region.     Bishop Mihoč, of the Evangelical Church of the   Augsburg Confession in Slovakia was   representing the Conference of European   Churches (CEC) in the seminar hosted by   Othmar Karas, First Vice-President of the   European Parliament, responsible for the   implementation of Article 17 Treaty on the   Functioning of the EU. Representatives of   other religious groups were also present.   The Catholic Bishops of Eastern Africa began   their plenary assembly in Tanzania last   Sunday with an outdoor Mass in a Dar es   Salaam stadium and prepared to focus   attention on the environment and integral   human development.     It was the 20th Plenary Assembly of the   Association of Member Episcopal   Conferences in Eastern Africa (AMECEA).   The principal celebrant at the Mass, attended   by thousands of Catholics, was Cardinal John   Njue, Archbishop Emeritus of Nairobi, Kenya,   and the homily was delivered by Cardinal Luis   Antonio Tagle, the Pro-Prefect of the   Dicastery for Evangelisation and   representative of Pope Francis at the event.      Then the meeting took place 10-18 July at the   Julius Nyerere International Convention   Centre with the theme, `Environmental   Impact on Integral Human Development.`     According to Chairman of AMECEA, Bishop   Charles Kasonde of Solwezi in Zambia, the   Assembly was to focus on the central message   of Pope Francis` landmark encyclical, Laudato   Si`. ",This is an urgent challenge for the world   and the region because environmental   degradation and its impact threatens the very   existence of humanity that Jesus came to   save,", said the Zambian Bishop.      Four successive seasons of failed rains and   drought have left more than 18 million people   desperately short of food in East Africa. Local   conflict, combined with skyrocketing food   prices caused by the invasion of Ukraine, is   making the situation even worse. Churches   are tackling the humanitarian situation and   supporting communities with emergency food   relief, alongside encouraging tree planting   and training farmers with new techniques so   that they can adapt to the changing weather   patterns.     The Chairman of AMECEA applauded the   Bishops of Tanzania and lay Catholics for   preparing resources for the Plenary. Bishop   Kasonde further expressed his gratitude to   God that the plenary has finally taken place   following the Covid-19 pandemic.     AMECEA is a regional institution of Catholic   Bishops in Eastern Africa with nine member   countries, namely Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya,   Malawi, South Sudan, Sudan, Tanzania,   Uganda, and Zambia. Its secretariat, headed   by a Secretary General, is based in Nairobi,   Kenya. Djibouti and Somalia are affiliate   members. Bishops from across East Africa    took part in the Mass Helping Sri Lanka`s Church   survive economic crisis   With Sri Lanka`s priests and Sisters   struggling to survive, a Catholic charity has   offered a vital lifeline so that they can   continue their essential ministry during the   country`s state of emergency. Aid to the   Church in Need (ACN) is providing more   than £,390,000 in vital support for priests   and religious who are struggling during Sri   Lanka`s unprecedented economic crisis.     The package consists of Mass stipends -   which provide priests with a basic income -   and subsistence aid for catechists, Sisters   and other members of religious orders   carrying out essential pastoral work.     Bishop Valence Mendis of Kandy, who is   also Apostolic Administrator of Chilaw,   told ACN that the local Church is struggling   to cover its own costs - and finding it hard   to relieve the suffering of everyone turning   to it for help.     He said: “,People can afford virtually   nothing. Our priests and religious are badly   affected by the crisis.",     The country has been hit hard by the rising   price of importing crucial goods and   mounting debt caused by massive   international borrowing made worse by a   fall in the price of the Sri Lankan rupee   against the US dollar.     Bishop Mendia said: “,The economic   situation in the country is very serious.   Many people are suffering lack of medicine   or food. There are very long queues, miles   and miles of people trying to buy fuel, gas,   powdered milk, sugar, rice, medicine…, A   number of people have died in these queues   while waiting to buy basic goods.",     He added: “,Many people have lost their   jobs, and prices have risen astronomically.",   With inflation having soared above 54   percent last month, food prices are now 80   percent higher than this time last year.     Sri Lanka`s financial crisis has been   deepened by corruption, lack of fuel, and   the loss of tourist income caused by the   coronavirus pandemic.     During the pandemic, ACN supported the   country`s Church with an emergency   programme for the dioceses.     Ranil Wickremesinghe - who was made   interim president last Friday (15th July)   after his predecessor Gotabaya Rajapaksa   fled the country following protests over the   economic crisis - declared a state of   emergency last night (17th July).     The state of emergency is designed to tackle   social unrest stemming from the growing   economic crisis.     Thanks to Maria Lozano     John Newton Bishop Valence Mendis ©,ACN   “,The situation in Ukraine is unexpected and   horrible,", said Bishop Mihoč,. He added: ",We   are trying to respond to the dreadful   conditions and serve in the name of love.   Openness and closeness, empathy and   practical help in the last months have   revealed themselves as precious values in   Slovakia, regardless of religious affiliation or   social class of those we serve. The churches   have offered a helping hand to people on a   journey escaping the consequences of the   atrocities and bloodshed in Ukraine.",     Bishop Mihoč, comes from a country which   has played a vital role in providing   humanitarian help to refugees from Ukraine.   He shared that his church is located in Preš,ov,   a city close to the Ukrainian border. Around   600,000 refugees recently have crossed these   borders from Ukraine to Slovakia.   He said: ",In the last months, overnight stays   per person were provided, and at this   moment we already have people staying for   long terms, who cannot return because their   homes were destroyed. We continue to   actively provide for these people free   accommodation and food, secure social and   health care and we strive to create for them a   safe and hospitable living environment.",      ",As a CEC Member Church, I want to assure   you that we the Churches want to be here for   others in these difficult days, especially   people from Ukraine. And we believe that   with your active support we can continue our   humanitarian efforts,", added Bishop Mihoč,.   The seminar was held as part of Article 17,   which foresees an open, transparent and   regular dialogue between the EU institutions   and churches and religious associations or   communities. The event featured opening   remarks by Roberta Metsola, President of the   European Parliament.
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Page 11

 The Catholic News.  August 2022 Page  11 Book Reviews Book Reviews “,The Canonisation of the “,Universal Brother”,,    Saint Charles de Foucauld.”,   By Fr Jonathan Cotton   Part Two   Continued from July The two miracles   What were the two miracles that convinced   the Pope that Brother Charles was chosen by   God for formal recognition as a Saint?      The first miracle, which led to his   Beatification in 2005, cured an Italian   woman, Giovanna Citeri Pulici, in 1984 of   bone cancer. Her husband, together with his   two blood sisters, who were also Religious   Sisters, prayed to Brother Charles for his   Intercession for Giovanna. It was not until the   year 2000 that Giovanna realised that she had   been cured. After a Diocesan Enquiry and an   extensive study by the Medical Commission,   the miracle was recognised in 2004. A   Theological Commission then gave a positive   report about Brother Charles, leading to his   Beatification in 2005.     The second miracle concerns the preservation   from apparently life-threatening injury of a   young French worker. On November 30th,   2016, the eve of the centenary of Br. Charles’,s   death, Charle [a version of the name Charles],   a 21year old carpenter’,s apprentice working   on restoring a chapel in Saumur, fell over 50   feet from the vault onto a bench whose   armrest pierced his left side and came out at   the back at the base of his rib cage. The seven   doctors who attended him later said that a fall   like this would normally result in burst organs   and death. But Charle, stood up and looked   for help. After an emergency operation he was   discharged from hospital eight days later and   was back to work after two months with no   after affects either physical or psychological.   Doctors reported that this incident could not   be explained medically.     Various additional extraordinary facts   enabled the miracle to be attributed to   Brother Charles. First, as Charle began to fall   he said that he lay flat, put his head in his   hands, and “,abandoned myself”,. Brother   Charles’, Prayer of Abandonment is a well   known daily prayer of the followers of Brother   Charles’, spirituality. But, Charle was not   baptised and did not know Brother Charles.   Secondly, Saumur, a town in West France, is   a place imbued with the spirit of Brother   Charles. It is where he trained as a soldier [at   the same age of our carpenter Charle] and   where the neighbouring Church is dedicated   to Brother Charles. The following day was   Brother Charles’, Feast Day and the parish   were concluding a Novena to Brother Charles.   Within minutes of the accident, Charle’,s   Manager, Francois Asselin, who was a   parishioner in the parish of Brother Charles,   was on the phone to his wife to ask her to   galvanise the parish, and any other members   of the Charles de Foucauld spiritual family, to   prayer, asking Brother Charles’,s intercession   for the healing of the young man Charle. She   immediately sent out text messages for   prayer. Third, Francois Asselin himself spent   the whole night in prayer asking Brother   Charles’, intercession for the healing of the   young apprentice. These key facts enabled the   The intense, shockingly timely, real   account of growing up in Eastern   Germany behind the ‘,Iron Curtain’,   Never Mind,   Comrade     Claudia Bierschenk   Published by Tangerine Press   Trade Paperback, £,12   100-Copy Numbered and    Signed Edition, £,40   26-Copy Lettered and    Signed Edition, £,150   ISBN:  9781910691700 (PB),    9781910691717 (HB)   Life Behind the Iron Curtain 1982-89       Once upon a time,   there was a small,   three-letter-country   known as GDR.   Claudia Bierschenk   spent the first   fourteen years of her   life there, until it   disappeared from all   maps of the world   overnight. Never   Mind, Comrade isn’,t   about how awful life   was behind the ‘,iron curtain’, during the   1980s. Yes, we learn of a world ruled by   ideology, restrictions, half-truths,   superstition, but there is also magic and   humour within these pages.    The author skilfully and sensitively conjures   up a child’,s curiosity, not just the clear-eyed   innocence of those years, but also how deeply   children think and feel about ‘,adult’, concerns.   The country that Claudia Bierschenk grew up   in no longer exists. Perhaps the strongest   message from this book is that if the Berlin   Wall can fall, anything is possible.       Now more than ever, as Eastern Europe once   again finds itself the focus of great   uncertainty, Never Mind, Comrade acts as a   reminder that no matter where you live, there   are certain collective emotions and questions   that all childhoods share, and that even the   ‘,iron curtain’,, with all its challenges, had the   power to bring people together.       Written in parallel with its German edition,   Never Mind, Comrade is not a direct   translation of Land ohne Verben. Both the   German and English language versions have   been developed by the author simultaneously,   with sections added and removed in the   English version, as the author saw fit, for a   wider international readership.     In addition to the   high-quality trade   paperback edition,   Tangerine Press are   producing a limited   number of   handbound,   hardcover, collectors’,   editions signed by the   author, available   direct from the publisher. The limited   editions will feature a special artwork by Hans   Ticha, one of the most important   contemporary German graphic artists and   illustrators.     Praise for the Book   “,Fascinating, absurd, tender postcards from   the other side of the Iron Curtain. They build   into an insightful, moving portrait of an entire   lost society and those who survived it.”,   Darran Anderson, author of Imaginary Cities       ",A compelling and poetic account of the harsh   realities of life behind the Berlin Wall…,A tes - tament to Claudia Bierschenk’,s exceptional   skill as a writer, listener and observer. One of   my books of the year, so far.",     Adelle Stripe,    author of Ten Thousand Apologies various Church Enquiries and Commissions   to report that a miracle had taken place   through the intercession of Brother Charles.   The Cardinals and Bishops agreed enabling   the Pope to announce the Canonisation.   The Thanksgiving Mass in St John Lateran Basilica for the Charles de Foucauld   Spiritual Family with Cardinal Angelo de Donatis on Monday 16th May 2022 By Caroline Carroll, Michael Carroll   ISBN-13  9780281082964   £,12.99   God Made the   Dinosaurs God Made the Dinosaurs combines   science and religion to show the variety   and wonder of God`s creation through   time in a beautiful, fully-illustrated book   for children aged 7 to 9. From the diplodocus   to pterodactyls, God   Made the Dinosaurs   is jam-packed with   fascinating facts and   interesting   information about   the creatures that once roamed earth.     This beautifully illustrated book will teach 7-   to 9-year-olds all about dinosaurs, from the   familiar T-Rex to lesser-known species,   highlighting how these and other prehistoric   creatures show the wonder of God`s creation.     Children will love learning more about their   favourite dinosaurs, as well as discovering   how we know about these incredible   creatures. God Made the Dinosaurs looks at   how we’,ve learned from fossils and genetics,   and introduces palaeontologists and other   scientists who have contributed towards our   understanding of God’,s creation.     Produced in collaboration with the Faraday   Institute, and with Jesú,s Soté,s’, incredible   artwork bringing every page to brightly- coloured life, God Made the Dinosaurs will   teach kids how science and religion can work   together to teach us about the world that God   has created and fill them with awe for the   majestic creatures that walked the earth so   long ago. For all your                                                 advertising    requirements                                 please contact    Natasha on   01440 730399   Natasha@cathcom.org
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 Page  12 The Catholic News.  August 2022 This article is an extract from Dr Paul Dixon`s forthcoming book, The Road Pilgrim. Over the coming months we shall be publishi ng   extracts. For more details, email: info@theroadpilgrim.com   Warning sign—,bends:   Bend warning signs sometimes have an   additional sign informing of an adverse   camber. Adverse camber slopes away from   the bend. Unless resisted it ‘,throws’, a vehicle   away from the intended direction of travel. A   driver on such a bend experiences what   appears to be a force drawing him outward   from the bend (centrifugal force), yet in   reality there is a force keeping him on the   intended direction of travel (centripetal   force). A person observing the journey from   outside the vehicle sees the centripetal force   keeping the driver on course.     In the spiritual life, at times of temptation we   can experience seemingly nothing other than   the lure of evil. Yet, within the struggle against   temptation is the force of God keeping us on   the correct path. Like the observer outside the   vehicle, maybe someone else is best placed to   see the centripetal force of God at work in our   life when we cannot. All temptation is akin to   driving road bends, each puts us at risk of   going astray. There are many bends and there   are many temptations, some big others small.   Ignatius of Loyola, in his fourteenth rule of   discernment, refers to the enemy of human   nature (the devil) in terms of a military leader   attacking his enemy (i.e. us) at our weakest   point. The weak spots in our character are   where we are most likely to be ‘,thrown’, off   course, they are the adverse cambers of our   spiritual life.     God is the centre of rotation around every   bend. The more we anchor into our true   selves, the more we experience the centripetal   love of God. As Ignatius teaches, when we find   and follow what we truly want we find and   follow what God wants too. How well do you   drive the bends on the highway of life?     Warning sign—,watercourse:   A roadside watercourse is a reminder that   alongside every moment is the stream of life.   Finding the positives in every situation   captures something of this spiritual   awareness. I once came across a roadside   watercourse where the water appeared to flow   uphill. It was a gravity hill. They are more   common than you might think, and they can   also give the appearance of such things as   balls and even cars freely rolling uphill. Of   course, gravity is not being defied, the optical   illusion has something to do with false   horizon lines in the surrounding landscape. It   can easily deceive.   In the Bible, St Paul says ‘,Satan disguises   himself as an angel of light’,. (2 Cor. 11:14)   Satan is very cunning. To lure people away   from the truth he masquerades as goodness,   as light. Yet, like gravity hills, what he offers   is an illusion. Be warned! Satan (and his   demons) create a false horizon and offer a   false perspective. God is the only true horizon   offering a true perception of reality. In one’,s   search for God, Satan will be present too. If   you do not believe this, Satan has you where   he wants you. God’,s love always flows   alongside the highway of life, but be careful   not to be deceived, discern the spirits.     Warning sign—,tunnel:   The next time you drive through a tunnel,   spare a thought for those who built it.   Appreciation for their hard work makes one   grateful. So often in life, we benefit from the   efforts of others. Tunnels are dug in the   spiritual life too. This applies within   individual lives and within the Church   community—,especially so during the Synodal   process we are engaging in. We come across   problems and to make progress we need to   dig, sometimes very deep. It may be easier to   go around an obstacle or remain on the   surface, but avoiding problems and/or living   shallowly does not foster love. Like the tunnel   builders of times gone past, you too may not   live long enough to see the light at the end of   all your tunnels. Yet rest assured, your effort   and hard work in love are never lost. Those   that come after will reap the benefit, like you   as you drive through tunnels made by others.   The Road Pilgrim   Part Six - Warning Signs CRYPTIC Across   7     Pool, outside Jerusalem, is a store of grain by morning (6)    8     Quiet after drink by the river in the Syrian city (6)    9     Felix`s wife needs a doctor, getting sick in America (8)    10   Police officer close to Egypt reportedly finds a Christian sect          member (4)    11    Pulls apart sick pun? (7)   14   Biblical prophetess`s name for a Scottish town (5)    15   Midlands city cricket captain loses toss in the end (5)    17   One`s reflective after transposing Yeats into the church (4-3)    21   Short recording following the appearance of old poet (4)    22  In Persia he, curiously, becomes a Jew (8)    24  Dangerous plant genus, dock, making a comeback in the         borders of Asia (6)    25  Partly responsible, ambushing Canaan town (6)     CRYPTIC Down   1      Stories he tells sending up type of transport (4)    2     Road on which social climber turned up displaying          ornamental shrub (6)    3     A boy king, son of Eliiphaz (6)    4     Native American`s upset losing ring, one coming from          Indonesia (5)    5     Clergyman`s study down under is being curtailed (6)    6     Record at a pub, one New York`s supporting, being a January          fixture (8)    12    `Birth of a Nation`s only half on –, at six on telly, either side –, at          Christmas (8)    13   Top South Australian carnivore`s kind of pouch (3)    16   Report Viking retreat in a valley near Jerusalem (6)    18   One killed in Susa is a boy found upset within Ionia`s bounds          (6)    19   Guard hurled the first of lances to be commandeered...   (6)    20     ...Lance earl used to break up joust (5)    23     Biblical country`s macho overthrow (4)      QUICK Across   7       Underground pool, once a major water source for            Jerusalem (6)    8      Second city of Syria (6)    9      Wife of procurator Felix who heard Paul`s case (8)    10    Member of a Christian sect, one descended from the           ancient Egyptians (4)    11     Pulls apart, works out (7)    14    UN Secretary General 1997-2006, Scottish town (5)    15    Add fuel to: keep (a fire) going (5)    17    Middle-of-the-road illumination (4-3)    21    Roman poet remembered for his elegiac verses on             love (43 BC - AD 17) (4)    22   Member of a strict sect of Judaism (8)    24   Genus of the family commonly known as belladonna or          deadly nightshade (6)    25   Town of Canaan where Jehu killed Ahaziah (6)     QUICK Down   1      Fabricator of the truth, perjurer (4)    2      Japanese dwarf trees and shrubs (6)    3     Grandson of Esau and son of Eliphaz (6)    4     Son of Japheth, father of people who lived in Greece and Asia          Minor (5)    5     Position of an ordinand on successful completion of training          (6)    6    Day after Twelfth Night (8)    12   Theological doctrine that Jesus Christ had no human father (8)   13   Fluid container, bag (3)    16   Valley separating Temple Mount from the Mount of Olives (6)   18     Notable among the enemies killed by the Jews at Ahasuerus`            citadel in Susa (6)    19     Protect, ward off (6)    20    Assegai, for example (5)    23    Biblical country in south-west Asia to the east of the Tigris           River (4) 2-in-1 Crossword by Axe You can use both sets of clues to solve the puzzle: the solutions are the same.    SOLUTION   Across: 7  Siloam,  8  Aleppo,  9  Drusilla,  10  Copt,  11  Unpicks,    14  Annan,  15  Stoke,  17  Cat`s-eye,  21  Ovid,  22  Pharisee,  24  Atropa,   25  Ibleam.  Down: 1  Liar,  2  Bonsai,  3  Amalek,  4  Javan,  5  Deacon,    6  Epiphany,  12  Nativity,  13  Sac,  16  Kidron,  18  Adalia,  19  Shield,    20  Spear,  23  Elam.
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