Catholic Post History
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Mar 2023 edition of the Catholic Post
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 MARCh 2023 page 13 Ramping Up   C h urc h   Disability   Inclusion page 10 Our Englis h   S h rines -A   secluded spot 4   miles from t h e   centre of Preston Mgr P h ilip Moger   says farewell to   Walsing h am  page 5   Edition 15   www.Cat h olicPost.co.uk All charities are focusing on supporting those   in need during these challenging times, but the   Saint Vincent de Paul Society (SVP) is meeting   this challenge on the frontline and providing   vital person-to-person support.     For 200 years, the SVP has supported people   in need and today is no different. Our   Vincentian values dictate we must seek and   find those in need and help them in a spirit of   dignity and humility, as well as speak out   against injustice.     This article provides a snapshot of how the   SVP is offering hope to those affected, and   how it continues to provide lifesaving support   and befriending to those most in need.     The beating heart of the society is its   members, there are 876 Members’, groups   (known as Conferences) which organise visits   and other support for people in need in their   community.     In addition, the society is able to help in many   other ways:   •, Housing –, those facing forced eviction are   offered Temporary Emergency   Accommodation whilst permanent housing is   sought.   Working on t h e frontline wit h  t h e SVP •, School Uniform –, Conferences work with   schools to recycle uniforms to ensure children   are properly attired.   •, In-work poverty –, where families are falling   into arrears and are forced to choose   between heating and eating, the SVP supports   with food parcels as well as offering debt   counselling.   •, Warm Space –, The SVP provides warm   spaces that offer a warm welcome, company,   heating, food and a place to spend time during   the winter months.   •, Loneliness –, the St Vincent’,s Centre in   Newcastle has seen record numbers of guests   in 2022. On average the centre offers around   150 hot, three-course free meals several times   a week in a warm and welcoming space to   anyone in need, but a major focus has been on   supporting men in need of company. With   increasing numbers of male suicides, such a   resource offers hope, engagement and   therapy to those attending.   •, Refugees, asylum seekers and migrants –, the   Society helps this group of beneficiaries in a   number of ways such as offering befriending,   providing financial support, food parcels,   advocating on their behalf and helping deal   with bureaucracy.   •, Debt - Complex debt issues are becoming   increasingly common at our centres. Debt   counsellors at support centres offer   counselling and advice to help those struggling   to pay their way. Since the start of 2022, the   debt advice team in Leeds has helped 559   people, and as a result they had a total of   £,733,344 debt written off.     The SVP is also lobbying the Government,   proposing policy recommendations to make   changes to social policy to improve the   situation for those who are struggling.     They include:   1. A commitment to the Levelling Up agenda   to reduce regional inequalities.   2. An engagement with faith groups to all work   together for the common good.   3. Provision of house insulation and energy   efficiency to help reduce bills.   4. An adequate and functioning social security   system to support people, not punish them.     From having basic necessities to being able to   pay for essential travel, from loneliness to debt,   from having someone to talk with as well as   having an advocate, the importance of and   reliance upon an organisation such as the SVP   cannot be underestimated.   Lance Philpott M a r c h   2 0 2 3       i s   t h e   m o n t h   o f     S t   J o s e p h Lig h t a virtual candle for Pope Francis   Pope Francis will be celebrating ten years of his   pontificate on March 13th . To highlight this   milestone anniversary in a “,viral”, manner, the   Digital Synod has launched a special online   map featuring virtual lighted candles   representing the prayers of the faithful   worldwide for him.       According to a press release, “,The Petrine   ministry is a great grace that Jesus granted to    His Church and we must always be grateful for   it. Therefore,  prayer must be our best gift, so   that God may support the service of the one   He has chosen for this ministry because on this   rock He builds His Church in time and history",.     Anyone who wishes to join the initiative will   find an invitation  at the  the following website   address decimus-annus.org/site/index to pray   one or more Hail Marys.", In the end they will   send the Holy Father the map with the  `little   candles` which represent the Hail Marys that   are prayed for him, thanking God for His   Mercy.",    The Digital Synod launches an online prayer   initiative  to mark the tenth anniversary of the   pontificate of  Pope Francis on March 13  cbcew For ALL of your Parishioners   For some of your Parishioners   Individual Subscriptions   Online Subscriptions   100 copies: from £,12  (12p per copy)   200 copies: from £,23.20  (11.6p per copy)   300 copies: from £,32.80   (10.9p per copy) 50 copies: from £,9.60   (19.2p per copy)   10 copies: from £,7.20   (72p per copy)   Annual 1 Copy  from £,3.20 per month   1 Online Copy     via Email from £,2.40 per month Subscribe to www.catholicpost.co.uk All prices include delivery
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 CONTACT US:   The Catholic Post is published by its owners    Bellcourt Ltd and is wholly independent of   and separate from any previous newspaper.   The Catholic Post is published on the last   Sunday of the month previous to   publication date.   EDITOR:   John Clawson    email:  johnclwson@icloud.com   ADVERTISING:    Natasha / Bellcourt Ltd.    01440 730399 / 07903 377019    ads@bellcourt.org   DESIGN &, LAYOUT:    David Lodge, david@bellcourtltd.co.uk    PUBLISHED BY:    Bellcourt Ltd. N2 Blois Meadow Business    Centre,  Blois Road, Steeple Bumpstead,   Haverhill, Suffolk CB9 7BN   01440 730399    ARTICLES TO:    The Catholic Post    email: johnclwson@icloud.com or   david@bellcourtltd.co.uk   Please send articles for publication by   email, supplying any photos separate to the   text We welcome contributions    Here are answers to some basic questions   about writing for The Catholic Post   How long should articles be?   Usually it seems to work out best if   contributors simply say what they have to   say and let us worry about finding a spot for   it in the paper.    What is the submission procedure?   Please send as a  Word file attached to an   e-mail. To submit articles for publication,   contact John Clawson by email at   johnclwson@icloud.com Charts, graphs, and   photos should be submitted as separate   PDFs. Electronic photos should not be   embedded or pasted into a Word document   as this reduces their quality.   Photographs and Illustrations   Photographs and Illustrations should be   supplied electronically as high resolution     JPEG (*.JPG) files).   Photographs and illustrations should be   sent in colour with a resolution of 300 dpi   and a minimum size of 100 mm x 100 mm   when printed (approx. 1200 pixels wide on- screen).    Computer print-outs are not acceptable.   Screen captures are not ideal as they are   usually not very high   Parental permission should be sought    before submitting photographs of minors.   Source information -    DW = Diocesan Website.    ICN = Independent Catholic News    Views expressed in The Catholic Post are   not necessarily those of the editor   Last date for copy is the LAST DAY of the    month prior to publication.     Page 2.  The Catholic Post.  March 2023.  From the presbytery.............. by Fr Neil McNicholas In the early centuries, observance of the   Lenten fast was very rigid: only one meal each   day was allowed and meat and fish were both   forbidden. In the West the fast was gradually   relaxed until it applied only to Ash Wednesday   and Good Friday and fish could be eaten. More   recently the law governing these two days of   fast and abstinence was relaxed still further.     The law of abstinence forbids the eating of   meat but not fish.     The guidelines from our Bishops’, Conference   (which has authority to make its own   interpretations and decisions in this matter)   say that fasting means that the amount of   food we eat should be considerably reduced   (but it doesn’,t give specific details regarding by   how much), and abstinence means that we   give up a particular kind of food (but without   specifying which) or some form of amusement.   It all seems a lot more lenient than it used to   be and, perhaps, a little confusing. Rather than   allowing that to be an excuse for doing little or   nothing, it actually invites us to enter into the   spirit of what fasting and abstinence are about,   and to make our decision maturely out of a   freedom of choice rather than blind obedience   to the letter of the law.     Canon Law says that the law of fasting applies   to those aged eighteen to the beginning of   their sixtieth year (in other words from the day   after someone becomes eighteen until the last   day they are fifty-nine - if we want to be   legalistic about it. Abstinence applies to those   who have completed their fourteenth year   (strictly speaking from the day after their   fourteenth birthday). Reasons of ill-health,   pregnancy, etc, may excuse of course. Other   forms of penance may be chosen by those   who are excused or who are not obliged in law.     Most of us find abstaining from meat to be no   great hardship, the problem is trying to   remember. On the other hand many of us, I   think, dread having to fast for the day –, even   though we aren’,t really fasting as such, just   eating a little less than we normally do. Part   ways through even just Ash Wednesday or   Good Friday morning, you’,d think we hadn’,t   eaten for days (even though we probably ate   breakfast) as we struggle with the temptation   to have our usual “,elevenses”,. And the same in   the afternoon.    These forty days, instituted by the apostles, should be   given over to  fasting which means not just simply a   reduction in our food, but the  elimination of our evil   habits.  (Pope St Leo the Great)   The catechism is remarkably silent on the   subject of self-denial as a form of penance in   terms of providing us with some guidance.   Many of us probably fall back on our childhood   practice of giving up something –, which is OK   in and of itself so long as we make the   connection with its purpose as an act of   penance, but such things tend to be somewhat   superficial (especially if we haven’,t really   moved on very much from what we gave up as   children). Giving up chocolate or cake or   biscuits may have more to do with losing a   little weight than with self-denial as such. And   while it might take a bit more will-power to   resist having a drink for six weeks, is it doing us   any spiritual good? - which is actually the   purpose.     This introduces a dimension to Lent that   people don’,t always consider: that of doing   something extra (especially spiritual) rather   than giving something up, which can often be   just as challenging. Choosing to do something   that requires a real commitment on our part   such as works of mercy (which might include   visiting the sick, the elderly or the housebound)   (Mt 25 v 31-46), making more time each day for   prayer or spiritual reading, going to daily Mass,   and that perennial challenge –, getting to   confession (and making it the start of a regular   practice).     On the subject of making an effort to go to   Mass more often, our own diocese has, in   recent years, restored the practice of “,station   Masses”,. In the early centuries of the Church,   ",Station Days”, (from the Latin statio - a   Christian assembly) were the occasions   throughout the year (on feast days and during   Lent) when the Pope, as Bishop of Rome,   would celebrate Mass in various designated   churches as a way of unifying the diverse   Christian communities of the city. The people   would assemble in a nearby church and then   process to the “,stational church”, as a sign of   witness. Our Lenten “,station Masses”, are   celebrated by the bishop in designated   churches - again as a sign of unity, but also to   encourage people to come together for the   celebration of Mass and to do so more   frequently as a way of marking the season.     The Church also reminds us about the   importance of alms-giving, the suggested link   being that we give from what we have saved   from our acts of self-denial –, which therefore   benefits us (spiritually) and those in need   (materially).     Although any time is suitable for the exercise   of the virtue of charity, it is more especially   urged on us by this present season…,that the   relief of those in need may support our fasts.   (Pope St Leo the Great)     Fasting does not germinate unless watered by   mercy. When mercy dries up, fasting suffers   drought, for mercy is to fasting what rain is to   the earth. Consequently, lest you lose by   saving, gather in by dispensing. Give to yourself   by giving to the poor. (St Peter Chrysologus)     Pope Leo’,s mention of “,the virtue of charity”,   suggests yet another way we can mark Lent:   by being just a little bit nicer to others, a little   more charitable, a little more patient and   understanding, a little less critical or   judgmental. Maybe we can reflect further on   this by reading Lk 6 v 36-38 and even Mt 5 v   23-24 if there may be bridges to be rebuilt.     The instructions in the Roman Missal for “,The   Passion of the Lord”, (on Good Friday) state   (p.346): On this and the following day, by a   most ancient tradition, the Church does not   celebrate the Sacraments at all, except for   Penance and the Anointing of the Sick.     During my time in the seminary we were   taught that from the end of the “,Mass of the   Lord’,s Supper”, on Holy Thursday until the start   of the Easter Vigil, sacramentally speaking the   Church was considered to be “,dead”, with   Christ in the tomb. This is why there is no Mass   on Good Friday and why communion is   ministered using hosts (only) consecrated the   previous day. Obviously people can’,t help   having need of the Sacrament of the Sick in an   emergency situation and, therefore, it can and   would be celebrated with them.     One final thought: I can’,t help wondering just   how well, and in what ways, Lent and all that it   involves and what it’,s about, is taught in our   Catholic schools these days. Are our children   and young people aware of the penitential   practice of self-denial –, of giving something up   for Lent? Are they aware of the requirement on   Ash Wednesday and Good Friday to abstain   from meat (from 14 years of age) and to fast   (from age 18) and what the law says about   fasting on these days? And just in case our   schools aren’,t teaching these things as they   should, are their parents?     And one final, final thought: when we are   deciding what to give up for Lent, let’,s make   sure it isn’,t Lent itself!     Aspects of Lent  (Part 2)
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 Promoting the Holy Rosary  in the U.K. &,  throughout the world to bring hope,  comfort and peace to the  marginalised, the oppressed and the  imprisoned, enabling wounded hearts  to find healing and shattered lives to  find breath and space to renew. Supporting priests   and  chaplains  in     their ministry, outreach and welfare.  Response from parish priests:  “,The  rosary cards that you sent me have  had a tremendous effect on the  devotion and prayer life of the  parish.”, www.crownofthorns.org.uk email: office@crownofthorns.org.uk Phone: 01342 870472 Registered charity no: 1042751 Crown  of  Thorns Mission of Hope The Catholic Post. March 2023. Page 3. No Place For Racism   A vibrant Mass for Racial Justice Sunday took   place in St George`s Cathedral, Southwark   during which the Archdiocese celebrated the   wonderful diversity of Southwark, and in which   rcsouthwark.co.uk Archbishop Wilson affirmed that there is no   place for racism in our parishes, schools and   wider community.      Thank you to all who organised this inspiring   liturgy and took part. Special thanks go to all   who arrived in their national dress and brought   banners and flags.   Racial Justice Sunday sees full Cathedral for celebratory Mass T h e Power of   Prayer to   c h ange world   events   So many elderly people feel that the world   is too fast, too changed, for them to have an   active part in family or parish life, or in   politics. Many feel lonesome, worry about   their children and grandchildren, thinking   that there is nothing that they can do to   support them. Yet these elderly and   housebound members of parishes are the   most amazing asset.     For these are the people who have power   to pray for the younger generations. Their   silent prayer each day for their families,   priests and parish communities, is the most   wonderful gift that anyone could receive.     For if we wish to change the course of world   events, we can. Our Lady has repeatedly   told us so. She has begged us to realise this.   She calls us again and again to believe in   the power of our prayer, of her intercession,   through the Holy Rosary. The messages of   Lourdes and Fatima, along with that of her   other apparitions, echo a mother’,s call, for   then and for now. Our Lady brings us hope   and gives us choice. She requests our prayer   to change the course of history and to allow   miracles to happen. It is up to us to respond.     The horrors of war can be stopped. We have   Our Lady assuring us of this, but we must   act. This is not difficult but it takes willpower   and trust. It takes us all to do our bit.     The Holy Rosary, with its simplicity of   prayers and meditations brings us into   contact with the Holy Family, their   hardships and their joys. It allows our minds   to wander through the lives of Mary, Joseph   and Jesus, in parallel to ours. Whether one   decade is prayed daily or several, is less   important than the effort and trust that is   put into it.   www.crownofthorns.org.uk Celebrating STEAM (science, tec h nology,   engineering, art and mat h ematics) Week    Ursuline Prep School, Warley We celebrated STEAM (science, technology,   engineering, art and mathematics) Week from   Monday 30th January until Friday 3rd February.   Throughout the week the children took part in   activities ranging from, watching a maths &,   science magic show performed by Michael J.   Fitch, each class worked with a visiting artist to   produce specific pieces, an inter-house maths   quiz as well building their own ‘,Bug Club’,   hotels! The children did a brilliant job with the   Bug Club Hotels that they were asked to create   and we celebrated each and every one of them   during our assembly on Friday. Some of these   hotels have now been moved to St. Angela’,s   Garden, on our school grounds to house any   bugs that choose to move in !     During Steam week we welcomed Eliza   Stimpson, a visiting artist, whose work is   inspired by Botanical illustration into every   classroom. Eliza uses paint to capture the   many colours, patterns and textures of fruit   and vegetables in her work. She always   celebrates the beauty of food and nature too.   The children thoroughly enjoyed working with   Eliza developing their skills in sketching,   painting, printing, collaging and marbling. The   children created: ice creams by printing, fruit   and vegetables using collage, sketching and   shading single fruits, marbling backgrounds to   use to create different foods and Lower Two   and Upper two worked in groups to complete   3D creations of lemons, oranges, garlic and   fennel. The children thoroughly enjoyed   working with Eliza.     An enjoyable week had by all! Each class worked with a   visiting artist to produce   specific pieces, an                           inter-house maths quiz                 as well building their own   ‘,Bug Club’, hotels!  
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 Paris h  Matters The headline ‘,A relational church is needed   now, more than ever’, in last month’,s issue   caught my interest for a number of reasons,   not least because of the reference to the   influence of Together for the Common Good   (T4CG) organisation whose inaugural   conference in 2011 I was privileged to attend.   However, the principle reason for my interest   was the illustrative story of a parish reaching   out to its wider community and, perhaps   more exciting, evoking a response from   within the community to engage with its own   wellbeing. The reaching out only becomes   relational when the gesture is reciprocated   and becomes two way and transforms from   a giver/receiver transaction into a joint   relational venture with its reward in mutual   fulfilment.     The T4CG movement found its model and   inspiration in the remarkable partnership of   Liverpool’,s Archbishop Derek Worlock and   Anglican Counterpart Bishop David   Sheppard in the 1980s whose work was   characterised by a combination of gifts from   different Christian traditions. Much like the   parishioners in Loughborough, praying   together they envisioned an ",outward-facing   church", which drew upon the wealth of   Catholic social teaching to work for the   common good. The Liverpool episcopal   partnership expanded to draw the wider   ecumenical community into their joint venture   and inspired the Methodist leader Dr John   Newton to eloquently describe the vision of   the Merseyside churches: “,My hope and prayer   is that, as Christians draw closer together, so   they will work more effectively as one in their   mission and service to God’,s children. Our   united resources are called for to minister to   the needs of a broken and divided world: to   bring hope to the poor, the homeless, the   unemployed, those who have lost faith or   never had it.",     These sentiments, so pertinent in that then   troubled city, could just as easily be applied to   our present troubled land that is surely crying   out for a similar response from our faith   communities in every part of the country.     What is evident in my own community is that   ‘,Warm Hubs’,, set up to offer warmth and   companionship during this period of high   energy costs, have inspired many churches to   welcome people of every generation into a   warm, hospitable and social environment.   Many have evolved into thriving, multi-activity   community centres where a hot lunch is   provided at very reasonable cost. Like the   Loughborough parish the range of activities   and possibilities being offered by many church   communities, often ecumenically, is drawing   people into a community of generous service   and, significantly, offering an estranged   generation a more enlightened and   appealing view of what Christianity is about.     Given that there is every indication that the   energy crisis is not going to go away any   time soon and, in all likelihood will taper off   gradually, will our church communities crawl   back into their comfortable shells or will we   have found that our mission has found its   true location among those in need? There is   every likelihood that the good people in   Loughborough will have already realised   that they are in this for the long haul.   (Perhaps we could, editor willing, get regular   updates on this encouraging and admirable   initiative.)     If we have the foresight and wisdom to join   up the dots between the energy crisis and   global warming, which will be best served by   using less energy on a permanent basis, it is   inconceivable that this particular impetus for   action, like the Church’,s mission, will ever   end.     What wonders will be revealed by the simple   act of reaching out and breaking bread with   our neighbours?     Seek the welfare of the city, and pray to the   LORD on its behalf, for in its welfare, you will   find your welfare - Jeremiah 29.7 quoted from   the T4CG website.   Willie Slavin MBE Page 4.  The Catholic Post.  March 2023.  W h y is breaking bread wit h  t h e poor unusual?   MPs were told today (24 January) that overseas   aid is being spent on fossil fuels, taking away   money from humanitarian programmes,   including those for women and girls.       Graham Gordon, CAFOD’,s head of policy, told   the International Development Select   Committee in an oral evidence session that   despite promises in 2019 that fossil fuel   investments would cease, there were around   £,700m (12.6% of the overall portfolio) ongoing   direct investments in fossil fuels in 2021 by the   UK government’,s development finance   institution, British International Investment   (BII).  This is what BII calls carbon-related   exposure.       BII also admit that they do not know their   current exposure to fossil fuels through   indirect investments in funds and financial   intermediaries, so the real figure will be higher.       This undermines the government’,s legal   commitments to reach net zero emissions and   its “,number one foreign international priority to   tackle climate change”,.       Graham Gordon said: “,If the government is   serious about its commitment to preventing   global warming of 1.5c, then we must make   sure no UK aid is invested in fossil fuels.   Because it is currently going in the opposite   direction to where we want aid money to go.      “,It’,s bad investment and it’,s taking money away   from essential humanitarian aid, such as   education and girls healthcare.”,      The Committee were urged to pressure FCDO   to close loopholes in BII’,s climate change   policy and to mandate it to pull out of all legacy   fossil fuel investments.    A third of BII’,s investments go through funds   or financial intermediaries, where BII remains   an arm’,s length investor. The government’,s   own documents admit that BII has less control   over the investments and therefore there is   less information about where UK aid money   goes not the impacts the money has.       Due to this lack of transparency, CAFOD   recommended that FCDO instructs BII to   drastically reduce its investments through   financial intermediaries and instead redirects   them to companies with an explicit focus on   creating decent, green jobs in the poorest   countries and communities.         Graham Gordon told the committee that FCDO   need to take back control of BII: “,As the sole   shareholder, FCDO have chosen to operate at   UK Aid is being Wasted UK aid is being wasted on fossil fuel investments, House of Commons Select Committee told  CAFOD If the government is serious about its commitment                     to preventing global warming of 1.5c, then we must   make sure no UK aid is invested in fossil fuels Graham Gordon arms length, while BII then operate at arms   length to many of its investments, then they   have an even longer arm in terms of where   their investments are reaching.”,      Given the context of drastic cuts to the aid   budget (Overseas Development Aid), Graham   recommended the FCDO should not give any   more aid money to BII. Adding “,BII should have   a much stronger poverty eradication focus in   line with the International Development Act.      “,We have a very clear act from 2002 that all   ODA needs to be tackling poverty.       “,We have shifted where a lot of our ODA is   going, we need to bring it back to be focusing   on poverty very clearly, tackling climate   change, to focusing on the poorest countries.      “,Because we have an ever decreasing pot of   ODA at the moment and we need to make   sure that is really targeted.”,    BII’,s assets have more than doubled since 2015   to £,8bn, while UK bilateral aid to poor   countries continues to be slashed. Any   additional funds for BII would be in the context   of cuts to emergency response, health,   education and women’,s economic   development.       Question marks were also raised over BII’,s   transparency, Graham asked: “,Why is ODA that   goes through BII particularly through financial   intermedaries let off the hook in terms of   transparency.”,      Sarah Champion MP, the Committee’,s chair   added that is exactly why this inquiry is   running.  
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 The Catholic Post.  March 2023. Page 5. Ince Benet: New prayer and retreat centre on Merseyside   Ince Benet is a new prayer / retreat centre   near Liverpool set in acres of beautiful   woodland. This marks a new chapter in the   life of the monastery built by Fr Tom Cullinan   in 1980, through the generosity and support   of the Augustinian sisters at Ince Blundell   Hall. Over the next forty years Fr.Tom lived   the monastic life of a Benedictine monk,   putting Ince Benet at the service of the local   and wider community, offering hospitality   and an atmosphere of prayer, study, conver - sation and guidance to many people of all   faiths and none.     As an evolution of Fr Tom`s life and work,   Ince Benet has been renovated, thanks to   the continued generosity of the Augustinian   sisters and is now available to individuals,   couples and groups of all faiths or none as a   place of prayer, reflection and renewal.     Half an hour from Liverpool and 10 minutes   from the M57 &, M58 motorways, it is ideal for   those looking for somewhere that is easy to   reach, yet has an `away from it all` feel from the   moment you enter the woods. The chapel,   bedrooms and communal areas have been de - signed not just to be set in the beautiful sur - roundings, but to be part of them, allowing   visitors to blend contemplation and conversa - tion according to their needs. Ince Benet is   ideal for retreats or for quiet days of rest and   prayer, for planning and Inset days, and is avail - able for residential stays and away days for in - dividuals and for groups. We welcome people   of all faiths and none.   Image by Ron Davies ICN Since opening, it has been used by individuals,   small groups and groups of 15-20   - Clergy: groups of priests both for planning      days and for overnight stays   - Parish groups: retreat days   - Schools: Inset days for staff   - Individuals: both for quiet days and short      stays of quiet, rest and prayer   - small groups: using the meeting room for      planning days.   For more information go to    www.incebenet.co.uk One year on from the invasion of Ukraine by   Russian forces on 24 February 2022, Ukrainian   Photographer, Misha Vavylyuk, shares pictures   from the last 12 months in a moving and   powerful online exhibition.     Through his photos, Misha, who works for the   international charity Mission Without Borders   in Ukraine, hopes that they will show the world   what his country people have been going   through this past year. “,My hope is that these   pictures will make people feel closer to us. The   enemy is dreadful and enormously big and its   intentions are cruel. We really need support of   the world and I hope that the world will not   turn its face from us,”, he said.   Ukrainian p h otograp h er documents  a year of t h e   war in powerful p h oto ex h ibition  Mykola Bogdanets is Mission Without Borders   Ukraine Country Director. He said, “,I have seen   the devastation first-hand. Misha’,s photos are   a snapshot of the many hundreds of villages,   towns and cities destroyed by Russia. My   prayer is that the war will end soon, and we can   help our people rebuild their lives. My   colleagues are supporting their neighbours in   so many different ways, but much more is   needed.”,     Mission Without Borders UK Country Director,   John Chamberlain, said, “,Misha’,s pictures show   the impact of the devastation this war is having   on the lives of millions of Ukrainians. Mission   Without Borders Ukrainian staff and   volunteers have been working in Ukraine for   over thirty years, providing love and care   through action and practical support and   emergency aid. I hope that through this   exhibition and the wider One Year At War   Appeal campaign, people will get a glimpse of   the dramatic impact this conflict has had on   individual lives and find ways to support our   work.”,   To mark One Year At War in Ukraine Mission   Without Borders (MWB) is asking for help in   three very direct ways –,     1. Pray –, Seeking support in prayer from   individuals, churches and Christian groups.   MWB is inviting people to use a brand new   resource booklet “,Reflections on Ukraine”, and   the prayer on the inside back page in services,   fellowship meetings and individual devotions   on Sunday 26th February. Visit   www.mwbuk.org for more information.       2. Share –, Inviting people to pause and reflect   on the impact of the war. People can go to   MWB’,s moving and powerful online photo   exhibition of pictures taken by Ukrainian   photographer, Misha Vavylyuk, which bring   A Mission Without Borders summer camp held in Voloshky, Ukraine, provided some much   needed fun for children whose parents are serving on the front line, in the army, police,   fire service and rescue units. Some of their parents had already been killed. Kateryna and Sasha’,s father was killed by a missile in August 2022. Sasha’,s mother   explains, “,Sometimes he acts as though his father is still here. He’,ll sometimes ask the   others to be quiet because father is sleeping.”, mwbuk.org Misha’,s photos are a   snapshot of the many   hundreds of villages,   towns and cities     destroyed by Russia home the   devastation of war in   individual lives. Scan   this code below with   your phone or go to   “,One Year At War”, at   our website   www.mwbuk.org       3. Support –, Help MWB’,s Emergency Response   Appeal for Ukraine by donating. £,15 will enable   the charity to deliver one essential emergency   parcel of food with items such as pasta, rice,   tinned meat and vegetables. A gift of £,30 will   enable MWB to deliver two parcels, the second   with hygiene items such as soap, washing   powder and toothpaste.  
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 Page 6.  The Catholic Post.  March 2023.  Cat h olic sc h ool pupils over 20%   more diverse t h an England   national average , new survey      Pupils in Catholic schools and academies are   significantly more diverse than the England av - erage, according to the latest data.        Overall, 44% of pupils at Catholic state-funded   primaries and secondaries are from an ethnic   minority background, compared to 36%   nationally.          A total of 11.4% of the 820,994 pupils in   England’,s 2,090 Catholic schools and   academies are either Black or Black British,   compared to 5.8% nationally. The percentage   of black teachers is also slightly higher, at 2.6%,   above a national average of 2.4%.        There are more than three times the   proportion of White Irish pupils (1%) than in   other state-funded schools and academies   (0.3%).         Sixty per cent of pupils in Catholic schools and   academies are Catholic, as are just under half   of the 47,662 teachers employed. Of the   316,070 non-Catholic pupils, just under half are   from other Christian denominations. The   largest non-Christian religion represented is   Islam, with more than 34,000 Muslim pupils.         Only 0.03% of all pupils, or just 277 of them, in   Catholic schools across England are withdrawn   from acts of collective worship such as Mass   and prayers in assemblies.     The figures come from the annual census of   Catholic schools and academies conducted by   the Catholic Education Service (CES), released   this week. The CES acts on behalf of the   Catholic Bishops` Conference and has   supported Catholic education since 1847.          Paul Barber, CES Director, said: “,Catholic   schools have led the way on diversity since the   nineteenth century, when many were   established to meet the needs of immigrants   from Ireland.         “,Today they outperform national GCSE   averages for English and Maths by five   percentage points, with more pupils from the   most deprived areas, and from ethnic   minorities. Parents and pupils of other faiths   and none rightly value this success and the   distinctive, all-inclusive ethos of Catholic   education.”,          Due to a 50% admissions cap for new religious   schools, only two new Catholic ones have been   built in England since 2010. The cap means a   new Catholic school could be put in the   position of turning away a pupil for being a   Catholic, which is against canon law.         Catholic schools continue to convert into   becoming Catholic academies, with a 17%   increase in the past year. There are now 814   Catholic academies in England, run by 77 multi- academy trusts.         Altogether, Catholic schools and academies   make up 9% of the national total of the state- funded sector, making the Catholic Church the   biggest provider of secondary education and   the second-largest provider of primary   education overall.  Catholic schools continue   to be more diverse                           than the England                             average whilst   outperforming national   GCSE averages  for         English and Maths Ordination of   Fr Marc Pitson   Fr Marc Pitson was ordained to the Sacred   Priesthood at Leeds Cathedral on Saturday   28th January by Bishop Marcus.     Fr Marc is a former student of Leeds Trinity   University and the Venerable English College   in Rome. Following his ordination to the   Diaconate last year he has been assisting in   the parish of St John Mary Vianney, in Leeds,   and it was here that he said his first Mass, in   the Immaculate Heart of Mary Church,   Moortown, Leeds on Sunday 29th January.     Please pray for Fr Marc in the coming   weeks as he begins his priestly ministry.    Diocese of Leeds CES Mgr P h ilip Moger   says farewell to   Walsing h am   Bishop Peter Collins and Bishop Emeritus Alan   Hopes joined Mgr Philip Moger as he   celebrated his last Mass as Rector of the   National Catholic Shrine in Walsingham on   Sunday 5 February. Mgr Moger is now Auxiliary   Bishop-Elect for the Archdiocese of Southwark   and is preparing to take up his new   responsibilities.     He came to Walsingham in September 2020,   for a five-year-appointment, but the plan   changed when Pope Francis decided last   November on his appointment to the   Archdiocese of Southwark.     ",Leaving Our Lady`s National Shrine to   become a Bishop wasn`t part of my plans,",   writes Mgr Philip, ",but then, doesn`t Our Lady   of Walsingham teach us always to be open to   the new thing God might want us to do? Of   course, what God asked of her was unique,   beyond compare, and of vital importance, but,   doesn`t God ask of us each day to do things -   however small - to help build his kingdom, and   give glory to His name? None of us can say   that we`re too small or insignificant to play a   part in God`s plan. And if we don`t, who will?",     Speaking of his move further south, Bishop   Peter said: ",I wish to express sincere gratitude   to Mgr Philip Moger, Auxiliary Bishop-Elect for   the Archdiocese of Southwark, as he prepares   to conclude his tenure as Rector of the   Catholic National Shrine and Basilica of Our   Lady in Walsingham.     ",Mgr Moger has served as Rector for the past   three years, moving to Walsingham from his   home diocese of Leeds. Alongside his diocesan   duties, Monsignor Moger has been a most   faithful and talented servant of the Catholic   Church in England and Wales for many years,   contributing greatly on the national level to the   liturgical and spiritual wellbeing of the Church.   rcdea.org.uk Mgr Moger leaves Walsingham to take up his new position as   Auxiliary Bishop-Elect for the Archdiocese of Southwark ",On behalf of the Diocese of East Anglia, I offer   thanksgiving for the immense contribution of   Mgr Moger to the ongoing development of the   National Shrine and its mission. We note, in   particular, the recent decision to designate the   celebration of Our Lady of Walsingham as a   National Feast in England. Bishop-Elect Philip   has ever been, and will ever be, a true and most   caring Pastor of the Flock.     ",Whilst we are sad to see him leave the sacred   precincts of Walsingham, we entrust him with   great confidence into the realm of his future   episcopal ministry. Our Holy Father Pope   Francis, as Vicar of Christ, has chosen Fr Philip   to assist Archbishop Wilson in the vineyard of   South London and Kent. We offer Bishop-Elect   Philip the firm assurance of our prayers during   these days of transition, and we entrust his   future ministry to the loving embrace of Our   Lady of Walsingham.",
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Page 7

 The Catholic Post. March 2023. Page 7. Notting h am Cat h edral lig h ts up t h e nig h t   The Friends of Nottingham Cathedral   The stunning arches and chapels were illuminated               with beautiful colours, highlighting the depths and   heights of this Gothic Revival build The Catholic Cathedral of St Barnabas joined   the `Nottingham Light Night` trail for the first   time this year, offering visitors an immersive   light and sound experience which showcased   the beauty of this AWN Pugin gem. As part of   this popular after dark festival, now in its 15th   year, the Cathedral welcomed nearly 2000   visitors over the evenings of the 3-4th   February, with many visitors having never   visited the Cathedral before.     An annual fixture on the Nottingham scene,   Light Night offers many immersive and   interactive light-based installations,   performances and activities across the city.   The event aims to offer high quality art within   the city, encourage residents to see the city in   a different light and open buildings which may   usually be inaccessible at night. Responding to   this brief, `The Friends of the Cathedral` in   collaboration with Cathedral parishioners and   the Cathedral music department, found itself   on the official app, map and trail with the   promise of a `Gothic Extravaganza` for visitors.   A simple yet spectacular light installation and   experience was offered to visitors, highlighting   the beauty of this Pugin masterpiece. The   stunning arches and chapels were illuminated   with beautiful colours, highlighting the depths   and heights of this Gothic Revival build. There   were gasps of joy as newcomers walked   Image by Francesca Rachel Hyde   through this captivating experience and those   familiar with the Cathedral commented on   how the lighting had moved the space from   being two-dimensional to something much   more three dimensional. Throughout the   evening visitors were treated to choral and   organ performances, with a number of visitors   commenting that the music really completed   the experience for them. As visitors passed the   Sanctuary on their way out, they were offered   the opportunity to light a candle- on Saturday   evening, more than 500 candles were aglow   on the Sanctuary steps. Many were visibly   moved by the beauty and splendour of what a   number of visitors called a `hidden gem` in the   city and volunteers were encouraged to do   more to share and showcase it.     The evening provided an opportunity to share   something of the history of the Cathedral and   the ambitious plans to `Restore Pugin` to the   east-end chapels and ambulatories, thanks to   a generous grant from the National Lottery   Heritage Fund. Light Night was an opportunity   to begin to open the Cathedral doors to even   more people in the City and further afield,   letting them know this precious sacred space   is open and accessible to all. The Cathedral is   an important part of Nottingham`s story and it   wants to be an important part of people`s                     lives across the City, County and region,   World c h ampion darts player  Mic h ael Smit h   trains at St helens paris h  club   Earlier this year Michael Smith from St   Helens, hit the headlines after winning the   PDC World Darts Championship title at   London’,s Alexandra Palace, a title he   clinched thanks to his daily training at one   of the Archdiocese of Liverpool’,s parish   centres - St Anne and Blessed Dominic in   Sutton.      Michael’,s mum Sandra Woods has been the   manager of the centre since 2011, and when   he is not away competing, Michael can be   found at the centre training.      He said: “,I come here when the club is   closed to practice, I do the school run and   then train for about four hours a day before   picking my two boys up on the way home. I   don’,t have a dart board at home as I want   to keep work and home separate, so the   club is where I do all of my training.”,     Sandra said: “,It’,s such a great opportunity for   local people to come and see the trophy, we   have had lots of interest and it’,s lovely to see   so many people, including children coming   through the doors to see it.     “,I am so proud of Michael, but I’,m proud of all   of my children and it’,s not just the darts that   makes me proud of him. During Covid he   donated thousands of pounds worth of food   to nurses at St Helens and Whiston Hospital   and I’,m incredibly proud of that.”,     Due to her work commitments at the centre,   Sandra doesn’,t go to watch Michael play live,   but watches the matches on TV at the centre.   She added: “,When Michael won the world   championship, the club was packed with   family, friends and regular customers - it was a   great atmosphere. However, it cost me £,150 as   I bought everyone a drink when he won!!”,     liverpoolcatholic.org.uk   When he is not away competing, Michael can be     found at the centre training It is no surprise that the club has two darts   teams who meet weekly. Sandra said: “,We have   lots of activities on at the centre including   darts, dominoes teams, chess club, snooker   teams, pensioner bingo and baby sensory   classes. The Police hold a drop in clinic for local   people to help them feel safe in their   community. We host functions from funerals   and weddings to birthdays, christenings and   children’,s parties.     “,The centre also is a warm and cosy hub every   Tuesday between 1-3.30pm welcoming anyone   to come to spend time at the parish centre to   keep warm and make new friends in a safe   space.     “,We are proud to be a hub of the community   and I love seeing people benefit from the   centre. There is a young boy from Ukraine who   comes along to our chess club and it is so   lovely to see him settling into a new   community and getting involved in something   he loves doing.”,     Family is at the heart of St Anne and Blessed   Dominic’,s, Sandra who has worked for the   archdiocese for 25 years, started work at Our   Lady’,s club in St Helens before it closed as   her two brothers were the manager and   assistant manager and her sister managed   St Joseph’,s club. Sandra started as a cleaner   then as bar staff before working her way to   management. Sandra’,s partner Ian is the   assistant manager at St Anne and Blessed   Dominic, daughter Claire is bar staff and   Michael has made a few rare appearances   behind the bar to help his mum out. offering a place of peace, beauty and   sanctuary amidst an often busy and frenetic   urban life. The weekend has certainly set the   bar high in terms of future events the Friends,   Cathedral and Diocese have planned this   coming year!
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Page 8

 Carbon Neutral  Church Heating At last an electric heating system that warms  the church and the congregation comfortably,  not just hot heads and cold feet!    The new  ChurchEcoMiser  system is designed  to operate in the same way as a traditional  heating system, but without the hassle. Contact ChurchEcoMiser  for a free on site survey Email: chris@churchecomiser.co.uk  kim@churchecomiser.co.uk   Web: churchecomiser.co.uk   Tel: 01706 411189    Mobile: 07770 621 158 No boiler or fl,ues      Virtually no maintenance      Silent in operation      Warms the people and helps protect the fabric      Sleek in appearance      Intelligent optimising controls    CLEANER GREENER CLEANER GREENER   EFFICIENT ELECTRIC HEATING SYSTEMS FOR CHURCHES Page 8.  The Catholic Post.  March 2023.  Letters to the Editor All correspondence to Letters to the Editor to be sent by post to   Bellcourt  Ltd, N2 Blois Meadow Business Centre, Steeple Bumpstead, Haverhill, Suffolk,   CB9 7BN  or via e-mail to johnclwson@icloud.com and must give a contact name and   place of residence. Anonymous correspondence will not be considered for publication.  Dear Editor     It is a real treat to have a Catholic paper once   again.  I was unaware you are now celebrating   your 12 months publication of this wonderful   paper.  Congratulations and best wishes for the   future.  We need it so much.     Mary McGogh     Dear Editor       With the Christian churches having more or less   exhausted the topics of gender and sexuality,   these also now ceasing to grip the public interest,   is it not time for them to explore and oversee the   more important areas of modern life, notably   motoring lifestyles?       My suggestion is that they should now establish   a bishop of road safety, whose job it would be to   look at life and death on our roads. In recent   times, around 1,700 people have been killed on   Britain’,s roads every year, over 50 of them   children.       Some 600 elderly folk are killed annually. About   430 pedestrians perish nationwide. On average   around 70 people die in “,hit and run”, tragedies,   all of these avoidable. In London, over 50   pedestrians die annually on local roads.       A bishop of road safety would have his or her   work cut out dealing with themes like grief,   injustice, indifference and the woeful culture of   speed. Perhaps a good start-up will be to   determine the arcane legal difference between   dangerous driving and careless driving?       Antony Porter, London     Dear Editor     I recently watched an interview with a Norbertine   Priest on the Journey Home Programme on   EWTN.     The Priest, Fr Sebastian Walshe, made the   suggestion that we should all make a return visit   to the Church in which we were Baptised as   infants. He suggested a pilgrimage to the actual   Font that was used.     At the Font we should quietly renew our   Baptismal Promises. A recommitment to our   Faith as adults, reflecting on, and being open to   the words of Saint John the Baptist, “, He will   baptise you with the Holy Spirit and fire.”,     I think this is a wonderful idea, and should be   encouraged, perhaps taking the opportunity of   Confession also.      However, a visit to our Cathedral Font with the   desire of a Pilgrim on our Journey of Faith would   be equal I’,m sure.     Name and address supplied     Dear Editor     The article on Papal Nuncio to GB In the January   edition of The Catholic Post been more   interesting for me had you included information   on the position of Papal Nuncio and what he   does, where he lives who he is responsible to etc.     Also the prefect of the Dicastery for the Eastern   Churches.  I realize most people know this but for   those of us who don`t it would be educational and   interesting.     God Bless     Penny Kain   YOUR PEST,  OUR PROBLEM. 
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 Frank Goulding For all your advertising    requirements please contact    Natasha on   01440 730399   Natasha@cathcom.org As we start Lent this year we will hardly   need reminding that 12 months have   passed since the conflict in Ukraine invoked   outrage and dismay to all who pray for   peace.     The Second World War left Europe needing   great healing, no one could know what the   invasion on the early hours of February 24th   2022 would lead to. With the aid of modern   technology and 24 hour news coverage we   are well informed of the devastation and   the bravery that followed after those early   missiles began to hit Kyiv.     I do wonder what our young people still at   school will make of all these tragic events.   In the 1950’,s the Primary and Secondary   Modern schools I attended never gave any   time to the then recent war let alone   allowing their pupils to ask questions.     When I started in 1960 to work in industry a   number of colleagues then in middle age   had been on active service during the 1939- 45 conflict. With just two exception they did   not wish to recall the full horrors they had   witnessed. These 2 appalling instances I   choose not to repeat but can never forget   what they told me.     Later this year on December 10th there is   another anniversary. On this date it will be 75   years since the United Nations General   Assembly voted in favour of the Universal   Declaration of Human Rights. Forty Eight   members voted for the Declaration and eight   abstained in 1948. The abstention 8 included   the USSR and five of its allies, South Africa and   Saudi Arabia.     Well we all know words can sometimes come   easy and sadly actions often take much longer.   Most of the articles agreed in 1948 would have   been influenced by the truly horrendous   experience of the Second World War, We   should not forget that the economic   circumstances of the 1930’,s with mass   unemployment and poverty may well have   influenced the opinions of the 1948 gathering.     Some of the Declaration is fairly straight   forward. In the preamble to the thirty Articles   we read “,of the inherent dignity and equal   rights of all members of the human family   being the foundation of all freedom, justice   and peace.”, In Article I we read “,All human   beings are born free and equal in dignity   and rights”, In Article 3 we further read,   “,Everyone has the right to life, liberty and   security of person.”, Finally in Article 7 we   read, “,All are equal before the law.”,     Despite the enormous technical progress   since 1948 we surely need to at least reflect   on the relevance of the U.N. Declaration   today.     I cannot recall how the Church prepared for   Lent in 1948 but we have much to be   grateful from all missionary activity over the   last 75 years.      The problems of Europe coincide with the   growth of the Church in so many areas of   our world as highlighted by the recent visit   of Pope Francis to sub-Saharan Africa.     Human rights were high on his agenda as   they must be on ours     The Catholic Post.  March 2023. Page 9. OUR LADY QUEEN   OF  HEAVEN  CATHOLIC   PRIMARY SCHOOL Hare Lane, Langley Green,   Crawley  RH11 7PZ     Headteacher   Tobias Melia   Telephone 01293 526057    Beer Never Stops! Tiny but Mig h ty   Right to Life A mum from Swindon, whose son was born 11   weeks early, has started a charity to help other   parents of prematurely-born babies.     Chloe Kirwan, 34, said “,I gave birth in January   of last year and my son was 11 weeks early and   he only weighed 895g, which is of course much   lower than normal”,.     Thankfully, despite being born so early, George   was okay, but Chloe felt that she didn’,t get   enough support as a parent. Chloe wanted to   bring some home comforts to other parents in   a similar situation so she set up a small charity   to help.     “,I set Tiny But Mighty up to help others and    started with providing care packages”,, she told   our reporter.     “,We have grown substantially since and we are   now holding our first coffee morning for   parents to attend”,.     “,We are going to be launching care packages   for parents who end up on the children’,s ward   later this year”,.     “,These will include a reusable coffee cup, a   water bottle, a notepad, a pen, fluffy socks, a   puzzle book, mini toiletries, beauty face masks,   snacks and hot chocolate”,.   “,We truly believe that selfcare is not selfish   when you are going through this situation”,, she   added.     One year on, Chloe and her husband Nick’,s son   George is doing well.     “,He is thriving now and you’,d never know that   he was premature. He has beaten all the odds”,,   Chloe said.     Almost four out of five babies born   prematurely between 22 and 28 weeks   gestation survive to discharge from the   hospital according to recent research.     A study, ‘,Mortality, In-Hospital Morbidity, Care   Practices, and 2-Year Outcomes for Extremely   Preterm Infants in the US, 2013-2018’,, by Dr   Edward F Bell of the University of Iowa, found   that from 2013 to 2018, with infants born   between 22 and 28 weeks gestation, “,survival   New charity set up to               help the parents of                           premature babies to discharge occurred in 78.3% and was   significantly improved compared with a   historical rate of 76.0% among infants born in   2008-2012”,.     The study, which took place between 2013 and   2018, assessed 10,877 infants born between 22   and 28 weeks gestation in 19 academic medical   centres across the US.     This means that almost four out of five   extremely premature babies survived and were   able to be assessed at 22-26 months corrected   age (22-26 months from their due date) for a   number of health and functional outcomes.     Right To Life UK spokesperson Catherine   Robinson said “,The outcomes for premature   babies are improving all the time and it is   wonderful to hear that baby George has gone   home despite the odds being stacked against   him”,.   Donate now at   www.reachfoundationuk.org   Your money goes a long way!   Reach Foundation UK - charity no: 1171521
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Page 10

 Page 10.  The Catholic Post. March 2023.  Devotion to Our Lady of Fernyhalgh goes back   through the ages to the 11th century. Since the   Reformation a devotion to Our Lady as Queen   of Martyrs has developed, which is reflected at   Ladyewell in the reliquary, the presence of the   Burgess Altar and the chapel of the English   Martyrs. There has never been an apparition of   Our Blessed Lady at Fernyhalgh just continued   prayer and petition over seven centuries. Even   during penal times apart from a period of five   years, the shrine attracted pilgrims and was the   focus of local Catholic prayer.  A secluded spot,   only 4 miles from the centre of Preston and in   close proximity to a very busy motorway,   surrounded on three sides by ancient and   protected woodland, Fernyhalgh has retained   it tranquil and sylvan charm.     The name Fernyhalgh is thought by some   historians to mean Ancient Shrine. Professor   E.J.Popham suggests that the place was called   “,ancient shrine”, by Anglo Saxons because on   this site was a shrine which even in their day   was considered ancient, though this seems a   tenuous link. The more feasible explanation is   that of etymologist John Bannister who   maintains “,the name means a watery meadow   abounding in ferns.”, He goes on to say “,halgh   bears a similar meaning to the first syllable of   Haighton, and is interchangeable with haugh”,.   “,Fernig halth,”, the Old English for “,a field with   ferns”, would appear to confirm that this is the   more likely meaning.     The name Ladyewell, spelt originally Ladye   Well, appears to have developed following the   rebuilding of the present house in 1685. There   was another Ladywell in the centre of Preston,   Shrines in England which has long ceased to exist, the site of an   old friary is remembered by the present day   Ladyewell Street.     Local people tend to refer to Our Lady of   Fernyhalgh, which is correct, but over the years   the term Ladyewell has become used by those   who visit particularly from away. In the writings   of Fr Christopher Tuttell (alias Blacklow) the   house and chapel was referred to as Ladyewell   House, which is the case today.     Pilgrims continue to make their way to this   beautiful shrine where they intercede to Our   Blessed Lady, bring their petitions and leave   unburdened and spiritually renewed.     Fernyhalgh is the Diocesan Shrine of Lancaster   and encompasses the beautiful church of St   Mary and Ladyewell House and grounds, which   is the site of the well. The main pilgrimage   season tends to run from May to the end of   October, during which time the dioceses of   Lancaster, Liverpool and Salford hold their   annual pilgrimages to Ladyewell, pilgrims   attend in large numbers and are usually led by   the Archbishop or Bishop of the visiting group.   The devotion at Ladyewell is ecumenical,   attracting members of other Faiths. The   Anglican community come all year round and   usually hold a large pilgrimage at the   beginning of June (Forward in Faith and the   Society of Mary). Members of the Orthodox   churches also visit and hold their services. The   Kerala Indians living in this part of Lancashire   hold a service each month in their own   vernacular. They have a great devotion to Our   Blessed Lady and never a day goes by without   members of this Catholic Indian community   visiting. They pray often for the blessing of   children and come back to give thanks usually   on the way home from the maternity ward.   Travelling families also visit Ladyewell, its   proximity to the motorway enables them to   call frequently en route often from Ireland,   their names and faces are very familiar to us.   Pilgrims come daily summer and winter   whatever the weather. Even when the house is   closed they come and intercede at the shrine,   which is always open. Large pilgrimages   usually start with Mass at St Mary’,s and then   process down to Ladyewell either with the   Blessed Sacrament or reciting the rosary. It is   a moving and inspiring sight to see so many of   the faithful, young, old and very often infirm    ladyewellshrine.co.uk Even during penal times   apart from a period of                   five years, the shrine   attracted pilgrims and               was the focus of local   Catholic prayer gathering to honour the Mother of God in this   particular way. Many of them recall being   brought as children by their parents and   recount of prayers answered and favours   granted.     Local pilgrims remember coming as part of   their own annual church pilgrimage, walking   from Preston in procession to congregate and   give homage to Our Blessed Lady of   Fernyhalgh. Many parish groups of lay   ministries and Catholic associations visit and   have their own days of retreat and devotions.   Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament and the   sacrament of Reconciliation is an important   feature of pilgrimage days enabling  pilgrims   to obtain the Spiritual rewards that they seek,   they also take away with them water from the   well and use it in invocation to Our Blessed   Lady who inspires great devotion. “,To Jesus   through Mary”, is so relevant at the shrine   where those who may have strayed from their   Faith often find the courage with the help of   Our Lady to benefit from the peace of the   sacrament of Reconciliation, which is available   on request.   Our Lady of Fernyhalgh   For further information visit   ladyewellshrine.co.uk
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Page 11

 The Catholic Post.  March 2023. Page 11. Since 1955, the Carmelite Shrine of Saint Jude has been dedicated to  the Apostle of Hope. Pilgrims find it to be a place of prayer, peace, and  hope. All are welcome.     The Shrine also sends out a newsletter four times a year called  ‘,Carmelite News’, for pilgrims near and far. ‘,Carmelite News’, includes  reflections, prayers, novenas, details of our Guild and Three Societies  (Saint Jude, Little Flower, and Infant of Prague), news on the British  Province and Carmelites around the world –, plus much more. All are  welcome to receive.     Please visit our website: www.stjudeshrine.org.uk/newsletter, or write  to: Carmelite Friars, PO Box 289, FAVERSHAM, Kent, ME13 3BZ,    or call: 01795 539 214 to find out more and/or to receive the newsletter. Westminster c h urc h es o ff, er Warm   Spaces and warmer welcomes   Warm Spaces established by churches are   becoming places for companionship in diverse   communities across the diocese of   Westminster.     Caritas Westminster has been supporting a   number of these Warm Spaces, as a way to   provide people who have been struggling to   heat their homes this winter with a place to go   for warmth, a hot drink and often a meal too.   But in a recent survey the charity discovered   that the Warm Spaces have also become   places of friendship, community and   companionship.     For example, in the parish of St Bartholomew,   St Albans, asylum seekers from different   cultures have come together to cook soup,   and Fr Richard Nesbitt from Our Lady of   Lourdes in White City reported that their warm   space has provided a safe and creative space   for a variety of young families.     Fr Nesbitt described the scene at their Warm   Space one week: ",a local Syrian father was   teaching his two young sons to play chess on   one table, while a Ukrainian family were   preparing a variety of pancake fillings with an   Italian family on the next table, while the parish   priest was playing dominoes with a Muslim   mother and daughter at another table! All to   the joyful background noise of an ecstatic   group of children aged 5-8 playing their own   version of football in the main part of the hall!   There wasn`t a mobile phone or other device   in sight!",   Caritas Westminster has seen this type of   companionship being repeated across the   diocese. People have come together across   cultures and generations, cooking, making   friends, helping each other, celebrating   Christmas and at least one birthday.     At St Paul the Apostle in Wood Green, where   the Society of St Vincent De Paul conference   have set up a Warm Space, people who had   never met before are making friends and   supporting each other. They reported that   ",Glen, a parishioner and a wheelchair user, has   come every week, regardless of the weather.   His journey is not easy as he has quite a   distance to travel by bus, but every   Wednesday, shortly after opening time, he is   there. Glen says he enjoys the company and   that his Warm Space visit gives him a focus for   his day. `Ian` joined us on our third week. He   was just passing, saw the sign and popped in.   At first, he was very reserved, but now he joins   in with things, and keeps a quiet eye on Glen..",   (names have been changed to protect   identities).     Nineteen parishes and one community project   have set up Warm Spaces in the diocese and   most have received a small grant from Caritas,   to go towards the heating, refreshments and   other costs associated with their warm space.   Fr Howard James from Bow explained what a   huge difference this money has made: “,When   we got the grant from Caritas we were grateful.   I had been using my own resources to make   soup for parish lunches on Fridays in Lent…,   when Lent ended I told them that we would do   it again in Lent 2023…, So, imagine the joy when   through your donation we were able to start   again, four months early! Everyone was   grateful, and the joy of being with people is   good. The `warmers` get to spend time   together - many of them live alone. And it   strengthens my ministry to see people at ease   and happy to be with each other.",     Our Lady of the Rosary in Staines is a parish   which has extended an existing social activity   - in their case, their Gresham Junction   community café,, to be a warm space.   According to Parish Priest Fr Philip Dyer-Perry:   ",Guests are eager to invite not just friends, but   others who they feel would benefit from   spending time here. At first, we attracted   elderly parishioners, but the net has spread   wider and wider - with a great cross-section of   the local community dropping in... An effective   and highly motivated team of coordinators   means the sessions run well - including during   school holiday times when everything else   tends to stop.",     Sr Silvana Dallanegra, who has been managing   Caritas Westminster`s support for these warm   spaces, said: ",It seems as though the needs   being met aren`t only for physical warmth, but   for the warmth which comes from   ICN The Warm Space initiative began as a means of                 helping people, many of them already struggling   financially, get through a cold winter companionship and good company. And it`s so   lovely that this is happening, and able to   happen again, after the worst of Covid.",     The Warm Space initiative began as a means   of helping people, many of them already   struggling financially, get through a cold   winter. However, as we inch our way towards   spring, and the need for physical warmth   lessens, the need for human warmth and   hospitality continues. Some parishes have told   Caritas Westminster that they would like to   continue offering this space, as a time for   socialising and building up the community.   Warm Spaces, born out of an urgent physical   need, may yet leave a very positive legacy.     Louise Cook Warm Space at St Paul the Apostle,                       Wood Green T h e Little Way of Love   To commemorate 25 years since St Thé,rè,se   of Lisieux was made a Doctor of the   Universal Church, the Sisters of Dolgellau   Carmel have produced a twenty minute film   about her Little Way of Love. The Little Way   is essentially about living a confident,   trusting relationship with God our Father,   expecting all things from His goodness, with   the loving surrender of a little child. Like little   children Thé,rè,se wants us to be poor,   humble, trusting, simple and grateful. She   encourages us to make little acts of sacrifice   and love - anything that costs us - simply to   please Jesus. It means embracing your   weakness as God`s opportunity to manifest   His mercy. In weakness we realise we cannot   do anything on our own, and it is this that   prompts us to unite ourselves to Jesus and   ask him to do everything in and through us.   This film, set in the Carmel in London, gives   an insight into cloistered Carmelite life, and   a way of holiness that can be practised by   anyone in any walk of life. There are further   resources on Prayer from the Carmelite   Saints, on Discernment and the Holy Spirit   at: http://carmel-dolgellau.uk
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Page 12

 Page 12.  The Catholic Post.  March 2023.  Punitive World   Bank conditions   undermining   farmers rig h ts    A campaign has been launched in opposition   to the World Bank’,s conditions on country   loans, which lead to legislation that   undermines farmers rights to seeds.         The conditions are placed on financing for   governments in the Global South. Loans can   include demands for seed laws that push   farmers towards buying seeds from a handful   of giant corporations.         These seed laws can prevent small-scale   farmers from using their own seeds or sharing   seeds amongst themselves, a practice that has   existed successfully for generations.        To support small-scale farmers from across   the world, leading international aid agency   CAFOD has launched a campaign calling on   people to write to the UK’,s representative at   the World Bank, Vel Gnanendran, to urge him   to end this damaging practice.     Dario Kenner, a policy lead at CAFOD said:   “,The World Bank’,s harsh conditions are   undermining small-scale farmers’, ability to   grow what they want, while helping big   business increase their market share and line   their pockets.     “,Tackling food insecurity must prioritise   supporting farmers, not just agribusiness   corporations who make huge profits. The only   way we will begin to tackle the global food   crisis is by giving back control to small-scale   farmers, so they can use the seeds they sow   rather than being pushed to buy seeds from   faceless corporations.”,         The campaign has been supported by over   1,600 people already, with over 1,000 emailing   Vel Gnanendran in just 24 hours.        The World Bank has pushed seed laws in   country after country, pursuing a development   model that benefits private companies over   the people producing and consuming the food.   In Africa in the last 10 years, the World Bank   has placed conditions on financing to Central   African Republic, Chad, Ghana, Sierra Leone,   Liberia, Mozambique, Nigeria and Niger   requiring implementation of seed regulations.         These laws have opened up the seeds and   fertiliser markets to agribusinesses, but the   World Bank cannot convincingly show that   increasing private sector control of seed supply   chains has an overall positive long-term impact   on reducing poverty and food insecurity.         Instead, farmers are struggling to access the   diverse range of seeds they need to combat   the effects of climate change and grow   nutritious foods for their families.         There are alternatives to the World Bank   approach, which work for small-scale farmers   and for local communities.      CAFOD supports Salina, a small farmer in   Bangladesh.    For the past two years Salina has been able to   grow better quality crops by getting her seeds   Loans can include   demands for seed laws   that push farmers       towards buying seeds     from a handful of giant   corporations CAFOD Rev/Sr/Mr/Mrs/Miss:  ........................................................ Address:  ....................................... ................................ ............................................................................................................................  Po stcode:  ................................... I enclose   £,100   £,50   £,25   Other £, ............  to help ACN’,s Earthquake Appeal Please send me information about gi昀, aiding my donation and/or  setting up a regular gi昀,   I enclose a cheque to Aid to the Church in Need  OR  please debit my VISA/MasterCard/Amex/Maestro                                       Expiry Date:      /         Valid From Date:      /     Signature strip code   (last block of digits) :         Issue No:       (Maestro)    Signature: ...................................................................... Please help the victims of the earthquake in northern Syria –, where ACN is  working with project partners to deliver emergency aid and provide food,  blankets, medicine and shelter for those who have lost everything.  Syria does  not have the infrastructure to cope with this disaster –, so please give  whatever you can a昀,ord!  They need our prayers and support at this time. PLEASE GIVE TODAY:   CALL 0345 646 0110 QUOTING ‘,P2CO’,  OR  VISIT WWW.ACNUK.ORG/E23CP Please photocopy this form if you do not want to cut your copy of the Catholic Post. A23P2CO 0345 646 0110 | www.acnuk.org | acn@acnuk.org Donations can also be given online at www.acnuk.org/e23cp 12-14 Benhill Avenue, Sutton, Surrey SM1 4DA A registered charity in England and Wales (1097984) and in Scotland (SC040748) SCAN ME Earthquake Appeal  from a seed bank. This means she does not   have to pay for the expensive fertiliser   demanded by corporate controlled seeds.   Coupled with the higher price her organic   produce attracts at market, she’,s been able to   provide more for her family.        However, she is acutely aware that being   dependent on buying seeds and fertiliser from   big agribusiness has a big impact on other   farmers in her community: “,I believe the   companies do not care for the farmers. They   are in it for their profits. So, the company seed   is not designed for farming, it is designed for   business. I think seeds and business should not   go together.”,        The CAFOD campaign is calling on the World   Bank to end these damaging practices by:    1.     Putting an end to all policies that limit small   farmers` choice over which seeds they can   access.    2.     Protecting the fundamental rights of small   farmers to save, use, exchange and sell their   God of Creation   Visit for a day, or stay a while   A place of peace, beauty, prayer and  reflection.  We offer retreats, quiet days,  spiritual direction and workshops.   Address: Ashstead Lane, Godalming, Surrey,   GU7 1ST   Website: www.franciscancentre.org.uk   Charity Number: 1199520 Almost 8 years ago, Pope Francis wrote his   encyclical ‘,Laudato Si’,, a letter written to the   whole world, asking for conversion, asking for   us to recognise our relationship with the   created world and each other, asking for us to   hear the cry of the Earth as she writhes in pain   due to our overuse and throwaway culture. In   2022, the film ‘,The Letter’, was released, a time   of encounter between Pope Francis and four   people from across the globe, affected by   climate change, again calling for conversion, a   change of heart, recognising that how we treat   the created world around us, profoundly   impacts not just all the creatures on our   beautiful Earth, but humanity too and   especially the poor. We are one species of   many, living in a world that is deeply   interconnected and interdependent. We do not   hold dominion over all the Earth’,s creatures,   they each relate to God, their Creator   independently of us. We need to engage with   all creatures who must be respected and   protected in their own right, as each has the   same Source as us.     Thomas Berry wrote: ‘,The divine   communicates to us primarily through the   language of the natural world. Not to hear the   natural world is not to hear the divine’,. God   communicates to us through our sacred book   of scripture, the Bible but also through the   sacred book of creation. We can learn much   about God by paying attention to nature, as it   is God’,s fingerprints that are all over it.   Shona Cahill     T: 01483 675575   Email: franciscancentre@ladywell.org.uk        
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Page 13

 The Catholic Post.  March 2023. Page 13. The Cambridge Cornerstone Bible uses the English Standard Version  Catholic Edition. It includes all 73 books of the Bible accepted by the  Catholic Church, in the same order as the Septuagint. The text is a generous size for ease of reading and presented in  paragraph format, with section headings. At the front of the Bible is a  family record section and at the back is a section of maps and plans  depicting the world of the Bible. The Bibles are beautifully produced, printed on India-style paper and  fi,nished with gilt edges for a traditional look. Choose between smooth  and supple faux leather and luxury cowhide. www.cambridge.org/bibles/bible-versions/english- standard-version/esv-ce-cornerstone-text-bible The Cambridge Cornerstone Bible ESV-CE Catholic Edition Black faux leather    978-1-009-08740-7 | £,70.00 Burgundy faux leather   978-1-009-08739-1 | £,70.00 Black cowhide 978-1-009-08738-4 | £,115.00 •,   Complete Catholic Bible •,   ESV-CE translation, approved by the Catholic Bishops •,   British spelling and punctuation they were seeking to arrest him the crowds, because they held prophet. the parable of the wedding  22  , And again Jesus   , spok parables, saying,  ²,  , , “,T of heaven may be co king who gave   , a wedding feast ³,  , and   , sent his servants c  to call tho invited to the wedding feast, bu not come.  ⁴,  , , Again he sent other s ing ‘,Tell those who are invited Ramping Up C h urc h  Disability Inclusion   With a generous grant from Benefact Trust,   disability inclusion charity Through the Roof is   ramping up its ‘,Roofbreaker’, project to triple   the support for disabled people in UK   churches.     Only 5–,10% of disabled people ever hear the   gospel in their lifetime (Lausanne Committee   for World Evangelization). Our Roofbreakers   are local volunteer disability champions who   enable disabled people to encounter God’,s   love. Benefact Trust’,s funding will help   Through the Roof to recruit more Roofbreaker   champions to increase the number of disabled   people supported from 9,000 to 30,000 within   three years.     One Roofbreaker used technology to include   a Deafblind lady who is partially sighted and   uses British Sign Language. It made a huge   difference and the lady responded by saying:    “,I looked at myself as a nobody in the past. I   didn’,t think much of myself because people   didn’,t have much patience with me. But now …,   I’,ve started finding identity which I never had   before…, it’,s helped me totally accept myself for   the first time. You have given me a voice that   a lot of people can understand.”,        Benefact Trust funding will recruit three   Regional Co-ordinators to build up local   Roofbreaker networks across the four nations   of the UK. Funds will also be used to provide   specialist resources and support, equip   disabled Christians to lead training, and   organise events so churches catch the vision   for disability inclusion.   Katie Mobbs, Through the Roof’,s Outreach Co- ordinator who is a wheelchair user, is   passionate about the difference Roofbreakers   are making in churches: “,I think the most   important thing is giving people a place to   belong within church life. We want to see   disabled people welcomed and enabled as part   of the church family. My passion is for disabled   people themselves to be empowered, to see   that the disability that they face can be turned   into a mission opportunity. Thanks to Benefact   Trust’,s support we can multiply the difference   we are making.”,     Chloe Ewen, Grants Officer for Benefact Trust,   said: “,We feel privileged to support Through   the Roof, as they work to make churches and   faith more inclusive for disabled people.   Everybody should feel empowered and have   equal opportunities to thrive. To be able to   support Through the Roof to triple their   support for disabled people is amazing.”,     Benefact Trust is one of the UK`s largest grant- making charities and awarded more than £,23   million to churches, charities and communities   in 2020. Its funds come from its ownership of   the Benefact Group.     Through the Roof trains and equips churches   and other organisations to be inclusive of   people across the whole spectrum of disability.   Their 25th anniversary video on YouTube   (@TTRChangesLives) features Roofbreakers   speaking powerfully of the benefits disabled   people bring to church life.   Find out how your church can be blessed by   the full involvement of disabled people at:   https://www.throughtheroof.org/roofbreakers / or atTTRChangesLives on social media. We feel privileged to support Through the Roof,                                 as they work to make churches and faith more       inclusive for disabled people Support from Roofbreakers overcomes   barriers, such as difficulties reading the   Bible in church Heidi holding her ‘,cardboard testimony’,   showing how Roofbreakers transformed   her life Through the Roof 
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Page 14

 Our Global Community Page 14.  The Catholic Post.  March 2023.  Pope stops to pray before icon of   Our Lady on return to Rome   `Ba h rain Document`  h olds   European launc h  in Rome to   promote interreligious  h armony   US eyewitness: Is t h ere really     no room in t h e inn?   Vatican News Pope prayed to Our Lady   for her maternal   protection during his   Apostolic Journey to DR   Congo and South Sudan Pope Francis made a brief stop at the Basilica   of St Mary Major on Sunday evening, on   returning to Rome from his Apostolic Journey   to South Sudan and the Democratic Republic   of Congo.      The Holy See Press Office report that the Pope   prayed before the ancient icon of Maria Salus   Populi Romani (`Salvation of the Roman   Peoples`), for a short time - to thank Our Lady   for her maternal protection during his   Apostolic Journey to DR Congo and South   Sudan.     This was his 104th visit to Our Lady`s icon. He   had visited the Borghese Chapel in the Papal   Basilica on Monday, ahead of his departure.   Although its origins date back much further,   tradition holds that the icon of Maria Salus   Populi Romani arrived in Rome during the   reign of Pope St Gregory the Great, sometime   around 590 AD.     In 1838, Pope Gregory XVI crowned the icon,   and a century later, Pope Pius XII - during the   Marian year of 1954 - repeated the gesture of   devotion.     In 2018, the Vatican Museums cleaned and   restored the ancient image. Columban Missionaries This year, I interacted             with many migrants and   heard so many stories Cynthia, who serves as the Advocacy   Coordinator for St Columban Mission for   Justice, Peace and Ecology, and is based in El   Paso, Texas, is witnessing first-hand the   manufactured crisis of migrants on the   US/Mexico border. She reports: All of this past   year, I have been going to help at our   Columban migrant projects and other   community shelters here on the border. Doing   the advocacy work is fulfilling and necessary   but at many times it can be frustrating and   slow. I like to go and connect with migrants so   I can be reminded of why all of this work is   important.      This year, I interacted with many migrants and   heard so many stories. Some were more   painful than others, but all are equally moving.   This last week, however, what I have witnessed   has been completely different and heart- breaking. Hundreds of migrants have found   themselves on the streets of both Ciudad   Juá,rez and El Paso. All our shelters are at   capacity. Some local parishes like Sacred Heart   in El Paso even opened their doors to let   families with children sleep. Yet so many   others that cannot find a space end up   sleeping outside in the cold.      It is a tradition here to celebrate the ",Posadas",,   a reenactment of the Holy Family`s journey to   Bethlehem. This year it feels like we are living   that in real life. The last few days I have seen   so many families with small children, single   mothers with children, and pregnant women   needing a place to stay. Our government is not   doing all that it can to give them shelter. Yet   even in the middle of confusion and   uncertainty, so many community members are   volunteering and donating clothes, blankets,   and food. This border community - my   community - continues to show love and   compassion by sharing the little that they have.   Couldn`t the rest of the United States do that   too? Couldn`t politicians and national leaders   agree to restore asylum and establish the   necessary processes to avoid this unnecessary   suffering?      Hundreds of families find themselves on the   journey to what they think will be a safe place.   Migrants and asylum seekers venture on this   dangerous journey to escape violence, poverty,   environmental degradation, and political   unrest. Many travel miles, selling the little that   they have to support their journey north. In   their journey, many are robbed, raped,   kidnapped, and abused, with many even   venturing through the deadly `Darien Gap.`   Confused and with little information they hold   to a dream, a hope, that there will be   something better once they get to the United   States. However, once they arrive they find ",No   Room in the Inn.",      After weeks or months or traveling, they arrive   at the US/Mexico border only to be welcomed   by a 30ft wall with razor wire and law   enforcement agents with guns. The confusion   caused by inhumane policies like Title 42   forces people to take the most desperate   decisions. In the last few weeks, with the hope   that Title 42 would be lifted and they could   lawfully present themselves asking for asylum,   hundreds of families arrived at the US/Mexico   border. In the border community of El Paso   and Ciudad Juarez, where Columbans have   been serving for more than 25 years, the   numbers of migrants arriving daily quickly   overwhelmed all shelters and community   services. For days, thousands of migrants on   both sides of the border have been sleeping on   the streets in the cold. The number of migrants   arriving is expected to continue to increase.     Both the Old and the New Testament reveal   God`s abiding love for migrants (cf. Ex. 22:21,   Lev.19:33-34, Mt. 25:35, Rom. 12:13). Scripture, as   well as our Church`s two-thousand-year   history, tell many heart-breaking stories about   people fleeing from violence, persecution, and   poverty. As the Christmas story remind us,   even Jesus and his family were refugees.      Reflecting on these sacred foundations, the   Catholic Church recognises that people have   the right to migrate to sustain their lives, and   the lives of their families, if they cannot do so   in their country of origin. The migrant`s story   reminds us of a fundamental principle of   Catholic social teaching: that the goods of the   earth are intended to benefit all people. It is   never God`s will that some of God`s children   live in luxury while others have nothing (cf   Caritas in Veritate, 21).      As people of faith, God calls us to live in   solidarity with others, especially with those   who live in poverty or are marginalised.       Pope Francis teaches us, that we have ",an   opportunity to meet Jesus Christ, who   identified himself with the foreigner who has   been accepted or rejected in every age.",   Cynthia Gonzales Following Pope Francis’, Apostolic Journey to   the Kingdom of Bahrain. ‘,The Bahrain   Declaration’, promoting interreligious   dialogue and peace holds its official   European launch at a Gala event in Rome.     The event follows Pope Francis’, historic visit   to the Kingdom of Bahrain in November   2022, where, welcoming the invitation of the   nation’,s authorities and the local Church, he   brought a message of peaceful coexistence   among religions and working together   against war.     The gala dinner of the launching ceremony,   was organized by the King Hamad Global   Centre for Peaceful Coexistence, Bahrain`s   Embassy to Italy in Rome led by H.E.   Ambassador Naser Al Belooshi, and ",This is   Bahrain,", took place on 26 January 2023 at   the Rome Marriot Park Hotel.     The Bahrain Declaration was first launched in   2017 in Los Angeles at a historic event   attended by His Royal Highness Prince Naser   Bin Hamad Al Khalifa and co-sponsored by   the Simon Wiesenthal Centre.     This was followed by a second launch in   2020 in Sã,o Paulo, Brazil, in the presence of   the then President of the Federal Republic of   Brazil.     The launch of this Declaration in Europe   takes place in these times of hardship and   war.     The Declaration carries the directions, objec - tives and messages of His Majesty King   Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, the country’,s   monarch, calling for religious tolerance and   harmony. Deborah Castellano Lubov The launch of this   Declaration in Europe   takes place in these times   of hardship and war
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Page 15

 When Bill Evans and   Win Klein first met at   Durham University in   1955, they not only   found a love that   would last a lifetime   and form the   bedrock of their fam - ily, but also a shared   desire for a faith to   guide them, in their   love for one another, from the shadows of   the past into a more secure future.     They came from very different backgrounds,   but emerging into adult life from a society rav - aged by World War Two, each had spiritual   hopes and queries without certainties. Both   were moved and intrigued by Jesus of   Nazareth, but neither of them claimed to truly   know who He was or to understand Him. Still   searching for an answer, they got married. This   book is about their pursuit of the question, led   by Bill’,s tireless intellect, and about one family   and its journey of faith.     Ruth Evans is a contemplative sister who lives   and writes in the diocese of Shrewsbury. She   owes her adult spiritual formation to the Poor   Clare Order where she lived until the closure   of the Poor Clare Convent at Woodchester in   Who is Jesus? In this   sequel to the widely   acclaimed Jesus of   Nazareth, Pope   Benedict XVI dares   readers to grapple   with the meaning of   Jesus’, life, teaching,   death, and   resurrection.     What happened in the final week of Jesus of   Nazareth’,s earthly life? In Jesus of Nazareth:   Holy Week—,From the Entrance into Jerusalem   to the Resurrection, Pope Benedict takes up   that and other crucial questions. How did the   man whom many hailed as the Messiah come   to be rejected by the leaders of his own   people? Was he a political revolutionary? Who   was responsible for his death: the Romans or   the Jewish authorities, or both? How did Jesus   view his suffering and death? How should we?   Did he establish a Church to carry on his work?   What did he teach about the End of the World?   And most importantly, did Jesus really rise from   the dead?     This is a book for Christians—,Catholics,   Protestants, Orthodox, as well as other   believers and non-believers. Benedict brings to   his study the vast learning of a brilliant scholar,   the passionate searching of a great mind, and   the deep compassion of a pastor’,s heart. In the   end, he dares readers to grapple with the   meaning of Jesus life, teaching, death, and   resurrection. In summary Dr   Treloar’,s book, which   is slightly smaller   than A5 in size is a   beautiful piece of lit - erature that is a ben - eficial read for all   healthcare profes - sionals and those   who know an individ - ual with dementia.      While it is written from a Catholic perspective   the vast majority of the book is highly relevant   to those of all faiths and none. I thoroughly   enjoyed reading the book and will enjoy   referring to it in the future, it has enabled me   to spend some time considering and reflecting   upon the many varied and important practical   and spiritual care elements of caring for and   interacting with a person who has dementia.     Donato Tallo - The Catholic Medical   Quarterly Volume 67 Learn to welcome   peace beyond trials   and to see it as a   limitless gift from   God, through   teaching marked by   the Spirit of St   Benedict.     Trials quickly take   Peace away from us. Does this mean peace of   heart is impossible? No, for Jesus himself   promised it to us. There is peace beyond our   trials, but we do not receive it according to the   way of the world. Fr Bernard Ducruet, through   teaching marked by the Spirit of St Benedict,   leads us to welcome the peace as a limitless   gift of God and the fruit of struggle. The Catholic Post.   March 2023. Page 15. Book Reviews Book Reviews Peace of heart ,    According to            St Benedict   Fr Bernard Ducruet, OSB   £,3.50   CTS Product Code: PA66   Please refer to t h is code w h en ordering   over t h e p h one   ISBN: 9781784697426   www.ctsbooks.org   Dementia -   hope on a Di ffi cult   Journey   By Dr Adrian Treloar   £,9.95   RP Books    Product Code: 1734    ISBN NO:9780852314715    www.rpbooks.co.uk Jesus of Nazaret h  ,   holy Week   Pope Benedict XVI   £,21.99   CTS Product Code: DO840   Please refer to t h is code w h en ordering   over t h e p h one   ISBN: 9781860827075   www.ctsbooks.org   W h at is t h e   Cat h olic Fait h ?    (Pack of 25 Lea fl, ets)   £,9.95   CTS Product Code: LF54   Please refer to t h is code w h en ordering   over t h e p h one   ISBN: 9781860826559   www.ctsbooks.org   This leaflet provides a succinct and masterly   summary of what Catholics believe and the   reasons for their belief. It offers a very accessi - ble introduction to Catholicism for those who   know something –, perhaps very little –, about   it, but who are interested to know more.     It is impossible to summarise the Catholic faith   in a few hundred words. This leaflet will simply   give you an idea of the main areas of Catholic   belief, and perhaps encourage you to look into   some of them more deeply. A succinct and mas - terly summary of   what Catholics be - lieve and the rea - sons for their belief,   offering a very ac - cessible introduction   to Catholicism for   those who are inter - ested to know more.     Time To Delay                         No Longer   A Searc h  for Fait h  and Love   Bill and Win Evans Edited by Rut h  Evans   £,20.00   ISBN: 978 0 85244 927 1   www.gracewing.co.uk   Lig h ts for t h e Pat h   Jo h n Sullivan,    ,24.99   www.veritasbooksonline.com   ISBN978 1 80097 026 7   It is a very good idea!   We all have our   heroes! John Sullivan   has selected eight,   all heroes of   education, each with   something to say   about education.   Not all are well   known as   educationalists.   Some are surprising! Elizabeth Jennings, for   instance, and Etienne Gilson. Each one   highlights a particular aspect of education.     For example, Paulo Freire exemplifies dialogi - cal teaching. This is the opposite of authoritar - ian teaching where knowledge is poured into   students like milk bottles. Dialogue means you   listen to, and learn from, your pupils. You are   changed by them, as they are changed by you!   For Edith Stein education is for the individual   person. Other heroes are Maximus the Confes - sor, Hildegard of Bingen, Bonaventure, Mar - shall McLuhan, Walter Org, Etienne Gilson.     These could well surprise you. They could   stimulate you to make your own litany of   saints. John Sullivan hints at Bernard Lonergan,   Jacques Maritain, John Henry Newman, Mau - rice Blondel. He has written about these else - where.     There is a brief biography of each hero, and as - pects of their thinking which are relevant to the   classroom today are discussed. The main   thrust of the thinking is to achieve and to pass   on to the pupils the wider view of life and the   world. Each of the heroes has a wider view   than the strict worksheet, question and answer   method of study, common in schools.       However in the interests of brevity he has sac - rificed clarity. You have to read his writing sev - eral times to get the gist of what he is saying.   He is not an easy read. But inspirational if he   prompts you to choose your own legion of   honour!       There is a danger in the bold insistence on a   catholic education. It can be seen as revision - ism, an attempt to create a catholic zeitgeist, a   world view, in which to place the education   system the book is proposing.       A stark contrast is drawn between secular   society and Catholicism. But that is no longer   true. Catholicism, and Christianity in general,   has moved towards secular society, especially   with the synodal process. And the Secular   society, with mindfulness and interiority   dominant features, has moved towards   religion. The world of education has many   lights, secular and religious.     The Oxford University Logo, is a book with   seven markers, the trivium, (Grammar, Logic,   Rhetoric), the quadrivium, (Arithmetic,   Geometry, Music, Astronomy) ) the three   crowns above the book, are Theology, Physics,   Law.  In the middle is the inscription from the   psalms, Dominus illuminatio mea, the bible, in   the middle, the aim of all education.       This was the medieval world view. It brought   together secular and religious learning. The   enlightenment of the eighteenth century   forced them apart, but modern thinking is   bringing the two spheres of learning together   again. John Sullivan’,s book is part of that   process.       Reviewer John Baron is a retired priest. 2011. Her life and writings have been strongly   influenced by her father Bill`s spiritual legacy,   Franciscan theology and the abolition move - ment in the USA.  
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 Page 16.  The Catholic Post.  March 2023.  2-in-1 Crossword by Axe You can use both sets of clues to solve the puzzle: the solutions are the same.    SOLUTION   CRYPTIC Across    5 God invites in accountant, about to have tea with the    taxman (9)    8   Cliff in Edom drinks, backsliding (4)    9   With Capone`s acceptance into church official, it`s    almost Babylonian (8)    10   Old Archbishop of Canterbury could be Brown`s   double (7)    12   Golden cloud, virtually, is seen to the west of    Canaanite city (5)    14   He wrote masses, marginally down after book fair (5)    15   Song uncle`s preferred to old capital (7)    17   Jude Hunt is an alias for David`s Levite (8)    18   Other half of Jezebel is primarily as hard and brazen    (4)    19 16 mostly responsible for this festival? (9)   CRYPTIC Down    1   Get a mug over here for the wine miracle (4)    2   Scots chap supporting two accounts leads to a    schism (7)    3   British king`s framed in the style of an OT monarch    (5)    4   Sikhs meet here to condemn a drug war (8)    6   James` rule to rewrite the Bible? (9)    7   Hours in church after weird icon appears during    passage (9)    11   Cleric`s in front, ahead of the leading Essene Jew (8)    13   Canaanite city`s discovered thanks to an article on a    church (7)    16  Caucasian Carmelite cleric`s gone missing (5)    18   Blunder losing front part of the church (4)    QUICK Across    5  Jericho `sinner` who, having Jesus to his    house, subsequently gave half his    property to the poor (9)    8   Rocky plateau at the foot of which the    Nabataeans carved the city of Petra (4)    9   Of people from an ancient part of    Babylonia, home to Abraham (8)    10   Abbot of Glastonbury, and Archbishop    of Canterbury from 959 (7)    12   Canaanite city rebuilt by Solomon,    along with Megiddo and Gezer (5)    14   Composer brothers (Franz) Josef and    Michael (5)    15   Capital of the biblical Northern    Kingdom of Israel (7)    17   Levite David appointed as a leader of    the Temple music (8)    18   Pagan king of Israel and husband of Jezebel (4) 19    Seventh Sunday after Easter (9)   QUICK Down    1  Town in the Bible, the scene of the water-into-wine    miracle (4)   2   Schism between Rome and the East, 482-519, named    after the Patriarch of Constantinople (7)    3   Moabite king who hired Balaam to curse Israel (5)    4   Place of assembly and worship for Sikhs (8)    6   Holy city for Jews, Christians and Muslims (9)    7   Conforming to the recognized rules of cathedral    clergy (9)    11   Member of an ancient Jewish sect denying the      resurrection and the existence of angels (8)    13   Canaanite city, later one of the cities of the Levites    (7)    16  Link between Carmelites, Magdalenes, Cistercian    Monks, Premonstratensians –, and Christmas! (5)    18   Angular or round section often found in the western    part of a church (4)   Across: 5  Zacchaeus,  8  Sela,  9  Chaldean,  10  Dunstan,  12  Hazor,    14 Haydn,  15  Samaria,  17  Jeduthun,  18  Ahab,  19  Pentecost.    Down: 1  Cana,  2  Acacian,  3  Balak,  4  Gurdwara,  6  Jerusalem,    7  Canonical,  11  Sadducee,  13  Taanach,  16  White,  18  Apse. Sport T h e girls following in           t h e Lionesses, footballing   footsteps   The passion for girls’, football is only set to rise   following the Lionesses’, victory at the Euros   and a more elevated profile of female players   in the media. This Schools’, Football Week,   which ran from Monday 6 February to Sunday   12 February, schools across the country   embraced school-level football and the   wellbeing benefits it provides to both pupils   and players.     Football is a sport that pupils and staff alike are   passionate about at Bishop Chadwick Catholic   Education Trust (BCCET) which looks after 30   primary and secondary schools in East   Durham, South Tyneside and Sunderland –, and   girls’, football is firmly on the agenda to   increase engagement and success in the sport.   St Joseph’,s Catholic Academy in Hebburn is   just one of the Trust’,s schools keen to   promote and develop girls’, football.     James Burns, curriculum leader of PE at St   Joseph’,s, said: “,St. Joseph’,s Catholic Academy   has, for a very long time now, been   enthusiastic about promoting and developing   girls’, football. The number of girls involved in   school teams grows every year, to a point now   where we have upwards of 70 students   involved in competitive inter-school games. All   students play for a local club, with some   students playing for Academies at Sunderland   or Durham. In addition, we have five students   playing at a county level too. We see a great   deal of success in sport, and girls’, football is no   different.”,   The girls have won titles across the age groups   in the local South Tyneside CVL and Futsal,   Tyne &, Wear School Games finals, County Cup   and EFL Cup.     “,Our widely reported national title gained us   great recognition and helped us to continue   promoting the talent of students who play for   the school,”, added Mr Burns.     This term, the school is continuing in its pursuit   to provide opportunities for as many students   to play. The team is currently top and third in   the Y7 South Tyneside CVL, with the Y8 team   second. The Year 9, 10 and 11 futsal squads   have all been crowned South Tyneside   champions and will progress to the County   Finals. The U13, U14 and U16 teams are in the   Durham County Cups, with convincing wins   against their opposition to date.     Their entry into the ESFA (English Schools   Football Association) National Cup has shown   some very impressive score lines, with the U15s   still in the competition at Round 5 –, the final   32 from 386 teams.     The Year 8 and 9 girls’, football team at St   Wilfrid’,s RC College in South Shields, which is   also part of BCCET, is also proving a team to   beat this season. They have worked extremely   hard this year and have qualified for the county   finals. They are unbeaten in the 10 matches   they have played so far, celebrating victory on   eight occasions.     “,Our contribution to girls’, football doesn’,t end   there,”,said Mr Burns.     “,We feel it is important to encourage girls into   other areas of the sport and therefore look for   opportunities for them to officiate and coach   where possible. We currently have students   who have completed their refereeing course   and have used this to officiate games for   school. Additionally, we have students who are   part of the FA Girls Game of Our Own   programme, taking their first steps into   coaching. We are also proud to say that we   have the girls football ambassador for South   Tyneside in our Y10 squad! St Joseph,s Catholic Academy, Hebburn
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