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PERTH, WA: October 18, 1990
Registered by Australia Post
Number 2710
Publication No. WAR 0202
POST ADDRESS: PO Box 50, Northbridge, 6000 W.A. LOCATION: 26 John St, Northbridge (east off Fitzgerald St). TELEPHONE: (09) 328 1388
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Lively sales According to Catholic Social Apostolate secretary Sue Bursey, the laity obviously want to know about the laity, judging by the 378 copies of This Is The Laity sold so far by the Catholic Social Apostolate and more to come after the first order of 600 is soon exhausted. Copies from CSA, 32 Claverton St, North Perth. Phone 328 6672.
moor
Second breakaway priest a 'bishop' now
Catholics in mental hospital shock
• Page 5
• Page 3
a . •
Of sin, syntax sex and sects
One of the "sins" at the current Roman Synod jested Pope John Paul to the assembled gathering is that "nessuno dei "Speak up, vescovi parla in latino" ("none of the can't hear bishops speak Latin"). your The pope, you guessed it, was speaking Latin," in Italian. . . says Pope But pity the confused South American John Paul bishop from Peru who said in Spanish that (in Italian!) no-one in the synod hall had made negative comments about sex. He was trying to reply to a translation of a journalist's question, in English, on why synod speakers were down on sects. If the priesthood is confused, so must be some of the language difficulties. Of the 10 formal opening speeches, five were in Latin, three in English and two in French. During the Latin, most of the
bishops had their simultaneous translation earphones firmly to their ears. Of the 231 eight minute permitted speeches 51 have been in Latin, 59 in English and the rest in French, Spanish, Italian and German. When the bishops broke up into the subcommittees, three English speaking groups scored a total of 69 members, three Spanish groups 57, and three French groups 57. The lone Italian group had 28 and the only German group 14. Three bishops tried to form a Latin group but disbanded. But there was one change in 1990: for the first time there was a group where Ukrainian, Polish or Russian could be spoken.
Where they are at now — see Pages 2, 6, 7, 10 and 11