The Record Newspaper 22 February 1996

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What's Inside... Lent is needed to fully celebrate Jesus' Resurrection at Easter, says Archbishop Barry Hickey in his 1995 Lenten Pastoral - Page 2 PERTH, WA: February 22, 1996

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Four political parties answer why should Catholics should vote for them - Page 9 Installments from Vatican statement on sex education begin today - Page I1

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Pope vote rules to lIt cardinals out By John Travis VATICAN CITY (CNS) - The next time a conclave is held to elect a new pope, cardinalelectors will no longer be housed in the ancient rooms surrounding the Sistine Chapel, sources told Catholic News Service. Instead. the cardinals will stay in a recently constructed modern guest house, the Domus Sanctae Martae, on the other side of Vatic.an City. They will be bused twice a day to the Sistine for voting. The change in the centuries-old tradition is contained in a 65page letter that fine-tunes many of the conclave rules. The document is expected to 13e made I Ilic in late February. In the past, cardinals participating in papal elections have stayed in quarters temporarily carved out of the Vatican Palace, adjacent to the Sistine Chapel. The very word "conclave" Latin for "with a key" - refers to the practice of sequestering the c.ardinals in one contained area for the duration of their meeting. Most conclaves last several days.

init some have gone on for months. The makeshift and cramped lodgings in the Vatican Palace meant cardinals had to put up with limited privacy, distant bathmoms and a stuffy and hot atmosphere in summer months. Up to 120 cardinals are voting members in a conclave. The Domus Sanctae Martae. which will offer 120 mini-apartments when it is opened this spring. would have to be cleared of regular guests during a conclave. The residence would be sealed off for the duration, and the cardinals would be prohibited from meeting or talking to anyone outside the Sacred College. The residence building is quite visible from outside the Vatican walls. Its construction. in fact. sparked protests from some Rome groups because it slightly limits the view of the basilica from the city streets. The papal letter says that rather than walking through St Peter's Basilica to the Sistine Chapel about a five-block hike - the cardinal electors will take a bus to a courtyard inside the Vatican Palace. The document even says which stairway the prelates will

come to the Sistine for the vote on a particular day. The document repeatedly warm; against any form of outside conununication by cardinal electors during the conclave. particularly through electronic devices. Sources said the pope appeared to be well aware that cellular phones were widely used by today's cardinals. For those breaking the secrecy rules, it threatens exconununication, the sources said. The papal letter reportedly maintains many of the previous rules outlined by Pope Paul VI in his 1975 document. Romano Pope John Paul pauses during his Pontifid Eligenda general audience address at the Specifically. it keeps Pope Paul Vatican last week. Photo '. VI's dii•ective that cardinals over the age of 80 are not eligible to take to reach the Sistine. Sources vote in the amclave. said the document was equally It makes it clear, however, that detailed in describing the electhose over 80 can participate in toral pmcedures. I • liminary meetings of cardiFor example, it requires a presi- nals to be held between the dent to keep track of votes with a death of a pope and the start of needle and thread. putting a nee- the conclave. dle through the name of the perThe new document also son voting and tying the ballots ensures that the newly elected with the thread. pope will present himself to the A procedure is also outlined for people waiting in St Peter's carwing ballots on a plate to car- Square - just as Pope John Paul dinals who may be too ill to II did in 1978.

Kimberley people take action for an education By Peter Rosengren At the end of approximately 170km of dusty bush road. about three hours travel by four-wheel -drive from Broome, the bush pioneering tradition of C.atholic education in the Kimberley continues. In the tiny Aboriginal coastal community of La Djadarr Bay population approximately 40 and formerly Icnown as Disaster Bay - classes commenced last week in the State's newest Catholic school. But this school is not like most others. At La Djadarr Bay Catholic School, for the short term at least, modem metropolitan education with all the comforts and 'mod cons' people are used to in Australian towns and cities stops La Ojadarr people show Bishop Jobst (carte, with white hat) and Broome Catholic Education Regional Officer, Sr and 'frontier' education begins. Veronica Ryan (beside Bishop Jobst) the plans for their school. Sr Nola Goodwin (glasses) looks on. As classes kicked off in this lated outpost of Catholic educa- school under the supervision of her accommodation is a humble initiative of the La Djadarr Bay ii t still being Sister Nola Goodwin. a Josephite caravan, located and moved to community. tion, the school was built by members of the commu- sister who has spent most of her the site for her by the communiThey are the ones who decided nity. Currently it consists of hvo life teaching in outback Queen- ty she works with. It will be her they wanted the school and then sland and the Eastern Kimberley home and her office until the lobbied the now retired bishop cIncrete walls and a roof. This did not deter the fifteen or trgion. school is finished and more suit- of Broome. John jobst, to assist in Underscoring the pioneering able accommodation for her can establishing it. sI initial students from kindergarten to Year 7 who happily nature of her work and that of be located or built. Continued on Page 8 turned up for their first day of the community is the fact that The entire school project is an

Tcoaprdliralican visits East TIT" S

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VAIILAN CITY (CNS) - Pope John Paul II has asked the international community, and especially Portugal, to work for a peaceful settlement of the tensions in East Timor as a top Vatican official left to visit the troubled territory. 1 appeal for (=rage on the part of the friends and serwmts If peace." the Pope said last Monday during a meeting with Portugal's new ambassador to the Vatican. East Timor. a former Portuguese colI ny. was annexed by Indonesia in 1976. An armed eration movement has been fighting for East Timorese independence. Cardinal Roger Etchegaray. president of the Pontifical Council for justice and Peace. left on lliesday with Rome Monsignor Diarmuid Martin. PCJP secretary. to travel to Indonesia and East Timor. The visit of the French cardinal. whI Pope John Paul often sends to world tmuble Si will have a "pastoral character." the Vatican said. adding that Cardinal Etchegaray was expected to meet Church and government officials in Indonesia and in East Timor. "Through its presence in the international community. the Holy See tries to encourage and strengthen this dialogue. especially in relation to spiritual and ethical values which are the essential basis for a just society and a true and lasting peace," the Pope told Arnbas.sador Antonio D'Oliveira Pinto da Franc.a. Pope John Paul thanked Portugal for its efforts on behalf of dialogue and peace in East Timor where the people "continue to hope for proposals which will allow them to realise their legitimate aspirations". East Timor is largely Catholic: Indonesia is overwhelmingly Muslim. "To those who I S in their hearts or in their hands the pmblem of Timor, I ask for a commitment to favouring and supporting the dialogue under way," the Pope said. The Portuguese ambassador tI I the Pope, "We Portuguese believe that as a country with a rich Christian tradition and a great multi-continental history, we have a particular responsibility to untiringly defend respect for human rights thmugh the international relations in which we actively parlicipate. "We are particularly afflicted. in body and heart, by the suffering S f the people of Timor, both in their daily lives and in their impalpable quest to preserve their identity," he said.


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