January 9, 2009
The Catholic News & Herald 1
www.charlottediocese.org
Roman Catholic Diocese of Charlotte
Perspectives Convergence against injustice; soulful time; change we can believe in
Established Jan. 12, 1972 by Pope Paul VI JANUARY 9, 2009
Catholic contingent
| Pages 14-15 Serving Catholics in Western North Carolina in the Diocese of Charlotte
Priest’s message at Mass for peace: Gaza ‘drowning in blood’
NANCY FRAZIER O’BRIEN
by
CNS photo Ibraheem Abu Mustafa, Reuters
JERUSALEM — The pastor of the Catholic parish in Gaza City described Gaza as “drowning in blood” a s h o s p i ta l s o v e r f l o w e d with patients. In a message to participants in a special Mass for peace at St. Stephen Church in Jerusalem Jan. 4, Msgr. Manuel Musallam, pastor of Holy Family Church in Gaza City, wrote: “What you see on television cannot be compared to what is happening. The word love is choking in my throat. ... We are living like animals in Gaza. We cry and nobody hears us. I am asking God for mercy and pray that the light of Christianity continues to shine in Gaza.” Church leaders from
A Palestinian firefighter shouts in front of a burning building following an Israeli air strike in the Gaza Strip Dec. 28, 2008. Israel launched air strikes on Gaza in reprisal for recent rocket attacks from Gaza into Israeli territory. Since the start of the airstrikes Dec. 27, at least four Israelis and more than 500 Palestinians, including 100 civilians, have been killed.
See GAZA, page 8
WASHINGTON — The number of Catholic members of Congress is slowly creeping higher, but the Catholic contingent, like the full Congress itself, has taken a decided turn toward the Democratic Party. When the 111th Congress was sworn in Jan. 6, more than a quarter of its members were Catholics, roughly matching the percentage of Catholics in the U.S. population and consistent with the statistical trends of the past decade. Four years ago when the 109th Congress convened, it included 153 Catholics. Two
Galileo’s jubilee
Vatican takes part in star-studded celebrations by CAROL GLATZ catholic news service
VATICAN CITY — As more than 130 countries celebrate the International Year of Astronomy, the Vatican also turned its gaze toward the heavens. The year, which began Jan. 1, was established by the See GALILEO, page 6
JUDITH SUDILOVSKY catholic news service
catholic news service
See CONGRESS, page 7
no. 10
‘We cry and nobody hears us’
Number of Catholics in Congress edging up; more are Democrats by
vOLUME 18
To establish a ‘virtuous circle’
Financial crisis calls for new economic model, solidarity, pope says by CINDY WOODEN catholic news service
VATICAN CITY — The current financial crisis should be seen as a challenge to find new economic models that promote honesty, development and concern for the environment, Pope Benedict XVI said.
“We need to try to establish a ‘virtuous circle’” of living simply and fighting poverty, the pope said Jan. 1 as he celebrated Mass for the feast of Mary Mother of God and World Peace Day. See PEACE, page 5
CNS by Reuters
Children take a bath in waste water in a slum of Jakarta, Indonesia, Oct. 14. In his message for the Jan. 1 World Day of Peace, Pope Benedict XVI said that closing the gap between rich and poor will happen only if people listen to their consciences and “feel personally outraged by the injustices in the world.”
Culture Watch
In Our Schools
There and back again
Book on Catholic feminism; religion TV game show
Students explore world, football through books
Migrant workers come and go to work fields
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