October 15, 2004
The Catholic News & Herald 1
www.charlottediocese.org
Welcome the Stranger
Roman Catholic Diocese of Charlotte
Parishes welcome Hispanics with ministries, bilingual celebrations | Pages 6-7
Established Jan. 12, 1972 by Pope Paul VI octoBER 15, 2004
Fighting for Life
Stem cell experts, activists exhort Catholics to understand issues ‘Cost too high’ for embryonic stem-cell research, Senate panel told
CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE WA S H I N G T O N — With the rapid advances in medicine, science and technology, beginning-of-life issues that seemed a remote possibility in 2000 have emerged as hot political topics in 2004. At the forefront are human cloning and stem-cell research using human embryos. Human cloning, at least of by
See STEM CELLS, page 8
Catholic first, Hispanic second
Hispanic ministry coordinators help immigrants feel at home in N.C. by
Serving Catholics in Western North Carolina in the Diocese of Charlotte
Stitching the fabric of compassion Tote bags touch lives of many by
JOANITA M. NELLENBACH correspondent
Editor’s note: This story contains descriptions of domestic violence. MAGGIE VALLEY — Her abusive husband could take everything she had, she said, everything — but her tote bag. She received the bag when she fled empty-handed to the REACH shelter. If she could return to her house, accompanied by a police officer and while her husband wasn’t there, the bag would hold whatever necessities she could quickly gather. The Sewing Angels of St. Margaret of Scotland Church make the bags. “Women cry when they get them,” said Rita Noland, services coordinator for REACH (Resources, Education, AsSee SEWING, page 5
Photo by Joanita M. Nellenbach
Esther Metz sews tote bags in St. Margaret of Scotland Church’s parish hall. The Sewing Angels ministry has sewed and donated 120 tote bags to a shelter for victims of domestic abuse in Haywood County.
Home Sweet Home?
Refugee camps becoming permanent homes, Vatican official says countries, a Vatican official said.
staff writer
See HISPANICS, page 6
no. 3
Sewing Angels
KAREN A. EVANS
CHARLOTTE — “They are all Mexicans.” “They are here to take our jobs, make some money, then go back to Mexico.” “They abuse our health care system.” “They don’t want to bother to learn to speak English.” These are a few of the misconceptions diocesan Hispanic Ministry coordinators are working to correct. Following a day-long meeting of the eight coordina-
vOLUME 14
by SARAH DELANEY catholic news service
CNS photo from Reuters
A displaced woman walks through Dirail camp, which houses tens of thousands of displaced Sudanese in the Darfur region of Sudan, Sept. 21.
VATICAN CITY — Refugee camps are increasingly becoming permanent homes for people fleeing war, extreme poverty or persecution, and wealthier nations must make a greater commitment to helping refugees return to their own
Some seven out of 12 million refugees worldwide have been kept from their homes for more than 10 years, a situation that leaves “masses of people without hope” and spawns “generations of children becoming adults with a lost childhood,” said Archbishop Silvano M. See CAMPS, page 12
Culture Watch
Perspectives
Serving up faith
Pope reviews 20th century in new book
Seeing God’s signs; classifying relics
Catholic churches supply food for fund-raiser
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