Dec. 3, 2004

Page 1

December 3, 2004

The Catholic News & Herald 1

www.charlottediocese.org

Roman Catholic Diocese of Charlotte

In her footsteps Mother Teresa’s successor visits Diocese of Charlotte | Page 5

Established Jan. 12, 1972 by Pope Paul VI DECEMBER 3, 2004

Serving Catholics in Western North Carolina in the Diocese of Charlotte

Hispanics welcome torch from Mexico City

New diaconate class forming by

Photo by Karen A. Evans

CHARLOTTE — There are many people who serve God, especially within the Catholic Church — clergy and laity; men, women and children; paid employees and volunteers. Permanent deacons fill a unique role: they are ordained ministers, yet most hold jobs in the secular world while fulfilling their ministerial roles. Most are married; unmarried men who enter the diaconate are not permitted to marry after ordination. For men interested in serving as permanent deacons, informational meetings have been scheduled at two churches this month.“The permanent deacon has a distinct role involving a ministry of charity,

Hispanic Catholics carry the flag of Mexico and a reproduction of the Our Lady of Guadalupe image into St. Vincent de Paul Church in Charlotte Nov. 29.

See DEACONS, page 12

staff writer

CHARLOTTE — Crying out “Viva la Virgen!” and “Viva la Mexico!” a few hundred Hispanics, mostly Mexican, welcomed the Torch of Guadalupe to Charlotte Nov. 29. The international torch run, an annual event since 2001, began at the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe See TORCH, page 5

Nations differ on uses of therapeutic cloning by TRACY EARLY catholic news service

UNITED NATIONS — Efforts to move the United Nations toward developing an international convention against human cloning were abandoned because of irreconcilable differences among member nations over how far the ban should go. Instead, the legal commitSee CLONING, page 13

KAREN A. EVANS staff writer

KAREN A. EVANS

U.N. efforts to ban cloning end with no resolution on

no. 10

In the service of Christ

‘Viva lA Virgen’

by

vOLUME 14

A feast of firsts

Refugees gather, share first Thanksgiving ESL students grateful for freedom, opportunities by DAVID HAINS special to the catholic news & herald

CHARLOTTE — Twenty-three adults and children gathered in a small apartment in Charlotte two days before Thanksgiving.

They were Montagnards from the highlands of Vietnam and Bantu tribal people from Somalia in eastern Africa. What they held in common was a past fraught with persecution and a future that is bright in the See FEAST, page 6

Photo by David Hains

Asinina Mayinguwa, 4, of Somalia eyes the food at her first Thanksgiving dinner since arriving in the United States in July. Her family is being helped by the CSS Refugee Resettlement Office.

Birthday girl

Perspectives

Parish Profile

Basilica parishioner reflects on 100 years

Abortion linked to child abuse; weather forecasting and prayer

Catholics find thriving parish at St. Mary Church in Shelby

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