May 10, 2009, East Tennessee Catholic

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CNS PHOTO/DANIEL AGUILAR

Mexican flu moves ‘past peak’ Homeless youths sit together on the street after a routine check-up for flu symptoms at a mobile clinic in downtown Mexico City. Mexico has moved past the peak of the H1N1 flu pandemic, the Mexican government said May 3. page 10

THE EAST TENNESSEE

Volume 18 • Number 17 • May 10, 2009

The

N E W S PA P E R

of the D I O C E S E of K N O X V I L L E www.d ioces eof kn ox ville.or g

Pope: prevalence of hunger is a ‘shameful tragedy’

Why the fight for life matters The Chattanoogans for Life banquet keynoter—and her daughter—help make the case. By Dan McWilliams

B Y CA R OL GL ATZ

IN THIS ISSUE Living the readings.............2 Letters .................................2 He dwells among us ..........3 The view from here ............3 Parish notes ........................4 On the calendar ..................5 Catholic youth ....................7 Life in every limb ................8 Called to follow...................8 Marriage preparation .........9 From the Paraclete ............9 From the wire....................10

Dr. Kelly Hollowell delivers the keynote talk at the United We Stand banquet held in Chattanooga on April 24. View more banquet photos at dioceseofknoxville.org. TIA’S MOM

ities in the coming year. Those include sponsoring two buses for the National March for Life in Washington, D.C., and projects such as the Prayer Chain for Life. Boy Scout Troop 172 of St. Jude Parish in Chattanooga presented the flags at the banquet, and Chattanoogans for Life president Cindy Kedrowski made the first award presentation of the evening. She gave the Nellie Grey Life Service Award, named for the organizer of the first March for Life in Washington, to Gary Carlson and Andrew Marini of North River Physical Therapy Center, a longtime Chattanoogans for Life sponsor.

Mr. Carlson, along with Mrs. Kedrowski, is a parishioner of St. Augustine in Signal Mountain. Mr. Marini is a member of St. Jude. Dr. Hollowell said that to be a “good fighter” in life issues, one needs to “know the enemy, know the facts of the playing field, know how to fight to win, and know why you’re fighting.” One enemy is the nation’s largest abortion provider, Planned Parenthood, she said. PP’s vision for the next 25 years, Dr. Hollowell said, includes a world of uninhibited sex, population control, and “get this, they want to be known as one of the top 10 places to work.” “Pretty much a third of

their income comes from our tax dollars,” she said. Dr. Hollowell was highly critical of President Barack Obama’s backing of the socalled Freedom of Choice Act (FOCA) and his support for abortion dating back to his days in the Illinois legislature. If FOCA were passed, she said, it “would remove all existing regulations on abortion . . . everything we’ve worked so hard to push back on since 1973.” Knowing the facts also means knowing the myths about abortion, said Dr. Hollowell. Her top 10 myths include: “abortion is legal only during the first three months of pregnancy,” “abortion is rare in the United States,” “abortion is good for women,” and “I can be personally opposed to abortion but be prochoice.” Knowing how to fight is something that “you Chattanoogans have down,” said Dr. Hollowell, citing Chattanoogans for Life’s efforts that led to the closing of the last abortion clinic in the city in 1993. “In 1993 Planned Parenthood had 938 facilities across the country. In 2000 it had 875, and thanks to Chattanoogans, now in 2008 [they have] 844. They’re not impervious. We can beat them.” Dr. Hollowell said that Tia “will heal more lives by her existence than I probably ever will.” Banquet continued on page 6

Pilgrimage brings message of peace to land of conflict Pope Benedict XVI begins a trip to Jordan, Israel, and the Palestinian territories, ‘the places where the events of our redemption took place.’ BY JOHN THAVI S

VATICAN CITY (CNS)—Pope Benedict XVI is set to begin a weeklong visit to the Holy Land, a pilgrimage in the footsteps of Christ and a journey through a political and interreligious minefield. In many ways the May 8 through 15 visit to Jordan, Israel, and the Palestinian territories is the most challenging of the pope’s foreign visits to date, one that will test his skills of communication and bridge-building in a region of conflict and mistrust. After recent communications missteps

at the Vatican, the pope can expect to find his every word and gesture under scrutiny by the world’s media—especially when it comes to relations among Christians, Muslims, and Jews and the Israeli– Palestinian crisis. Although the world may measure the success of the visit in terms of international or interfaith diplomacy, Pope Benedict is going to the Holy Land first and foremost as a religious pilgrim. “The priority is to witness to the truth of the Incarnation by visiting, as head of the church, the places where the

CNS PHOTO/ALI JAREKJI, REUTERS

Hunger continued on page 2

r. Kelly Hollowell gave her audience at the Chattanoogans for Life banquet numerous arguments against abortion, via a PowerPoint presentation, but the most moving one may have appeared in one of the final slides of the evening. The author, attorney, and biotechnology expert was the keynote speaker at the sixth annual United We Stand banquet held April 24 at The Chattanoogan hotel. Shortly after showing everyone a picture of her 4-yearold daughter, Tia, Dr. Hollowell asked the gathering why the fight for life matters. “It matters because every life, as everyone in this room knows, is precious, valuable, distinct, created in God’s image—beautiful, full of potential for love, laughter, hope, making the world a better place,” she said. Tia was diagnosed in the womb with a condition that leads 90 percent of American women to choose abortion, Dr. Hollowell said. “My own daughter, Tia, in the picture I showed you of her at 15 weeks—that was exactly when she was diagnosed with Down syndrome. And nine out of 10 women in America would have killed her because she wasn’t perfect. By whose standard? Tia—her name is Victoria, for victory in Jesus.” A total of 315 attended the banquet, contributing more than $11,000 that Chattanoogans for Life will use toward its pro-life activ-

D

DAN MCWILLIAMS

VATICAN CITY (CNS)—One of the most urgent and critical social problems afflicting the world is the “shameful tragedy that one-fifth of humanity still goes hungry,” Pope Benedict XVI told members of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences. “Assuring an adequate food supply, like the protection of vital resources such as water and energy, requires all international leaders to collaborate in showing a readiness to work” toward eliminating social inequalities between countries and communities, he said in a May 4 address. “For Christians who regularly ask God to ‘give us this day our daily bread,’ it is a shameful tragedy” that so many people go hungry and are malnourished, he said. Some 25,000 people die from hunger every day, and a child dies every six seconds of malnutrition or starvation, according to the United Nations’ World Food Program. The pope made his remarks during an audience with about 55 participants attending a plenary assembly of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences. The academy, headed by the former U.S. ambassador to the Vatican, Mary Ann Glendon, was meeting May 1 through 5 to discuss Catholic social doctrine and human rights. The meeting was specifically addressing rights that are currently under assault, such as the right to life, the right to build a family, freedom of conscience and religion, and the right to decent subsistence, Glendon said in her address to the pope. The pope said there is “a flagrant contrast between the equal attribution of rights and

PAPA VISITS A child stands next to a welcome poster for Pope Benedict XVI during a Mass in Amman, Jordan, on May 2. The pope is scheduled to visit Jordan, Israel, and the Palestinian territories during his May 8 through 15 trip to the Holy Land.

events of our redemption took place. That’s the point,” Franciscan Father

David Jaeger, an Israeli priest and an adviser to the Vatican, told Catholic News

Service. The pilgrimage has a special focus on Holy Land continued on page 3


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May 10, 2009, East Tennessee Catholic by Diocese of Knoxville - Issuu