February 18, 2005

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Bishops, papal envoy honor Fatima's Lucia COIMBRA , Portugal (CNS) — Most of Portugal 's bishops joined Italian Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone of Genoa, the papal envoy, in concelebrating the funeral Mass Feb. 15 for Carmelite Sister Lucia dos Santos, the last of three Fatima visionaries. Sister Lucia died Feb. 13 at the age of 97. She is to be buried temporarily at the Carmelite convent while preparations were made for final burial alongside her two cousins, Blesseds Francisco andJacinta Marto, at the Shrine of Our Lady of Fatima. See story on Sister Lucia

A nun attempts to touch the coffin of Sis ter Lucia dos Santos during a ceremony in Coimbra, Portugal, Feb. 15. Sister Lucia , the eldest of three Portuguese children who reported apparitions of the Blessed Virg in Mary in 1917 , died Feb. 13 at the age of 97.

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Pope John Paul II sent a message, which was read at the funeral. "I remember with emotion the various meetings I had with her and the bonds of spiritual friendship that intensified with the passing of time. I always felt supported by the daily gift of her prayers, especially in difficult moments of trial and suffering," the pope wrote. In his homily, Cardinal Jose da Cruz Policarpo of Lisbon, Portugal said the "extraordinary" gift Sister Lucia received of w OA seeing and hearing the Blessed Virgin Mary would have had no a meaning if Sister Lucia had not listened and lived the call to cons § version and to following Jesus Christ at every moment of her life. o In the same way, he said, the extraordinary grace given to 5 ¦ x, cu all the baptized is meaningless if they do not allow it to make in z a difference in their lives. "God calls us and trusts us to fulfill u our mission. Lucia recounts in her memoirs the apparition of the Madonna with the simplicity of a child. "Lucia was always faithful to her mission to spread the message of Fatima, which challenges people to penance, conversion and contemplation," Cardinal Policarpo said. "We are moved today, not so much because of her death, but because today between Fatima and heaven a new bridge has been built. "

U.S. missionary nun who defended peasants killed in Brazil By List Alves SAO PAULO, Brazil (CNS) — In a small community on the outskirts of the Amazon jung le, the death threats against U.S. Sister Dorothy Stang came true. The 73-year-old member of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur was shot several times in the chest and head Feb. 12 in the Brazilian state of Para as she headed to meet officials from the National Institute of Colonization and Agrarian Reform to discuss the demarcation or land tor peasants. Her religious order contacted the U.S. State Department and requested that it press Brazil for a full investigation. The Brazilian bishops' Pastoral Land Commission criticized the murder and said the killing recalled past eras — thought ended — when activists antagonizing powerful economic groups were shot dead by hired gunmen.

Bishop John H. Ricard of PensacolaTallahassee, Fla., chairman of the U.S. bishops ' Committee on International Policy, wrote the Brazilian ambassador to the United States, Roberto Abdenur, to express the bishops' "deep concern and revulsion " at the murder. Sister Dorothy, as she was known, was a native of Dayton, Ohio, but had lived in the Amazon region for nearly four decades, working closely with the bishops' land commission. The nun had also become a Brazilian citizen. Sister Dorothy defended land rights for rural peasants and warned against the ecological dangers of deforestation in the Amazon region. Her work often put her at odds with large landowners and logging interests. According to the Brazilian bishops'

land commission, Sister Dorothy had been receiving death threats for nearly four years due to hejr activities in favor of rural workers. The nun had informed authorities numerous times of these threats, but never received police protection, said a statement by the bishops' commission. The last time she went to authorities was Feb. 9. "If the life of a defenseless religious is taken in this manner, how will the peasants be treated?" asked the bishops' land commission. It said the killing could have been ordered by powerful landowners with whom Sister Dorothy had been at odds. Reuters , the British news agency, reported a Brazilian government official as saying Feb. 14 that police had identified the gunmen and suspect a local rancher ordered the killing.

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The congregational leadership team ol the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namui issued a Feb. 13 statement expressing hope that the assassination would draw the attention of the Brazilian government MISSIONARY NUN, page 18

Oregon's assisted suicide .. 3 News-in-brief Pastoral initiative on marriage - Pages 10-11 Bishop Wang in Haiti ~ Pages 6-7 •»

Lenten movie series ~ Page 17 ~

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Stem-cell breakthrough . . . 7 This Catholic Life Columnists

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Scripture and reflection... 14 Datebook

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