Special section on encyclical’s 50th year
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‘Seriously nice’:
Teilhard:
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Revisiting French Jesuit’s faith-science encounter
Pouring UK’s first Trappist brew
CATHOLIC SAN FRANCISCO Newspaper of the Archdiocese of San Francisco
Serving San Francisco, Marin & San Mateo Counties
www.catholic-sf.org
July 26, 2018
$1.00 | VOL. 20 NO. 15
Water in the desert: Simple act of mercy saves migrant lives Peter Tran Catholic News Service
AJO, Ariz. – In the Sonoran Desert northeast of Ajo, temperatures can soar to mid-90s in late spring and above 100 degrees in the summer. This vast, arid landscape of mountain ranges, arroyos and valleys, typical throughout southern Arizona, is where undocumented migrants make a path to find a better life in the United States. This also is where hundreds of unfortunate ones have taken their last breath. From January to June 20, the number of migrant deaths in Arizona stood at 56, and more than 7,200 people lost their lives from 1998 to 2017, said Reyna Araibi, co-founder of the Tucson-based Colibri Center for Human Rights. The most common cause of death for 55 percent of the migrants whose remains are recovered is hyperthermia or heat stroke. For the rest, the cause is “undetermined” because of the condition of the remains. Sister Judy Bourg, a regular volunteer with Tucson Samaritans, recalled a jarring experience in late 2017 when she and other volunteers encountered a human skull under a mesquite tree in the desert near Ajo. “Silence fell over our group as we realized what we had discovered,” she said. They contacted the sheriff’s office in Ajo, which sent two deputies to collect the remains. (Photo by Christina Gray/Catholic San Francisco)
Members of walking tour for tourists congregate in the lobby of the Porziuncola Nuova at Vallejo Street and Columbus Avenue in North Beach. The chapel is a stop on the group’s tour of local attractions.
see national shrine, page 15
A summer day at St. Francis’ shrine Visitors to North Beach holy site drawn by faith, mystery, curiosity Christina Gray Catholic San Francisco
An estimated 25.5 million people travel to the city of St. Francis each year and for the last 20, an unmeasured number of them have made their way to the national shrine bearing his name. The National Shrine of St. Francis of Assisi in North Beach was designated a pilgrimage site in 1999 by retired San Francisco archbishop Cardinal William J. Levada and the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. The site includes the shrine church – formerly the historic St. Francis of Assisi parish church
built in 1849 to serve Gold Rush-era Catholics – and the adjacent Porziuncola Nuova chapel, a near-replica of St. Francis’ chapel in Assisi built by the Knights of St. Francis, a local religious group, in 2008. Catholic San Francisco spent an afternoon at the Porziuncola July 16 with longtime volunteer docent Angela Testani to ask visitors what brought them to the chapel and why. A Canadian tourist, a local office worker, a bishop from Paris, a theology professor, a parish handyman, a Buddhist from Arizona and a city tour group each came in for reasons of their own.
“Avenue of Flags” Franciscan Brother David Buer and Sister Judy Bourg, a School
(CNS photo/Peter Tran, Global Sisters)
A personal way to honor your loved one’s patriotism to our country.
Sister of Notre Dame, who are part of the Tucson Samaritans, are
If yousee have receivedshrine, a flag honoring and likeintothe donate it Desert northeast of Ajo, Arizona. pictured in would late May Sonoran national page 3 your loved one's military service to the cemetery to be flown as part of an “Avenue of Flags" on Memorial Day, 4th of July and Veterans' Day, please contact our office for more details on our Flag Donation Program. This program is open to everyone. If you do not have a flag to donate, you may make a $125 contribution to the “Avenue of Flags” program to purchase a flag.
For an appointmentHoly - 650.756.2060 | www.holycrosscemteries.com | CA Cross Catholic Cemetery, 1500 Mission Road, Colma, 650-756-2060
A Tradition of Faith Throughout Our Lives.
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