The Southern Cross - 100407

Page 1

R5,00 (incl VAT RSA)

SOUTHERN AFRICA’S NATIONAL CATHOLIC WEEKLY SINCE 1920

Vatican archives go online

Inside Oblates to run Ngome shrine The Oblates of Mary Immaculate have accepted an invitation by Bishop Xolelo Kumalo to take over the running of the Marian shrine at Ngome, KwaZulu-Natal.—Page 3

BY SARAH DELANEY

H

Turin Shroud is going public

The Shroud of Turin, which will go on display on April 10, offers Christians a complete understanding of the suffering Christ went through on the cross, according to an Italian cardinal.—Page 4

The shipwrecked St Paul As Pope Benedict prepares to visit Malta this month to mark St Paul’s shipwrecking there, we look at the apostle and the island he evangelised.—Page 10

Seasons of marriage A Catholic newspaper editor explains the secrets to a happy marriage.—Page 9

What do you think? In their Letters to the Editor this week, readers discuss respect for holy places, penance for a scandal, titles for the pope, President Zuma’s Christian ethics, and the Turin shroud.—Pages 8 & 11

This week’s editorial: The boil must be lanced

Teen, born 1971, to be beatified BY JOEUN LEE

C

Love, food and faith in Italy

www.scross.co.za

April 7 to April 13, 2010 No 4670

PAGE 10

Muslim sheik Devotion to the Divine and the Mercy Annunciation

Online dating for SA Catholics

Reg No. 1920/002058/06

PAGE 7

PAGE 4

PAGE 2

HIARA Badano, an Italian who died of bone cancer just before her 19th birthday, will be beatified on September 25 at a shrine outside of Rome, said the bishop of the diocese where she lived. The beatification ceremony will be held at the sanctuary of Our Lady of Divine Love and will be presided over by Archbishop Angelo Amato, prefect of the Congregation for Saints’ Causes. A member of the Focolare Movement, Chiara (pictured) corresponded for years with Chiara Lubich, founder of the movement. Born on October 29, 1971, in northern Italy, she was diagnosed with osteosarcoma, a bone malignancy, when she was 17. When she was given the news, she vowed to accept it as God’s will. “If you want it, Jesus, so do I,” she was reported to have said during a painful therapy session, adding that “embraced pain makes one free”. She also reportedly declined to take the morphine doctors offered because, “I want to share as much as possible the pain of Jesus on the cross.” “I feel that God is asking me for something more, something greater,” she said, according to her official biography. “I could be confined to this bed for years, I don’t know. I’m only interested in God’s will, doing that well in the present moment: playing God’s game.” Chiara, who was nicknamed Luce or “Light,” died on October 7, 1990. Devotion to her has spread, so the rather isolated diocese of Acqui asked that her beatification ceremony be celebrated in Rome to make it easier for more young people to attend, said Mariagrazia Magrini, the vice-postulator of her cause.—CNS

JUMP FOR JOY: Members of the KZN Burundi Drummers—all draped in the Burundi national flag—entertained guests at the sixth annual Archbishop Denis Hurley weekend at Durban’s Emmanuel cathedral. The weekend included Masses and an ecumenical workshop addressed by Fr Peter-John Pearson. PIC: ILLA

New economy way ahead? BY MICHAIL RASSOOL

A

CHURCH-BASED political analyst has welcomed indications from the government of a return towards a needs-based economic policy, as opposed by the macro-economic policy of the past decade. Mike Pothier, research director of the bishops’ Catholic Parliamentary Liaison Office, applauded recent moves by minister of Economic Development Ebrahim Patel to put together a “ministerial advisory panel” that is likely to oppose inflation targeting. In other words, he explained, the panellists are likely to oppose the idea that monetary policy must prioritise the control of inflation within set limits by manipulating interest rates, an approach followed by successive Reserve Bank governors and repeated by finance minister Pravin Gordhan in his budget speech. This, Mr Pothier said, has hindered investment and seriously retarded the creation of jobs. He pointed out that the Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) especially has been vociferous in its calls for a weaker rand, saying that the relatively strong currency has harmed export industries such as mining and agriculture, making South Africa an attractive destination for cheap foreign goods such as textiles and clothing. Mr Pothier welcomed the inclusion on the proposed panel of Professor Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel economics laureate and former World Bank executive, who is a strong opponent of inflation targeting. He is pleased that the panel also contains at least two mainstream bankers and

other economists and academics whose research into poverty and development he believes will add valuable perspective to its deliberations. Mr Patel reportedly intends to add further names to the panel and set up an economic policy development institute by the end of the year. Ten policy documents dealing with jobs and growth are also promised by March next year. Mr Pothier said that Mr Patel’s proposal raises two possibilities: “Is this the first move in the long-awaited ‘policy coup’ by the left-wing of President Zuma’s reportedly divided cabinet, or is it merely yet another panel of experts or think-tank set up to give the impression that something is happening?” He also asked what the reaction from other policy makers in government will be. He cited recent comments from the director-general of the Treasury, Lesetja Kganyago, who told a conference that the strong rand was not to blame for South Africa’s poor export performance, but lack of productivity, skills shortages and poor levels of competitiveness. “Clearly, this kind of thinking will not sit too easily with some members of the Patel panel,” Mr Pothier said. Mr Pothier said a fresh approach may be required, because as much as the current macro-economic policy, the Growth, Employment and Redistribution strategy, may deserve credit for its stability and predictability, and as much as it has helped shield the country from the worst effects of the recent global financial crisis, it has failed to create jobs in any significant numbers or made enough of a dent in poverty levels.

ISTORICAL Vatican documents, including material regarding the role of the Church during World War II, are now online and available for consultation on the official Vatican website. Thousands of official Vatican acts recorded between 1865 and 2007 have been scanned and uploaded to the website. But the documents likely to arouse the most curiosity are contained in the volumes of World War II-era documents compiled by four Jesuit scholars beginning in the 1960s. The volumes include material from the Vatican Secret Archives regarding war-time Pope Pius XII, accused by some historians and Jewish groups of not doing enough to save Jews from destruction by the Nazis. In 1965 Pope Paul VI ordered the scholars to search the archives for evidence to rebut claims about his predecessor's allegedly negligent conduct during the war. The scholars, led by US Jesuit Father Robert Graham, gathered documents through 1981 that were published in 12 volumes under the title “Acts and Documents of the Holy See Relating to the Second World War”. The published volumes do not make up the entirety of the Vatican collection of wartime material. Scholars and Jewish groups have called on the Vatican to open the archives of that period for study. So far, documents dating up to 1939 have been made accessible, but the Vatican has said the wartime documents will not be available until at least 2013 after they are properly catalogued. Vatican technicians scanned the other documents, noted as Official Acts of the Holy See from 1865 to 2007, a Vatican spokesman said. They are all available at www.vatican.va under the section Resource Library or on the icon of a stack of books with the Latin words “Acta Apostolicae Sedis” and “Acta Sanctae Sedis”.—CNS

Crucified Christ could be porn under new law

‘W

ILL even the naked body of Christ on the cross be considered pornography?” This is what Catholics in Indonesia are asking after the Constitutional Court backed a 2008 anti-pornography law. Indonesian civil society, including moderate Muslims, Christians, and Hindu groups, as well as associations dedicated to protecting freedom and human rights have challenged the law. “It is not that we are pro-pornography,” an Indonesian Catholic explained, “but because it is feared that this law—accepting a controversial generic definition of ‘pornography’, which includes ‘any attitude and any artistic-cultural form of communication that excites a sexual instinct or is contrary to morality’, lends itself easily to exploitation: the fundamentalist Muslim fringe can use it to penalise non-Muslims and, ultimately, seek to impose strictly traditional customs, even the Sharia.” The law comes at a time when the country is also debating a blasphemy law, which opponents say could be misused to persecute non-Muslims.—Fides


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
The Southern Cross - 100407 by The Southern Cross - Issuu