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SA producer on filming priest’s life
Teaching men to be real men
Pope: We’ll be tough on abuses
Media nun on Hollywood
www.scross.co.za
May 5 to May 11, 2010 Reg No. 1920/002058/06
No 4674
R5,00 (incl VAT RSA)
SOUTHERN AFRICA’S NATIONAL CATHOLIC WEEKLY SINCE 1920
Pope: Respect our freedom of expression
Don’t miss our special Catholic Education Issue! Out on May 12!
Inside Youth programme a winner
BY CAROL GLATZ
A youth programme in a Mthatha parish has been so effective that young people are bringing their parents back to church.—Page 2
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Giving a soul to media Pope Benedict has called on Catholic communication workers to help infuse digital media outlets with “a soul”.—Page 5
A witchhunt on the pope A Canadian Catholic newspaper editor demands that the mainstream media restore Pope Benedict’s image.—Page 9
Rebuild with courage In a guest column, Fr Russell Pollitt SJ argues that the necessary rebuilding of the Church can’t be left to bishops and clergy alone.—Page 9
HAPPY MOTHER’S DAY: Bernadette Kleissler and her daughters Margaret, 3, and Elizabeth, 6 months, enjoy a day at a park. All mothers are honoured in special ways on Mother’s Day on May 9. PHOTO: LISA A JOHNSTON/CNS
A secular misery In his monthly column Mphuthumi Ntabeni states his problems with secular fundamentalism.—Page 9
What do you think? In their Letters to the Editor this week, readers discuss Mass dress codes, a third Vatican Council, help for pregnant women, our enemies, Divine Mercy and a tourist to New Zealand.—Page 8
This week’s editorial: One year of Zuma
Agca to pope: Meet me in Fatima BY JOHN THAVIS
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HE man who tried to kill Pope John Paul II in 1981, Mehmet Ali Agca, wants to meet with Pope Benedict at the Marian shrine of Fatima in May, according to news reports. The Italian news agency ANSA said Agca’s request was made by his lawyer through the Vatican press office. Vatican spokesman Fr Federico Lombardi SJ said: “Such an encounter is not on the schedule.” Agca had previously asked the Portuguese government for permission to attend annual ceremonies on May 13 in Fatima, which will be presided over by Pope Benedict who is going to Portugal from May 11-14 to mark the 10th anniversary of the beatification of Francisco and Jacinta Marto, two of the shepherd children who saw Our Lady of Fatima in 1917. Agca shot and seriously wounded Pope John Paul in St Peter’s Square on May 13, 1981, the feast of Our Lady of Fatima. Pope John Paul credited Mary with saving his life in the assassination attempt, and on the first anniversary of the shooting, he made a trip to Fatima to give thanks to Mary. He later placed a bullet fragment from the shooting into the crown of her statue at Fatima. In 2000, Pope John Paul revealed the “third secret” of Fatima, a prophetic vision of Church suffering that the pontiff said he believed referred to the attempt on his life. That prompted Agca to describe himself as a tool of divine providence.—CNS
HE Catholic Church respects everyone’s right to expression but it, too, has a right to make its message known to society, Pope Benedict has said. The Church respects people’s freedom to have opinions that are different from the Church’s, but the Church “would like that its right to expression also be respected”, he said in a speech welcoming Charles Ghislain, Belgium’s new ambassador to the Vatican. The Church carries a message that gives meaning to and can guide people’s personal, social and family lives, the pope said. As with all individuals and institutions, the Church has the right to express itself publicly on issues of social interest. “The Church, having the common good as its aim, asks nothing more than to have the freedom to be able to propose this message, without imposing it on anyone, in respect for the freedom of conscience.”—CNS
Church plans Vatican to set up new department World Cup P Masses BY JOHN THAVIS
STAFF REPORTER
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HE bishops of Southern Africa want parishioners to dress in football jerseys on June 13, which they have declared World Cup Sunday. It will be the first Sunday after the football World Cup’s opening match between South Africa and Mexico on June 11. “The World Cup is about South Africa welcoming the world to our home. We are also welcoming the world to our church communities,” the bishops said in a letter to the region’s priests. “This welcome helps us realise that despite our nationalities and our teams, we’re all one people of God.” The organisers of the bishops’ pastoral programme for the World Cup, the “Church on the Ball” team, suggest that the June 13 liturgy may replace the responsorial psalm and second reading for the 11th Sunday of the year with Psalm 47 (“God reigns over the Nations”) and 1 Corinthians 9:24-27 (“I’m not a man running aimlessly”). The bishops’ letter, signed by Salesian Father Francois Dufour, also suggests various themes for a homily. For example, “the theme of the proposed alternative second reading…is relevant to the 2010 competition. While the World Cup promotes temporary glory, believers need to remember there is more to life than earthly rewards. Parallels can be drawn between the rules of soccer and the rules of life”. The prayers of the faithful could ask for God’s blessings on the event, that South Africans may be good hosts, that sportsmanship and fairness prevail, that all may “contribute in our own positive ways to prevent, control and fight crime and corruption, hooliganism of any kind and exploitation
The bishops’ Church on the Ball website, from which a World Cup prayer booklet can be downloaded. and abuse, especially of those most vulnerable”, for road safety, among others. The bishops also encourage the singing of the South African national anthem, which they point out “is a prayer song”. The letter suggests that “socialising could open up a whole world for your community”, especially if visitors from other countries are present. “How do you make people from other cultures and communities welcome?” The “Church on the Ball” team has produced a World Cup prayer booklet which can be ordered from local chanceries or from the Southern African Catholic Bishops’ Conference. The booklet is free, though for hardcopies, postage is payable. The booklet can also be downloaded from the “Church on the Ball” website (www. churchontheball.com) “The benefits of having it in electronic format is that extracts can easily be published in parish newsletters,” the letter said.
OPE Benedict is planning to create a Roman curia department charged with overseeing the “re-evangelisation” of traditionally Christian countries, an Italian newspaper has reported. The Pontifical Council for the New Evangelisation will be announced in an apostolic letter being prepared by the pope and will be headed by Italian Archbishop Rino Fisichella, Il Giornale reported. The Vatican had no immediate comment on the report. The step would represent the first major curial innovation under Pope Benedict, who has frequently spoken about the need to renew the roots of the faith in European and other Western societies. It was Pope John Paul II who first used the term “new evangelisation”, and Il Giornale said a proposal to create a Vatican department to promote this type of activity was made in the 1980s by Fr Luigi Giussani, the founder of the Italian lay movement Communion and Liberation. More recently, the newspaper said, Cardinal Angelo Scola of Venice re-proposed the idea to Pope Benedict, and the German pontiff decided to move ahead with the project. Archbishop Fisichella has headed the Pontifical Academy for Life since 2008. He came under fire recently from a small number of academy members, who said in a statement that he should be replaced because he “does not understand what absolute respect for innocent human lives entails”. The criticism of Archbishop Fisichella stemmed from an article he wrote in 2009, which said a Brazilian archbishop’s response to an abortion performed on a 9year-old girl had shown a lack of pastoral care and compassion. The Vatican later issued a clarification reiterating its teaching against abortion and saying the Brazilian archbishop had, in fact, acted with “pastoral delicacy” in the matter.—CNS