The Southern Cross - 100630

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SOUTHERN AFRICA’S NATIONAL CATHOLIC WEEKLY SINCE 1920

Diocese tackles human trafficking with camps

Inside Parish centre for demolition Durban’s Cathedral parish is planning to tear down its century-old centre—if nobody has a serious objection.—Page 3

Priesthood not about status

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A priest who seeks status rather than the will of God won’t ever discover how God wants to use his personal gifts and talents for the good of the Church and the world, Pope Benedict has said.—Page 5

Cardinal under investigation Italian magistrates have informed Cardinal Crescenzio Sepe of Naples that he forms part of a wide-ranging corruption investigation.—Page 5

Let’s keep African names In an opinion column, Marist Brother Simeon Banda argues that the Church should encourage the use of African names.—Page 9

No coercion in confession In his fortnightly column, Michael Shackleton explains why it is necessary to maintain trust between confessor and penitent.—Page 9

What do you think? In their Letters to the Editor this week, readers discuss the language of Mass, preparations for the new missal, military conscription, the sacrament of reconciliation, and more.— Pages 8 & 11

This week’s editorial: Violence: We are warned

Fake priest excommunicated

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Honest parish finances

www.scross.co.za

June 30 to July 6, 2010 No 4682

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Power of SA Church’s World Cup St Thérèse’s relics fever in pics

Xenophobic attacks after Cup?

Reg No. 1920/002058/06

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FAKE priest who reportedly built up quite a following in the Philippines by celebrating “Latin Masses”, has had his priestly career cut short by a Philippines diocese. Cubao diocese in Quezon City announced that Bishop Honesto Ongtioco had excommunicated former seminarian Xavier Eubra de Borja this month, reported the Catholic Asian news agency UCA News. Mr De Borja had served as an altar boy during his student days. After leaving the country and entering a seminary in Russia, he returned to his old parish in 2009, saying he was an “ordained priest” on vacation. He even presented documents proclaiming himself a member of the Canons Regular of St Augustine in France. The parish accepted Mr De Borja as a “guest priest” before his supposed return to “assignment in Russia”. However, a check with the Vladivostok-based Mary Mother of God Mission Society revealed that no Filipino priest was assigned there. In the meantime, Church authorities also learned Mr De Borja had celebrated Mass, heard confessions and conducted retreats and recollections while “on holiday”. He reportedly attracted parishioners with his celebration of the Mass, which was described as “reminiscent of all the reverence and strict compliance with the movements and rituals whenever traditional Latin Masses are celebrated”. The fake priest reportedly delivered good homilies. Mr De Borja is now barred from attending Catholic Mass, receiving Communion and participating in religious ceremonies.

Children before Mass on a mountain at one of three camps in the diocese of Aliwal North aimed at combating human trafficking. The children are from the Indwe region of the diocese. “The vuvuzela kept quiet during Mass,” Bishop Wüstenberg said.

HE diocese of Aliwal North is hosting three camps during the month-long school holidays aimed at combating human trafficking. “Recruiters” for trafficking have been active in his diocese, said Bishop Michael Wüstenberg. Aliwal North is in the Eastern Cape, south of Lesotho’s border. The bishop told of one mother who witnessed at the camp how she was almost tricked into “selling” her child. The camps, which will have been attended by a total of 450 children, address human trafficking by creating awareness among participants and then in their communities and Small Christian Communities. Bishop Wüstenberg pointed out that simply by being at the camps during the long school holidays over the World Cup, the children will not be available to traffickers. Catechetical elements also form part of the camps’ daily schedule. While the children enjoy viewing some of the World Cup games, said the bishop, they prefer to play the game themselves.

New chancery for Johannesburg BY JUDY STOCKILL

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HE archdiocese of Johannesburg is planning to build a new chancery in Berea, and is looking to raise funds to help finance the move. Parish priests and parish pastoral council chairpersons were presented with the plans for a new chancery, its cost and the method of financing at the archdiocese’s annual general finance meeting. Mr Richard Waller of TPSP Architects presented the conceptual plans. There will be three components to the project: an upgrade of the Moth Hall on the west; upgrade of the existing halls (including the one presently used as the chancery), and the building of the new chancery. The old Moth Hall will house the soup kitchen and interview or consulting rooms. The halls are art deco heritage buildings built in 1934 as a factory which at one time housed a Pepsi bottling plant. They will be sensitively refurbished to meet the needs of the Cathedral parish and the archdiocese, the meeting was told. The new chancery will be built on the terrace above the halls to the east of the priests’ house. It will be a 2 000m 2 threestorey building with basement parking. It will have balconies and arcades on the north and south. The space between the chancery, cathedral and the halls will be a tranquil courtyard in keeping with a spiritual place of prayer. The parking lot will be treed. The chancery building is projected to cost R30 million, and the money will be raised by parishes. Charles Rowlinson of the archdiocese

A sketch of the new Johannesburg chancery finance committee presented the funding target. Parishes will have an obligation to raise four times their 2009 levy within two years. If their levy in was above R100 000, they will be required to contribute five times the amount. In a subsequent letter to every parish priest, parish finance committee and parish pastoral council chairperson, Archbishop Buti Tlhagale admitted to wondering “if we have made the right decision in these difficult economic times”. However, he added, “if it was not me, then someone some time in the future would have had to make the decision to upgrade the very old, present make-shift chancery”. He asked each parish to sign a commitment to raise their target and urged that a dedicated fundraising team be appointed in each parish. At the finance meeting, Chubby Sonderup introduced a “Buy-a-Brick” fundraising competition by which donors would

contribute “a brick” towards the building. The bigger the “brick”, the bigger the prize. Ticket sales will help each parish meet its target, and any funds raised over and above the target will be split between the parish and the project, Mrs Sonderup said. In an interview with Johannesburg’s Archdiocesan News, Archbishop Tlhagale said the chancery project will unify the diocese and “lift our spirits”. It will be a concrete expression of our ownership of the Church in the diocese and a show of our determination to be self-sustaining, the archbishop said. “The Church is bigger than just the parish,” he said. He pointed out that of all South African dioceses, Johannesburg’s receives the biggest financial injection from the Pontifical Mission Society—money given by fellow Catholics mostly in the Americas and Europe. It is time that the local Church used its own resources, Archbishop Tlhagale said. “We must drink from our own well.”


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