131225

Page 1

The

S outhern C ross

December 25 to December 31, 2013

Reg No. 1920/002058/06

No 4854

Political holiness: Saint Nelson of Qunu?

Page 10

www.scross.co.za

Does your family have balance?

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R7,00 (incl VAT RSA)

How media sexualises girls

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Boos for Zuma ‘echoed the cry of the poor’ BY CLAIRE MATHIESON

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ECALLING the booing of President Jacob Zuma at the memorial for Nelson Mandela at FNB Stadium, Soweto, Archbishop William Slattery of Pretoria said that “the poor and undermined in South Africa feel hopeless, and it is time the government acted to eradicate the despair felt around the country”. “Mr Mandela was someone who gave witness to Christ. He evangelised us to the poor,” the archbishop, who represented the Catholic Church at the memorial, told The Southern Cross. “Mr Mandela emphasised the poor through simple things: when visiting a hotel or a house or a new country, he started with the ordinary people. He spent time with everyone. He inspires us Christians to give,” Archbishop Slattery said. In this way, he added, the late president reflected much of what Pope Francis has said repeatedly, for example in the recent apostolic exhortation Evangelii Gaudium. In the document, the pope calls for a poor Church for the poor, where we are called to listen, to speak to, and to embrace the poor.

He similarly reflected ideals in his message for the World Day of Peace, which is observed on January 1. In his message, titled “Fraternity, the Foundation and Pathway to Peace”, Pope Francis writes that peace and social justice are impossible without a spirit of fraternity based on recognition that all men and women are children of God—a relationship fulfilled in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. He added that it is impossible to build a just society and lasting peace without fraternity. In his message, Pope Francis calls for “effective policies” to reduce income inequality and guarantee “access to capital and services, educational resources, healthcare and technology so that every person has the opportunity to express and realise his or her life project and can develop fully as a person”. He also called on ordinary Christians to embrace a “sober and essential lifestyle” and share their wealth, calling such practice of “detachment” a “form of promoting fraternity—and thus defeating poverty—which must be the basis of all the others." Fraternity is both a gift and a responsibility A young man kneels on the street shortly after the hearse carrying the coffin of Nelson Mandela passed by in Pretoria. Archbishop William Slattery of Pretoria has said that the booing of President Jacob Zuma at the memorial for Mr Mandela in Johannesburg gave a voice to the voiceless who are frustrated with the government’s failure to address poverty. In his message for World Peace Day, on January 1, Pope Francis calls for effective policies to reduce income inequality and guarantee “access to capital and services, educational resources, healthcare and technology”. (Photo: Kai Pfaffenbach, Reuters/CNS)

Malcolm Salida, director of Catholic Welfare and Development, coaxes songs from the children at a Christmas party for clients of the Women In Need project. See page 3 for report. (Photo: Michail Rassool) each human being receives from God the Father, who calls people to fight against “inequality and poverty that undermine the social fabric, to take care of every person, especially the weakest and most defenceless, to love him or her as oneself with the very heart of Jesus Christ,” a Vatican communiqué said about the pope’s message. As children of one Father, all human beings are linked to one another in fraternity, and only efforts that are born from a sense of fraternity can overcome the poverty, conflict, inequality, crime, fundamentalism and other ills facing the world today, the Vatican note said.

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ardinal Peter Turkson, the president of the Pontifical Justice and Peace Council who represented the Vatican at the Mandela memorial, has held up Mr Mandela as an example of that fraternity which lies at the very heart of Pope Francis’ message: a spirit of courage and reconciliation which recognises the God-given human dignity within each and every individual. The booing heard when Mr Zuma appeared on the stadium’s screen during the memorial was from people who “came to mourn and sing and dance and pray”, Archbishop Slattery noted. “They’ve heard of the ideals and aspirations of Mandela. Some of these have been attained, like equality, but others, such as education and poverty eradication, have not happened,” he said.

“The booing was an act that sent a message to Jacob Zuma and his government that these issues need to be addressed and that the people are frustrated—not only for not having a voice at the memorial, but also not having their needs addressed.” The booing represented “a clash between the ideals the politicians were speaking of and the real world these people experience”, Archbishop Slattery said. “There are better means to deal with this problem. But these people felt they needed to be heard. We need to eradicate the hopelessness of the poor.” Archbishop Slattery said instead of focusing on world leaders, the service for Mr Mandela could have offered hope to ordinary South Africans by referring to Jesus. “Mandela has died and we can have hope to let us continue. Because of the resurrection of Jesus, Mandela is alive in us. Through Christ, Mandela can continue to inspire us,” the archbishop said. But the crowd heard very little of Jesus or messages of hope for unity and a better future, the archbishop said. This unity, Pope Francis writes in his Peace Day message, is “still frequently denied and ignored in a world marked by a globalisation of indifference which makes us slowly inured to the suffering of others and closed in on ourselves”. For Archbishop Slattery, the test now lies in the future: “Following the outcry at the memorial, how will we address the needs of the poor and give them hope?”

FATIMA • LOURDES • AVILA Join The Southern Cross and the Diocese of Tzaneen on a Pilgrimage of Prayer for the Sainthood Cause of Benedict Daswa to places of Our Lady in France, Spain & Portugal!

Led by Bishop João Rodrigues • 25 Sep to 6 Oct 2014

Benedict Daswa

Fatima with candlelight procession | Avila & Alba de Tormes (St Teresa) | Madrid | Zaragossa (Our Lady of the Pillar) | Lourdes with torchlight procession | Nevers (St Bernadette) | Tours (Sr Marie of St Peter) | Lisieux (St Thérèse) | Paris with Notre Dame and Rue de Bac (Miraculous Medal) | and more...

For full itinerary or to book phone Gail at 076 352 3809 or 021 551 3923 info@fowlertours.co.za www.fowlertours.co.za


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