The
S outhern C ross
May 6 to May 12, 2015
Reg No. 1920/002058/06
Big celebration for Archbishop George Daniel
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No 4923
www.scross.co.za
Interview with Fr Nicholas King SJ
Page 10
R7,00 (incl VAT RSA)
‘Real or not, let Turin Shroud speak to you’
Page 9
Bishops apply to shift feast days BY STUART GRAHAM
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HE Southern African Catholic Bishops’ Conference (SACBC) has applied to the Vatican to shift the feasts of the Assumption and Ascension Thursday to the following Sunday. Conference spokesman Archbishop William Slattery of Pretoria said the bishops decided to apply for the move because many worshippers live in rural areas and are unable to attend Mass during the week. “Last year the bishops decided that the solemn feasts of the Assumption and Ascension Thursday should be transferred to the Sunday following,” Archbishop Slattery said. “The reasons for the decision to ask for the move of those are the inability of many of the faithful to take part in celebrations due to the rural nature of the Southern African Church and work commitments inhibiting peoples’ ability to attend Mass during the week.” If the feast of the Assumption falls on Saturday, for example, rural communities use the day to celebrate weddings or hold funerals. Many in these areas have to walk several kilometres to attend Mass. Holding a service on successive days burdens those who do not have transport, he explained. Priests in rural areas tend to serve a number of communities and have to perform up to six
services in different areas every weekend. Archbishop Slattery said until a response was received from the Vatican, it would remain the prerogative of the bishops in the respective dioceses to promulgate shifting the feast day, or not to do so. Ascension Day marks the end of Easter and occurs ten days before Pentecost. The date is governed by the phases of the moon, but Ascension Day always falls on a Thursday. The feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, South Africa’s patronal feast, is celebrated every year on August 15. It is a holy day of obligation, meaning that Catholics are required to attend Mass on the day. “We would like our people to honour Our Lady that day, but during the week many people may not be able to attend Mass,” Archbishop Slattery said. “The feast of the Ascension is a hugely important feast, but having it on Thursday sometimes means that people do not celebrate.” The application has to be approved by the Vatican’s Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments. Archbishop Slattery said the decision would not affect Botswana and Swaziland, which form part of the SACBC region, where both feast days are public holidays.
Fr Noel Rucastle (front) of Hout Bay, Cape Town, took the idea of getting closer to God literally when he fulfilled a long-standing dream of skydiving. The following day the priest told The Southern Cross: “It was an amazing experience and I’m still wearing the broad smile.” He is seen here with tandem diver Rainer of Skydive Cape Town, near Melkbosstrand. The dive was a surprise birthday present from parishioners at Hout Bay’s St Anthony’s parish. “A few weeks ago one of my parishioners was surprised by her husband on the morning of her 65th birthday. Her present that morning was a tandem dive. When she told me at Mass that Saturday evening, I made a big fuss of it by congratulating her during the parish announcements. I also told the parishioners that skydiving had been on my bucket list for a long time and I would get around to doing it sometime.” The parishioners decided to make “sometime” arrive sooner. For Fr Rucastle’s 47th birthday they surprised him with the gift of the tandem dive which took place on Freedom Day.
Precious Blood Sisters won’t close doors after nun’s murder BY STUART GRAHAM
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HE Sisters of the Precious Blood will keep their house open to the community and refuse to allow the April murder of 86-year-old Sr Stefani Tiefenbacher at her community’s Sacred Heart Home in Ixopo, south-west of Durban, to hamper their work. Austrian-born Sr Tiefenbacher, known by the people of Ixopo as “Sister God Bless”, was due to celebrate her 65th jubilee as a Precious Blood Sister in May. “We made a decision that her murder is not going to affect us,” said Sr Clair Wade, who administers the home. “Our house is open and we are there for the people. No, it is not going to affect us. Sr Stefani was a people’s person. She would not want us to close off to the community.”
For further info or to book contact Michael or Gail at 076 352 3809 or 021 551 3923 info@fowlertours.co.za www.fowlertours.co.za/ poland-2016/
St Stefani Tiefenbacher CPS, who was murdered at the age of 86. Sr Tiefenbacher was buried on April 27 in a funeral Mass attended by more than a thousand people. She leaves a younger sister
and brother in Austria. “Her funeral was wonderful, it was like a celebration,” Sr Wade said. “Every race and denomination were present. It was a community. Sr Stefani would have looked down and said, ‘Was that possible for me?’,” Sr Wade said. “That community has rallied around us,” she added. “It has brought all of us together. People who didn’t know about us before know about us now.” Sr Tiefenbacher was found by her fellow sisters in her bedroom at the Sacred Heart Home early on the morning of April 19. A novice and a young nun who had only recently taken her vows, had noticed that her door was open. They called for her, but when she did not respond they went in and discovered her body. She had been tied up with ribbon of the
St John Paul II Pilgrimage to Poland Southern Cross
typewriter with which she used to write her extensive correspondence, gagged and suffocated. A rosary was wound around her wrists. The suspect or suspects stole cash and ransacked the house’s pantry, taking alcohol and groceries. They had entered the house through an unlocked side door. The police speculate that Sr Tiefenbacher might have been targeted because she administered funds for the community. Two suspects have been arrested. Archbishop William Slattery, the spokesman for the Southern African Catholic Bishops’ Conference, said the murder of Sr Tiefenbacher was “absolutely shocking” for everybody “in and out of the Church”. “Sr Stefani spent more than 60 years serving people. That she should die in this manner is disgraceful,” he said. Continued on page 3
A journey to the places of St John Paul II’s life and devotions, led by a Bishop who knows Poland intimately.
Led by Bishop Stan Dziuba 13 - 21 May 2016
Kraków | Wadowice (on St John Paul II’s birthday) | Black Madonna of Częstochowa | Niepokalanów (St Maxmilan Kolbe) | Divine Mercy Sanctuary | Warsaw | Kalwaria Zebrzydowska (with miraculous icon) | Zakopane | Wieliczka Salt Mine (with Mass!)