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Volume 53, Issue 18 | wednesday, september 12, 2018 | ndsmcobserver.com
Cardinal encourages aid for vulnerable Cardinal Peter Turkson presented at Saint Mary’s as part of the annual McMahon Aquinas lecture By COLLEEN FISCHER News Writer
Saint Mary’s hosted Cardinal Peter Turkson, first prefect of the dicastery for the promotion of integral human development, as its annual McMahon Aquinas lecture speaker Tuesday night. Turkson spoke of the Vatican’s perspective on helping the poor and vulnerable. Turkson discussed a three-part approach to identifying ways to assist the needy in society. It begins with seeing, he said, followed by judging and ending with acting. “We look at examples of representations of the poor and the vulnerable in our midst,” Turkson said. “This would be the moment of seeing for us, and then we shall seek to understand the humanity
of the existence and the experiences of the poor and the vulnerable in our midst in the light of the Biblical Christian tradition, and that would be the moment of judgment. Finally, we should consider what concrete action may be formulated and applied as responses and remedies to the existence of the poor and the vulnerable in our midst, and then we act.” The inciting forces for Turkson’s work within the Vatican were one of Pope Francis’ Masses, during which he spoke about Catholics being guardians of the poor and environment, and later meetings Turkson had with leaders of popular movements. “Pope Francis’ invitation to be guardians drew attention to the see TURKSON PAGE 4
Prayer service reflects on 9/11 anniversary
ANNA MASON | The Observer
Cardinal Turkson explored the perception of the poor during his lecture on Tuesday night in O’Laughlin Auditorium. Turkson is first prefect of the dicastery for the promotion of integral human development.
Priest discusses Church involvement in scandals By NATALIE WEBER and MARY STEURER News Editor and News Writer
In the aftermath of the Pennsylvania Grand Jury report, members of the Notre Dame community gathered Tuesday in a discussion hosted by Campus Ministry to grapple with the sexual abuse crisis facing the Catholic Church. “There’s going to be no
ANNA MASON | The Observer
Students gather at the Grotto on Tuesday to pray and remember those who lost their lives in the events of Sept. 11, 2001. By GRACE McDERMOTT News Writer
Many Notre Dame students were between the ages of 1 and 5 when the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, occurred. For some, it was one of their first concrete memories. Others were too young to remember the event. To commemorate this day, students and community members gathered at the Grotto of
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Our Lady of Lourdes on Tuesday night at 8:46 p.m., exactly 12 hours after the time of day the first plane hit the World Trade Center in New York City. University President Emeritus Fr. Edward Malloy, who led the University during the time of the 9/11 attacks, presided over the memorial service. He recalled doing the see MEMORIAL PAGE 3
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resolution at the end of this,” Fr. Pete McCormick, director of Campus Ministry, said. “But we are, I believe, going to … leave from [this] with a wider sense of [the] questions that are at play.” The scandal emerged after the Pennsylvania Grand Jury issued a report on Aug. 14 stating that more than 300 Catholic priests sexually abused minors over the course of more than 70 years. The report listed more than 1,000
victims and noted that thousands more were yet to be identified. Johnny Gregory, a Holy Cross brother and graduate student, said as a member of a religious order, he struggled with guilt in the face of the allegations. “Personally, I feel it’s my fault, [that] I am involved in it, that I have done something wrong,” he said.“ … I was questioning see CHURCH PAGE 3
Professor highlights international relations University of Chicago professor John Mearsheimer delivered a lecture Tuesday for the Notre Dame International Security Center’s Seminar Speaker Series. The lecture focused on the changing state of international relations and politics, specifically on the rise and fall of the liberal
international order and its future implications. The “liberal international order” is a term which refers to U.S. international goals and doctrine following the fall of the Soviet Union, and the unipolar political landscape which developed as a result. Mearsheimer defined the key terms and concepts that make the liberal international order. “An order is a cluster of
institutions that help with the general governance of states,” he said. “These institutions are set up so that governments can coordinate activities in rational, legal ways” Examples of such institutions would include NATO or the International Monetary Fund. Mearsheimer also discussed what qualifies as international
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nd men’s golf PAGE 12
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By MAX LANDER News Writer
see RELATIONS PAGE 4