FALL RIVER DIOCESAN NEWSPAPER FOR SOUTHEAST MASSACHUSETTS CAPE COD & THE ISLANDS
t eanco . VOl. 29, NO. 32
FALL RIVER, MASS., FRIDAYi AUGUST 16, 1985
$8 Per Year
usee back~
Family love
is theme
of congress
NAIROBI, 'Kenya (NC) More than 20 cardinals, 200 bishops and 700 pl'iests concele brated a Mass in English and Swahili on a dais built to re ;emble a thatched-roof hut as the 43rd International Eucharis ~ic Congress opened in Nairobi o\ug. 11. Amid cheers and applause, pil ~rims of some 50 nations stood in turn to be recognized, dis ;>Iaying their national flags and Jnfurling colorful banners and pendants created especially for the occasion. The :largest non African delegation was from the United States. Theresa Doherty, a pilgrim who attended the 1976 eucha,r lstic congress in her hometown ;)f Philadelp~ia, said this year's =ongress was "slower, smaller, more informal and better-paced to savor." The pope was scheduled to ad jress the congress Aug. 18, the =Iosing day. Hundreds of mlU"l"ied =ouples were. expected to renew their wedding vows before the pope during the closing cere monies. Many black American Cath Tum to Page Six
parent aid legislation
REPRESENTING THE five areas of the diocese at the Bishop's Evening are, from left, guests Mary Maynard, Taunton; Sister Simone DeCelles, F.M.M., Fall River; James Gaffney, New Bedford; Chloe Blackmore, Cape and Islands; Agnes Rose, Attleboro. (More photos on page nine)
'Some Enchanted. Text and photos by Joseph Motta Ma'rgaret Haggerty of Our Lady of the Assumption parish, Osterville, enjoyed herself im mensely last Thursday night. She was one' of hundl'eds attending the second annual "Evening on Cape Cod with Bishop Daniel A'. Cronin."
The August 8 reception, spon sored by the Diocesan Counci,1 of Catholic Women, was held at the Sheraton-Regal Inn, Hyannis and benefited diocesan charities. "It was a pleasure to meet the bishop," said Ms. Haggerty, president of Our Lady of the As sumption Women's Guild. "I've never met him before. He's a
~ve~ing'
very gracious man." Msgr. Anthony M. Gomes, DCCW moderator, referring to the function as "Some Enchanted Evening" introduced "the super enchanter, Bishop Daniel A. Cronin," to the guests. Bishop Cronin welcomed all, thanking them for their presence Tum to Page Six
WASHINGTON (NC) - The U.S. Catholic Conference has urged congressional support for proposed legislation ensuring working parents the right to take leave for the birth, adoption or sickness of a child. The bill, H.R. 2020, the Paren tal and Disability Leave Act, would .also permit temporary leave for disabilities. It calls for establishment of a national com mission to study parental Ileave salary issues. In a letter mailed shortly be fore Congress began its August recess, Msgr. Daniel F. Hoye, USCC general secretary, urged legislators to cosponsor H.R.· 2020, which he tenneda "mod est" effort and step toward "pro family" policies. Under the bill, ~ponsored by Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D- Colo., men and women employees would be permitted. over a two year period, to take 'Up to 18 working weeks' leBlve, not nec essarily paid, for the birth or adoption of a child, or to care for a seriously ill or injured child. They would retain employee Turn to Page Seven
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Huge church growth YAOUNDE, Cameroon (NC) - Pope John Paul II has made a third trip 1to Africa to encourage Catholics to deepen their faith on a Coo tinent which is expected to have the world's second largest !Catholic population by the year 2000, said a Vati can official.
The pope is promoting a "second evangelization," said Joaquin Navarro-Valls, head of the Vatican press office. He said the new effort is aim ed at counteracting secular ization of values and "atom ization" of African Christian ity into a "cluster of sects." Navarro-Valls was inter viewed by National Catholic
News Service during the pope's visit to Cameroon on his A'ug. 8-19 trip to Africa. The pope referred to a "new type of evangelization"
·in his talk to Cameroon's bishops Aug, 13. He also spoke of severe) "modern problems" challenging Afri ca's prelates. Navarro-Valls said church officials predict there will be 100 million African Catholics
by the end of the century. The pope is also concerned about keeping the African church closely aligned with the Holy See, he said. The press chief noted that in Togo, ,the pope urged Cath olics to "make church with Peter." It is a message the pope has sounded in various ways during the seven-nation trip. Navarro-Valls also said that the Catholic Church can be a "unifying factor" on a con tinent troubled by ethnic div isions, "People become Cath· olics, which is something
above the tribe," he 1~ld. "
On the issue of sed.ts, Na
varro-VaIlssaid that iniKen1a,
which was on the· pope's
agenda for Aug.. 16-1(l. there
are 150 "Christian feonfes
sions." He said so~.~ beann
in K e n y a , ' He noted the number .of
Moslems and followers of tia ditional African !t'eligiqns who have come out to "~ee the pope. ·'It is a very inlPol'tal'lt moment" for ;the (::atholic Ohurch in Africa. he' $id,and it is 1mportant for 'the pQpe to be "phY$icallY preS9nt," Jf,. The Vatican press head said there are "no ~g d9C trina1 problems" in Aftica.$1d
"no confrontations" between
clergyand'bis'hops.·~
.~
He said ~ major mOl'a1 Prob
lem, however, iSPolygam1r.:
the .:traditional practice .of
having more than on~ wifej
NC/UPI ,Reuter photo
POPE JOHN PAUJL II holds a little girl in Lome, Togo as he begins his
African trip.
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