Friday, October 2, 2020

US Bishops blast exclusion of Catholic schools in coronavirus aid bill October 1, 2020 CNA Daily News News Briefs

 

US Bishops blast exclusion of Catholic schools in coronavirus aid bill

CNA Staff, Oct 1, 2020 / 09:30 am (CNA).- The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops has condemned a proposed COVID-19 relief bill that excludes support for children and families enrolled in non-public schools.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has affected all Americans, including those whose children are enrolled in Catholic and non-public schools,” said Bishop Michael Barber, SJ of Oakland in a statement released on Thursday, October 1. Barber leads the USCCB’s Committee on Catholic Education.

“It is unconscionable that this latest aid proposal would exclude these American children and the schools they attend from emergency aid that would ease the financial burdens they have borne as a result of the pandemic,” said Barber.

The bill, the Health and Economic Recovery Omnibus Emergency Solutions (HEROES) Act, would provide $182 billion for K-12 public schools, but no equivalent services for non-public schools. This version of the HEROES Act was proposed by the House Democrats and may be heard as soon as Thursday, said the USCCB.

Additionally, the bill prohibits the use of funds to assist families who have children enrolled in non-public schools.

Approximately 150 Catholic schools have closed due to the pandemic, said Barber, “many in low-income areas that serve children of color.”

“Congress and the White House must come together to support emergency aid that prioritizes the health and safety of all students, including non-public school children and the nearly two million students enrolled in Catholic schools,” he said.

In July, Barber was one of the signatories of a letter to the Congressional Black Caucus requesting aid for non-public school students that was equivalent to the percentage of schoolchildren who are enrolled in non-public schools.

After noting that public schools have requested an additional $300 billion in the next coronavirus aid package, the bishops asked in July that “families of non-public schools be considered as part of the comprehensive needs of K12 education, since non-public students represent ten percent of the K12 student population.”

The bishops requested that 10% of what is given to public schools “be directed specifically to the non-public school community to provide direct aid to families in the form of means-tested scholarships.”

Per the USCCB’s press release on Thursday, non-public schools “have had access to equitable services since 1965 and have been included in all recent federal emergency aid bills until now.”

The bishops have publicly supported the School Choice Now Act, which would provide one-time funding to scholarship-granting organizations, who would be authorized to allocate those funds to parents. The funds could be spent on private school tuition or expenses associated with homeschooling.

Catholic schools have endured a “triple whammy” this spring, Jennifer Daniels, the associate director for public policy in the USCCB’s secretariat for Catholic education, told CNA in July.

This “triple whammy” of families losing jobs, the suspension of Masses and their Sunday collections to offset tuition costs, and the cancellation of spring fundraisers has “had a severe impact on a school’s bottom line budget,” Daniels.


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Who was Carlo Acutis? A CNA Explainer October 1, 2020 CNA Daily News News Briefs

 

Who was Carlo Acutis? A CNA Explainer

Denver Newsroom, Oct 1, 2020 / 10:28 am (CNA).-

Carlo Acutis, an Italian teenager who died in 2006, will be beatified Oct. 10 in Assisi.

Acutis, a gamer and computer programmer who loved soccer and the Eucharist, has been the subject of interest around the world. So who was Carlo Acutis? Here’s what you need to know:

Who was Carlo Acutis?

Carlo Acutis was born May 3, 1991, in London, where his parents were working. Just a few months later, his parents, Andrea Acutis and Antonia Salzano, moved to Milan.

As a teenager, Carlo was diagnosed with leukemia. He offered his sufferings for Pope Benedict XVI and for the Church, saying “”I offer all the suffering I will have to suffer for the Lord, for the Pope, and the Church.”

He died on Oct. 12, 2006, and was buried in Assisi, at his request, because of his love for St. Francis of Assisi.

His cause for canonization began in 2013. He was designated “Venerable” in 2018, and will be designated “Blessed” October 10.

So, he was pretty holy, huh?

From a young age, Carlo seemed to have a special love for God, even though his parents weren’t especially devout. His mom said that before Carlo, she went to Mass only for her First Communion, her confirmation, and her wedding.

But as a young child, Carlo loved to pray the rosary. After he made his First Communion, he went to Mass as often as he could, and he made Holy Hours before or after Mass. He went to confession weekly.

He asked his parents to take him on pilgrimages — to the places of the saints, and to the sites of Eucharistic miracles.

There was fruit of Carlos’ devotion in his lifeHis witness of faith led to a deep conversion in his mom, because, according to the priest promoting his cause for sainthood, he “managed to drag his relatives, his parents to Mass every day. It was not the other way around; it was not his parents bringing the little boy to Mass, but it was he who managed to get himself to Mass and to convince others to receive Communion daily,”

He was known for defending kids at school who got picked on, especially disabled kids. When a friend’s parents were getting a divorce, Carlo made a special effort to include his friend in the Acutis family life.

And he promoted Eucharistic miracles, especially through a website he built to promote them.

On the site, he told people that “the more often we receive the Eucharist, the more we will become like Jesus, so that on this earth we will have a foretaste of heaven.”

When Carlo got sick, his life of faith increased. He was intentional about offering up his suffering for the Church, the pope, and for people who were suffering with illness.

And he was a gamer?

Here’s what we know: Carlo loved playing video games. His console of choice was a Playstation, or possibly a PS2, which was released in 2000, when Carlo was nine. We know he only allowed himself to play games for an hour a week, as a penance and a spiritual discipline, but he wanted to play much more.

Here’s what we don’t know: What games he liked to play. Tony Hawk Pro Skater 2? Gran Turismo 3? We’re pretty curious, and if CNA finds out, we’ll report it.

He was also a programmer, and, as we mentioned, built a website cataloguing and promoting Eucharistic miracles.


Carlo also apparently liked sports and the outdoors. But, well, a lot of saints liked soccer. How many liked playing Kingdom Hearts? (or whatever game he liked to play.)

And was his body incorrupt?

Initially, there were reports that the body of Carlo Acutis was found to be incorrupt.

A spokeswoman for Acutis’ beatification told CNA that the entire body was present when it was exhumed, but “not incorrupt.”

“Today we … see him again in his mortal body. A body that has passed, in the years of burial in Assisi, through the normal process of decay, which is the legacy of the human condition after sin has removed it from God, the source of life. But this mortal body is destined for resurrection,” Archbishop Domenico Sorrentino of Assisi said at a Mass at the opening of the tomb Oct. 1.

He will, however, lie in repose in a glass tomb where he can be venerated by pilgrims until Oct. 17. He is displayed in jeans and a pair of Nikes, the casual clothes he preferred in life.

And his heart, which can now be considered a relic, will be displayed in a reliquary in the Basilica of St. Francis in Assisi. His mother said that his family had wanted to donate his organs when he died, but were unable to do so because of the leukemia.

 


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Rockville Centre is fourth NY diocese to file for bankruptcy (Was this by Design, so American Churches would be forced to close over the next coming years. All to create a New Godless Democrat America)

 

Rockville Centre is fourth NY diocese to file for bankruptcy (Was this by Design, so American Churches would be forced to close over the next coming years. All to create a New Godless Democrat America)

CNA Staff, Oct 1, 2020 / 10:30 am (CNA).- The Diocese of Rockville Centre, New York, announced it was filing for bankruptcy early Thursday morning, becoming the fourth of the state’s eight Latin Catholic dioceses to do so.

In an announcement on Oct. 1, Bishop John Barres said the diocese was filing for Chapter 11 reorganization, following more than 200 new clergy sex abuse lawsuits being filed against the diocese.

The passage of the Child Victims Act (CVA) in New York in 2019 allowed for sex abuse lawsuits to be filed in past cases where survivors had not yet taken action, long after the statute of limitations had expired.

“The diocese was not going to be able to continue to carry out its spiritual, charitable, and educational missions if it were to continue to shoulder the increasingly heavy burden of litigation expenses associated with these cases,” Bishop Barres said in a video announcement.

The CVA originally created a one-year window for these lawsuits to be filed, but due to complications caused by the coronavirus pandemic, the window has been extended to Aug. 14, 2021; Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) in May originally extended the window until January of 2021, and the state legislature in August moved the window seven months further.

Several dioceses in the state have filed for bankruptcy due to the large number of lawsuits filed under the law. The Diocese of Rochester declared bankruptcy in Sept., 2019, and the Buffalo diocese followed suit in Feb., 2020; the Diocese of Syracuse also declared bankruptcy in June. The Ogdensburg diocese reported in February that it was considering filing for Chapter 11.

Bishop Barres said on Thursday that the “goal” of the declaration is to ensure that survivors “are afforded just and equitable compensation” in the hope that they can obtain “some measure of healing.”

“Most” diocesan operations and ministries would continue uninterrupted during the reorganization process, he said, adding that he believed the diocese’s “current and future liquidity” would be “sufficient” to cover normal operations and services.

Parishes and schools were not included in the filing, and the diocese is asking the court to halt civil actions against parishes and bring those cases “under the umbrella” of the bankruptcy settlement process.

After the filing, “the diocese will have fewer financial resources to help struggling schools and parishes,” he said.

“I ask each and every Catholic on Long Island during these painful times to embrace the power of the Cross of Jesus Christ and His Divine Mercy, and to help others to carry their crosses, especially survivors of clergy sexual abuse,” Bishop Barres said.

“Together we ask for the intercession of our Blessed Mother Mary, Mother of the Church, that she continue to intercede for a spirit of holiness in mission in this diocese, and the raising up of a new generation of saints on Long Island to serve the Church and the world.”


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St. Therese Parish in Utah ‘overwhelmed’ with support after statue vandalism October 1, 2020 CNA Daily News News Briefs

 

St. Therese Parish in Utah ‘overwhelmed’ with support after statue vandalism

Denver Newsroom, Oct 1, 2020 / 12:00 pm (CNA).-  

Two weeks after vandals toppled a statue of St. Therese at a Catholic parish in Utah, the parish said it has been overwhelmed by support and generosity from the Catholic community, both locally and globally, as it celebrates the feast of its patron saint.

“We are thankfully doing well, overwhelmed with all the generous and loving support we have received from our community, different parishes, individuals, and people from even all over the world reaching out to let us know they are praying for us and supporting us,” André Sicard, a seminarian at St. Therese of the Child Jesus Catholic Parish in Midvale, Utah, told CNA.

On September 14, the parish reported that vandals toppled their large statue of their patron, St. Therese, that had greeted parishioners outside the main church building for the past ten years.

Sicard said while police do not have any leads as to who toppled the statue, the parish staff suspects that it was homeless individuals, “who we have had some trouble with in the past.”

The parish used to offer more services to the local homeless population, but has had to pull back in recent years following several vandalism incidents, including a broken door and window and some stolen items, Cecilia Lopez, director of religious education for the parish, told Fox 13 News in Salt Lake City. 

“We do not believe it to be a hate crime like other vandalism that is occurring around the country,” Sicard told CNA.

For the feast of St. Therese on October 1, Sicard said the parish is celebrating two Masses, one in English and one in Spanish, both of which will be livestreamed on the parish Facebook page.

The parish is also celebrating the conclusion of the St. Therese novena “with a student from the religious education classes dressed up as St. Therese and standing on the pedestal where our beloved statue used to be.”

Sicard said the parish is still evaluating whether to replace the broken statue or to repair the original. It is also looking into improving its security measures, by adding more lights and cameras around the parish campus. Elevating the statue pedestal, as a precautionary measure, is also something the parish is considering.

Donations have come in from numerous supporters to assist with repairing or replacing the statue, the parish said.
 

 


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