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Books
Kimberly E. OLeary
The bumpy intellectual journey of Clarence Darrow
Stephen J. Pope
Seeking restorative justice in the prison system
Of Many Things
Karen Sue Smith
Leonard Woolf and the "habit of loving"
Signs Of the Times
From AP, CNS, RNS, Staff and other sources

“This Mass is a sign of solidarity, especially for immigrants who try to cross the border and encounter so many troubles to reach their goal."

Letters
Make Charities Catholic Re “Fighting Bias” (Current Comment, 10/31): The federal government’s recent denial of funds for the U. S. Bishops’ Office of Migration and Refugee Services should come as no surprise. Whoever controls funds controls how the funding agencies operate. T
Signs Of the Times
From AP, CNS, RNS, Staff and other sources

The Rev. David Beckmann, president of Bread for the World, said that the funding at issue supports the most basic aid for poor people abroad.

Arts & CultureBooks
James T. Keane
William Carlos Williams rejected the poetic conventions of the time in favor of a distinctly American verse.
Gerald F. Kicanas

BAGHDAD—In her book “Kitchen Table Wisdom,” Dr. Rachel Naomi Remen reminds us that while the simple loving gesture of “kissing the boo-boo” does not take away the pain and suffering that a child feels, it does take away the loneliness felt in suffering.

Suffering and fear dominate the lives of so many, too many, around our world.

Try as we might, we cannot alleviate the suffering, end the fear, but we can stand in solidarity with those who suffer, who are fearful, to help them realize they are not alone.

I reflected on these matters as the airbus carrying Bishop George Murry, S.J., and I prepared for our mid-morning landing at Baghdad International Airport, the former Saddam International Airport.

We were coming to Iraq in early October at the invitation of the bishops of the Chaldean, Latin, Armenian and Syrian Catholic communities. They had been hoping for some time that bishops from the United States would make a pastoral visit to Baghdad to see first hand what life is like in their country.

Despite the cautions we heard about our safety, we wanted to go. We wanted to express to our brother bishops and to the people of the church in Iraq the love and support of our church in the United States. We wanted to assure them they are not alone.

After being greeted at the airport by Bishop Shlemon Warduni, Chaldean Auxiliary Bishop of Baghdad, and Archbishop Giorgio Lingua, the Apostolic Nuncio in Baghdad and Jordan, Bishop Murry and I stood in the line to have our passports checked.

I saw a man who had been a passenger on our plane running to the open arms of a man who had been waiting for him. They embraced, kissed and cried. He had come home, I thought. Even though his country was so torn by war, even though danger, violence and death were daily events, he had come home.

As we drove from the airport, we saw workers planting palm trees along the route. A nice beautification project, I thought, but the trees did not do much to camouflage the armored vehicles lingering on both sides of the street and the Iraqi army and police with automatic weapons clustered near the vehicles or walking in patrols.

My other first impressions: roads marred by ruts and blocked by rolls of barbed wire and huge barrels; cement walls 10-feet tall around buildings; check points everywhere; people wary, vigilant, watchful for random acts of violence.

In the next three days, we met and talked with our brother bishops. We visited the people they shepherd in the churches, convents, schools and hospitals of their communities in Baghdad. We saw the programs and services of Caritas Iraq and met with Caritas staff.

Each of the bishops expressed their great concern about the plight of Christians. Many have been internally displaced in Iraq having left their homes and belongings for what they deem is the relative safety of the north; others have left the country as refugees to Lebanon or Syria, hoping to begin their lives anew.

Many who have fled hope to come to our country, but because our government has put a hold on Iraqi refugees, they remain in limbo in Syria, Lebanon or Egypt, insecure and marginalized.

(I have met Iraqi refugee families who have come to the Diocese of Tucson. Like many Iraqis who have come to our country as refugees, their circumstances are difficult. Unable to find jobs, not knowing the language, receiving little government support, they find themselves traumatized again. We are working as a community to help them.)

The bishops encourage their people to stay in Iraq, this land that has been home to Christians from the very beginning of the church. The people, though, ask their bishops if they can assure their safety. The bishops are frustrated that they cannot give that assurance. Christians continue to leave.

Unsafe Even in Church

Faith in Focus
James M. Lang
How I learned to take homelessness personally
In All Things
James Martin, S.J.
In preparation for next Sunday s rollout of the new English translation of the Mass Fr John Baldovin SJ professor of historical and liturgical theology at Boston College s School of Theology and Ministry offers this in-depth introduction to the changes in the Mass nbsp It s a longish presenta
In All Things
Valerie Schultz
Thinking I had to steel myself for the changes looming for the first Sunday of Advent was God rsquo s joke on me because the priest who presided over the Saturday evening Mass I just attended for the feast of Christ the King decided to go with the new translation one week early Glossy brochures in
In All Things
Michael J. O’Loughlin
This morning I opened the New York Times like I do every Saturday morning and turned immediately to the Op-Ed page to learn how I should think for the day kidding of course nbsp First I read the column by regular contributor Gail Collins entitled ldquo Republican Financial Plans rdquo in wh
In All Things
Tom Beaudoin
This is a quotation from the Rev Phillip Lawson veteran civil rights activist in a video produced by the Council of Elders a collection of surviving activists from the Civil Rights Movement including Sr Joan Chittister Here is a video of some of the Council of Elders endorsing the Occupy mo
In All Things
James T. Keane
The American Academy of Religion is holding its annual meeting in San Francisco this year drawing academic theologians and religious scholars from over 1 000 colleges universities seminaries and other schools in every corner of the United States and in recent years other nations for several
In All Things
James T. Keane
The American Academy of Religion is holding its annual meeting in San Francisco this year drawing academic theologians and religious scholars from over 1 000 colleges universities seminaries and other schools in every corner of the United States and in recent years other nations for several
In All Things
Kevin Clarke
While the OWS movement celebrated its second month anniversary with marches all over the country most notably in Manhattan the U S Census Bureau was continuing its march through American poverty statistics The census quietly released another selection of depressing data related to childhood pove
In All Things
James Martin, S.J.
A preview of this week s Religion amp Ethics Newsweekly segment this week on spirituality and humor complete with an angry-looking Jesus from a familiar basilica nbsp nbsp LAWTON nbsp Part of the problem in the Christian world Martin says is a distorted view of Jesus MARTIN nbsp We focu
In All Things
Michael J. O’Loughlin
You might remember a post about the Mormon ad campaign I spotted in New York a couple months ago Today the New York Times reports that the campaign is going national After Sunday worship in recent months Mormon bishops around the country gathered their congregations for an unusual PowerPoint pr
In All Things
Kevin Clarke
Toward Reforming the International Financial and Monetary Systems in the Context of Global Public Authority a note recently issued by the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace included a litany of complaints with the means and ends and some of the recent escapades of contemporary capitalism
In All Things
Terrance Klein
Bishops of Rome teach infallibly ex cathedra ldquo from the chair rdquo or as Bishop of Rome on questions of faith and morals Granting their infallibility in matters of content no one so far as I know has ever claimed on behalf of Roman Pontiffs a sense of timing that is without error