Last June, fighting broke out between soldiers of the Sudan People’s Liberation Army and a mixture of local opposition groups and members of other ethnic communities.
Paul Jeffrey - Catholic News Service
No future for Christians in Mosul, says Iraqi Christian leader
“Christians aren’t going to come back to stay. The churches I saw were not destroyed with bombs, but by the everyday business operations of the community.”
Meet the Catholic priest pushing for rehabilitation in the Phillippines
“Healing, not killing” is the message of Father Luciano Feloni in the Philippines.
Vatican officials have begun pushing a unique project to rapidly expand the availability of antiretroviral drugs for children
“From our perspective in industry, we appreciate and really look to faith-based organizations for their leadership in reaching out to communities, identifying patients and supporting them and offering both care and prevention services,” Anil Soni, vice president for infectious diseases at Mylan, said.
Colombia is moving toward peace, but issues remain, says archbishop
Pope Francis’ Year of Mercy comes at a good time for Colombia, as the country is pondering issues of forgiveness and mercy.
Iraq’s Assyrian Christians form militias amid sectarian tensions
“Our ancestors lived there for thousands of years, so we have to go and retake our homes and lands and churches. We don’t want to live like exiles in someone else’s land.”
U.S. Catholic leaders visiting Iraq challenged to go home, work for peace
“The situation is very hard. We cry out with one voice, ‘Don’t forget us,'”
In politically polarized Argentina, some view new president with worry
“In my parish, people are not happy. They worry about employment and housing and pensions for the retired, and they fear these things aren’t going to get the same attention in the new government as they did in the old government [of President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner],” said Jesuit Father Rafael Velasco.
In Hiroshima, U.S. bishop says USCCB will push for nuclear disarmament
Bishop Cantu, who serves as chairman of the U.S. bishops’ Committee on International Justice and Peace, said that as a U.S. citizen, he arrived in Hiroshima with a sense of “sorrow and repentance.”
CRS strengthens civil society groups in fractured Lebanon
When Samar Shalhoub and some friends wanted to better protect children in Lebanon from abuse and violence, they turned their dream into a nonprofit organization. They registered with the government and got to work holding workshops on bullying and ways that children could protect themselves against
