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U.S. gymnast Simone Biles, a Catholic, competes on the floor exercise during the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro Aug. 7. (CNS photo/Mike Blake, Reuters)
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Catholic News Service
I don't use it to pray before a competition. I'll just pray normally to myself, but I have it there in case."
Men build a book booth in Kolkata, India, Jan. 25. Although the Sept. 4 canonization of Blessed Teresa is at the Vatican, special festivities to honor her will continue in Kolkata until Christmas. (CNS photo/Piyal Adhikary, EPA)
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Saadia Azim - Catholic News Service
At Mother Teresa's home, the headquarters of the Missionaries of Charity, the doors are open for all, and followers and admirers come every day, visiting and praying in her tomb.
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Dale Gavlak - Catholic News Service
"Of course, we are frightened to return. What are we going back to? The houses and churches have been bombed."
Pakistani journalists in Lahore, Pakistan, protest a bombing Aug. 8 that killed at least 70 people in Quetta. (CNS photo/Rahat Dar, EPA)
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Anto Ankara - Catholic News Service
"The Catholic Church stand firmly with the people of Balochistan in this hour" and asked the government "to bring the perpetrators of this heinous crime to justice."
African Catholics gather for an Aug. 6 Mass during the Third African National Eucharistic Congress at The Catholic University of America in Washington. (CNS photo/Rhina Guidos)
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Rhina Guidos - Catholic News Service
"Keep for yourselves the wonderful culture and the beneficial gifts of the African fabric of life."
FaithNews
Catholic News Service
Mother Teresa always returned to India to be with those she loved most—the lonely, abandoned, homeless, disease-ravaged, dying, "poorest of the poor" in Kolkata's streets.