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Demonstrators in Delhi, India, protest a new citizenship law on Dec. 27, 2019. Opponents say new law targets Muslim refugees, unlike people of other faiths. (CNS photo/Anushree Fadnavis, Reuters)
Politics & SocietyNews
Anto Ankara - Catholic News Service
As India continued to experience violent protests against a controversial citizenship law, Cardinal Oswald Gracias of Mumbai said citizenship should never be based on a person's religion.
An anti-government protester in Beirut demonstrates in front of riot police Dec. 15, 2019. (CNS photo/Mohamed Azakir, Reuters)
Politics & SocietyNews
Doreen Abi Raad - Catholic News Service
"The wounds of the Islamic State have not been healed yet, together with the ongoing violence, poverty, unemployment and poor services that have pushed thousands of people, especially youth, to demonstrate peacefully, demanding the right to live with dignity and freedom in a stable, secure and strong independent homeland," Cardinal Louis Sako, patriarch of Chaldean Catholics, said of anti-government protests.
FaithNews
Junno Arocho Esteves - Catholic News Service
"We must beware of fundamentalist groups; each (religion) has their own.”
FaithFaith in Focus
Jordan Denari Duffner
Truth and beauty can be found outside the walls of church, in a space that belongs to those who worship differently.
FaithLast Take
Robert George
Christians and Muslims must, as never before, join hands to bear witness to God’s sovereignty, to God’s love for each and every member of the human family, to God’s desire that we lead upright lives.
Politics & SocietyEditorials
The Editors
Every citizen, whether aligned with the political right or the left, must denounce these crimes against our Jewish brothers and sisters.