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Voices

Judith Valente, a regular contributor to NPR and "Religion and Ethics Newsweekly," is a journalist, poet and essayist. She is the author of Atchison Blue: A Search for Silence, a Spiritual Home and a Living Faith, named best spirituality book in paperback for 2014 by the Catholic Press Association and one of the three best spirituality books by Religion Newswriters Association. Her book, The Art of Pausing, was runner up for the Catholic Press Association book award in 2014.

Ms. Valente began her work as a staff reporter for The Washington Post. She later joined the staff of The Wall Street Journal, reporting from that paper's Chicago and London bureaus. She was twice a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, first in the public service category as part of a team of reporters at The Dallas Times Herald in the 1980s. In 1993, she was a finalist for the Pulitzer in the feature writing category for her front page article in The Wall Street Journal chronicling the story of a religiously conservative father caring for his son dying of AIDS.

Carmen Severino, an abuse survivor, is embraced during a news conference that heralded the release of thousands of documents from the Chicago Archdiocese on past cases of clergy sexual abuse in January 2014. (CNS photo/Jim Young, Reuters)
FaithDispatches
Judith Valente
Ms. Collins’ complaints “mirror” concerns she and other members of the National Review Board raised in the early years of the abuse scandal. “The whole thing spoke to me of ‘nothing’s changed.’”
Tony Romero. Photo: Josh Leff for The DePaulia
Politics & SocietyDispatches
Judith Valente
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development estimates as many as 58,000 students across the United States—about one in 10—face homelessness at some point during college.
Kofi Ademola, left, of the group Black Lives Matter Chicago, and other protesters talk to the media outside the Chicago Police District 1 headquarters on South State Street in Chicago on Jan. 13. Speakers said Chicagoans already knew from experience what the Department of Justice said in its report critical of the Chicago Police department. (Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune via AP)
Politics & Society
Judith Valente
"You can change the training at the academy and retrain all of the current officers, but the biggest issue is changing the culture."
Politics & SocietyDispatches
Judith Valente
The march and its counter-protest showed the sharp divide in how blacks and whites view the police in a city with few integrated neighborhoods.
Politics & SocietySigns Of the Times
Judith Valente
In Chicago, 17 people were lost to gun violence in a single weekend.
Politics & SocietyDispatches
Judith Valente
Ten “core values” which Americans can agree on may get the nation back together.
Painting of Martin Luther posting "The 95 Theses," c. 1871.
FaithDispatches
Judith Valente
“Lutherans and Catholics are on the way to greater unity," says Martin Marty.
Faith
Judith Valente
“Lutherans and Catholics are on the way to greater unity," says Martin Marty.
(CNS photo)
Signs Of the Times
Judith Valente
The Illinois budget battle raises broader questions about whether the state has a moral obligation to care for its citizens in need.
Participants walk during a call for an end to violence in their community June 17 in Chicago. The march followed a rally in front of St. Sabina Church. (CNS photo/Karen Callaway)
Signs Of the Times
Judith Valente
Chicago’s long, hot summer of shootings came to an end over the three-day Labor Day weekend, with 65 people shot, 13 fatally, as homicides climbed toward 500 for the year. August was already on record as the city’s deadliest month in more than two decades.The wounded included a youn