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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.

Dispatches
Judith ValenteGiovanna Breu
On the day before he departed Rome to attend events at Loyola University in Chicago Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi wrote from his Twitter account ldquo Departing for the country of Dickinson Poe Whitman Melville Hemingway Kerouac F O rsquo Connor Salinger Roth Bellow Updike rdquo In 140 c
Signs Of the Times
Judith Valente
At a parish on Chicago’s North Side, Charles Dahm, O.P., finishes reading the Sunday Gospel, the familiar story of a woman accused of adultery who is threatened with public stoning until Jesus intervenes. Father Dahm then launches into a homily that surprises many.“Today I would like to
John Gilbert's "Shylock After the Trial" (Photo via Wikimedia Commons)
Dispatches
Judith Valente
An ecumenical theater troupe sparks conversation with 'The Merchant of Venice'
Mary's Lake is seen through trees on Sisters of Loretto property near proposed natural gas liquid pipeline in Kentucky
Signs Of the Times
Judith Valente
Ever since the days of pioneer homesteaders, the Sisters of Loretto have lived amid the rolling hills of central Kentucky. They taught in rural schools, still operate a corn and soybean farm and offer retreats on their 780 acres of prime agricultural land.The sisters would have liked to continue qui
The hermitage at Gethsemani: 'In the silence, everything begins to connect'
FaithDispatches
Judith Valente
How Merton kept the scales of his two vocations, writer and monk, in balance.
A man bows his head as St. Louis Archbishop Robert J. Carlson leads a prayer vigil for peace at January-Wabash Park in Ferguson, Mo., last November.
Dispatches
Judith Valente
Local pastor sees "a very diverse community working together, acting together."
Protests in Ferguson after the killing of Michael Brown
Dispatches
Judith Valente
Religious leaders are helping to heal the city.
Cardinal Braz de Aviz speaks with Sister Holland at conclusion of Vatican press conference for release of final report of Vatican-ordered investigation of U.S. communities of women religious, Dec. 16 (Paul Haring, CNS photo).
Dispatches
Judith Valente
Sister Mary Ann Zollmann former president of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious nbsp awoke at four this morning to watch on cable the announcement of the Vatican 39 s long-awaited report stemming from the six-year apostolic visitation Zollmann says she was heartened first of all by the
 Sister Jean Wincek (second from left), Sister Mary Ann Zollmann (center) and Dr. Margaret Cain McCarthy (second from right)
Dispatches
Judith Valente
A process that many women rsquo s religious congregations once viewed as hurtful and intrusive has turned into a tale of transformation for the country rsquo s nearly 59 000 religious sisters That is how several sisters in leadership positions now describe the Vatican rsquo s ldquo apostolic visita
Protester faces line of police during Los Angeles demonstration following Missouri grand jury decision on shooting of black teen.
Signs Of the Times
Judith Valente
The shooting of Michael Brown by a police officer in Ferguson, Mo., exposed long-ignored, long-simmering tensions in the United States. Ferguson amounts to a kind of national Rorschach test on race. Polls show blacks and whites hold decidedly different views about the unarmed teenager’s death.