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by Dan Stockman

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dstockman@ncronline.org

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May 11, 2018
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  • Read more about Postville faith leaders, immigrants look back on 10 years since raid

Postville, Iowa - On May 12, 2008, local police and federal immigration agents arrested 400 people at a meat-processing plant — a raid that disrupted hundreds of lives and changed this Iowa town. Ten years later, more than 300 people gathered at St. Bridget Church to mark the anniversary of the raid and to dedicate themselves to enacting change so similar raids do not happen again.

This story appears in the See for Yourself feature series. View the full series.

by Nancy Linenkugel

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May 11, 2018
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  • Read more about Still working

See for Yourself - "Where is everybody going?" One cruise. Two vacations. Two retiree trips. One trip home. I looked out the window imploringly, wishing by now we were already at the terminal. Should I make up something exotic?

by Tracey Horan

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May 11, 2018
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  • Read more about 'Cling tightly to me,' the Holy One says

During a hike, I climbed a fire tower. At the top, wind and fear knocked me over, leaving me clinging for dear life to the rail at the center of the winding stairs. Such a place of utter dependence is one I avoid at all costs. My struggle with mental illness since my early 20s has brought me unwillingly to this place.

by GSR Staff

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May 11, 2018
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  • Read more about May 11, 2018

"When the history and cultural context shifts, guess what's right behind it? The expression of religious life shifts to match it." 

by GSR Staff

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May 10, 2018
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  • Read more about May 10, 2018

"People don't just come to Mass and then go home. They are walking in their faith, and there is so much care about people, their issues, their struggles. It is a place of faith and action, a unique community."

by Karen Jean Zielinski

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May 10, 2018
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Columns
  • Read more about Edible relics: my mother's pickles

I cannot open the jar of homemade dill pickles, nor can I eat them. And Loretta Zielinski made good pickles. Common sense told me to get rid of them, but my heart told me they stayed right where they were in the back of my fridge. Those pickles were a big part of my mother.

by Joachim Pham

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May 10, 2018
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  • Read more about Ethnic sisters help preserve minority cultures in Vietnam

Kon Tum City, Vietnam - The Filles de la Médaille Miraculeuse congregation, which recently celebrated its 70th anniversary, has 153 sisters from eight indigenous groups who work in 32 communities in the provinces of Kon Tum and Gia Lai. Three ya, a Bana ethnic word meaning "sister," shared with Global Sisters Report their stories about their vocations, work and the choice to live with the order.

by Dan Stockman

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dstockman@ncronline.org

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May 10, 2018
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  • Read more about Nebraska move to deny sisters Medicaid could imperil retirement funds

As the Sisters of Mercy appeal the Nebraska Medicaid program's denial of coverage to 21 sisters, their predicament has national implications. Women's and men's congregations already face a growing shortfall between retirement assets and the amount needed to care for aging religious.

  • Read more about Karen Jean Zielinski

Karen Jean Zielinski is a member of the Sisters of St. Francis of Sylvania, Ohio. She has lived with multiple sclerosis (MS) since 1975 and sometimes writes for Healthy Living News — a local health magazine — and is regularly published in two national magazines. Her first book, Hope and Help for Living With Illness deals with health and spirituality.

by Dawn Araujo-Hawkins

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daraujo@ncronline.org

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May 9, 2018
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  • Read more about St. Joseph Sr. Carol Zinn named executive director of LCWR

"Sr. Carol brings a breadth of experience to this role and a heart for religious life that kindles our hope," LCWR president Teresa Maya told GSR. Notably, Sr. Carol Zinn was part of the leadership team that shepherded LCWR through three years of Vatican oversight following a doctrinal assessment of the organization that began in 2009.

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