From A Nun's Life podcasts - "I decided not to enter religious life but want to stay in touch with the nuns. Or will that be too awkward?"
The month-long Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons opens at the United Nations April 27. Sr. Mary Ann McGivern, a member of the Sisters of Loretto who served on her order's Committee for Peace, joined a delegation with Pax Christi in the days leading to the conference. McGivern told CNS her community has proposed that the U.S. enact a unilateral nuclear weapons ban. "We're saying that no matter what the rest of the world does, it's time for the United States to set aside our nuclear weapons," she explained. While it is unlikely that any proposal for quick action on a ban will find its way into the U.N. conference's final report, McGivern said she hopes the idea will begin to percolate among the delegates.
As Global Sisters Report celebrates our one-year anniversary, we are also celebrating the connections we have made with sisters in Africa. While in Kenya in January, I ran two writing workshops for more than 100 sisters. Here is an insightful reflection from one of the sisters who participated. You can read more of sisters' work from these sessions here at the Writing Workshop series page.
The Catholic church in Vietnam has both survived persecution and grown in faith during the past four decades, since the fall of the Saigon government, on April 30, 1975. After the North communist army captured Saigon, the capital of a U.S.-backed South Vietnam, and reunified the country, the Hanoi government confiscated and shut down religious facilities – including schools, hospitals, churches and other properties – and began a program aimed at strictly controlling all religious activities. Since then, slowly, the Hanoi communist-led government has continued to open to the needs of local religious, and formation activities are becoming stronger.
Congress has a responsibility to create federal budgets that are both morally and economically responsible – budgets that address the needs of all, not just the moneyed few. A group of interfaith leaders are briefing congressional staff this week, speaking about how our government should function – decision-making based on respect, engagement in respectful dialogue, and creatively working toward mutually beneficial solutions.
GSR Today - Migrants are being held hostage by kidnappers at the U.S.-Mexico border; Appalacian coal mining affects all of us in advance of Pope Francis's upcoming encyclical on the environment; and the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences is taking steps to become active – not just academic – especially in the prevention of human trafficking and modern-day slavery.
Over eight years ago, I had a conversation about table manners that continues to challenge me. At the time I was a canonical novice and fairly new to religious life. During that stage of formation, I was trying to make sense of what it meant to be a Catholic sister and sort through my ideals. I was in a period of serious discernment about whether this religious lifestyle would satisfy my deepest desires, to take a vow of poverty and to serve the poor.
The Southern African Catholic Bishops' Conference condemned the murder of an elderly nun who was found bound in her room at a convent in Ixopo, South Africa. Sr. Stephanie Tiefenbacher, 86, a member of the Missionary Sisters of the Precious Blood and an Austrian national, was discovered by another sister early April 19.
"You walk toward trouble, you don’t walk away from it. You walk toward it so you can embrace it and hold it and help people who are suffering."
See for Yourself - Live theater is exciting. Although viewing a play on a movie screen or on TV is entertaining, live theater brings the show to life in a way that can't be captured on film. Recently I had the privilege to be in the pit orchestra for a community production of "Peter Pan." This was the famous 1954 Mary Martin Broadway version.