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by Dawn Araujo-Hawkins

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daraujo@ncronline.org

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November 19, 2014
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Blog
  • Read more about Q & A with Sr. Sung Hae Kim

Last month, when the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate released a special report on American women religious, the Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill were featured for their growth – not in the Pittsburgh area, where they are from, but in South Korea, where they started ministering in 1960. In 1965, Sr. Sung Hae Kim became one of the congregation’s first two Korean postulants, and in August she became its first Korean General Superior.

by GSR Staff

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November 19, 2014
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  • Read more about November 19, 2014

"We are not biologically determined; nature has an inner dimension of freedom and transcendence."

This story appears in the Making Peace feature series. View the full series.

by Melanie Lidman

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November 19, 2014
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News
  • Read more about African tradition blends with religion to illuminate path to forgiveness

Reconciliation is complex in northern Uganda, where children were both victims and perpetrators of a decades-long civil war. Religious leaders are employing traditional ceremonies to try to bring closure. And as the children who had been "conscripted" into Kony's criminal army emerged from the bush and tried to come home, the scarred communities they left struggled to absorb them. Sr. Pauline Acayo, a Little Sister of Mary Immaculate of Gulu, was the director of Catholic Relief Services in northern Uganda for 14 years before moving to another post with CRS. She calls these children “returnees.”
Related - Busy hands build bridge to recovery

by Dawn Araujo-Hawkins

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daraujo@ncronline.org

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November 19, 2014
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Blog
  • Read more about Catholic trends in Latin America

Three Stats and a Map - Last week, the Pew Research Center released the results of massive survey of religious life in Latin America. The big news out of the survey is that the traditionally Catholic region – 40 percent of the world’s Catholic live there – is becoming increasingly Pentecostal.

by Joan Brown

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November 19, 2014
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Columns
  • Read more about The Good News of caring for God's creation

Several weeks ago a startling scientific infographic by NASA came across my desk. Since the map dealt with methane, a large contributor to global warming, which I work with on a daily basis, I took note. The image of the United States displays methane releases during the study period from 2003-2009: A large red hot spot dramatically stands out in New Mexico in the Southwest Four Corners Region. According to NASA, “One small “hot spot” in the U.S. Southwest is responsible for producing the largest concentration of the greenhouse gas methane seen over the United States – more than triple the standard ground-based estimate.”

by Jan Cebula

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November 18, 2014
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  • Read more about Immigration plight is ongoing

GSR Today - A couple of weeks ago a headline caught my attention: “How can a three year old represent himself in court?” Having been a legal aid attorney for over 20 years, I was curious. How could anyone expect that? We in the U.S. have legal protections in place when children’s welfare is at stake. The system has safeguards which are supposed to prevent their return to dangerous situations.

by Dawn Araujo-Hawkins

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daraujo@ncronline.org

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November 18, 2014
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  • Read more about Doing real work

GSR Today - I think “slackitivism” gets a bad rap. I mean, I don’t actually believe that a hashtag can save the world, but hashtags, viral videos, Facebook posts and the like can raise awareness – and aware, educated people do, in fact, make a difference.

This story appears in the Ebola feature series. View the full series.

by Joshua J. McElwee

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November 18, 2014
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  • Read more about Amid West Africa's Ebola fight, deacon and church empower community

Twelve weeks ago, Catholic deacon and doctor Timothy Flanigan left Rhode Island carrying 10 hockey bags full of medical supplies. His destination? The West African country of Liberia, one of several countries struggling to halt and recover from the outbreak of the deadly Ebola virus in the region.

by N.J. Viehland

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November 18, 2014
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Blog
  • Read more about Q & A with Sr. Maria Añanita Borbon

Sr. Maria Añanita Borbon, 47, heads the Council for Ministry for the Philippine Province of the Religious of the Good Shepherd and coordinates Ruhama Center for girls and women in Marikina City, east of Manila, carrying on the work of the late Sr. Mary Soledad Perpiñan.

by Ilia Delio

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November 17, 2014
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Columns
  • Read more about Why transhumanism will transform the church

To bring science and religion together into a new unity requires a new level of consciousness, a new type of person, one who is free of the Adam myth and its corresponding misogyny. This is where transhumanism can play a profound role.

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