The Face of St. Teresa of Avila Brought to Life

By Currents News

Here’s an interesting story for the parishioners of St. Teresa of Avila in Crown Heights, Brooklyn or anyone with a devotion to the 16th-century saint.

The world is now able to put a face to the name, all in thanks to modern technology: a scientific reconstruction shows what the Carmelite sister looked like at 50-years-old, a key moment in time in her spiritual life.

The work involved experts from Italian and Australian universities authorized by the Vatican who molded her skull with clay and referenced paintings, creating the most accurate representation to date.

Her tomb was excavated for the study, and will be on display to the public from May 11 to 25 in Spain.

Brooklyn Parents Inspired To Be Baptized by Son’s Catholic Education

By Katie Vasquez

Karter Ramroop was still filled with energy after school at St Mark’s Catholic Academy in Brooklyn.

His parents, Jazmin and Kenwyn went to several schools before deciding on the one in Sheepshead Bay, where they immediately noticed how happy the four-year-old was.

“We wanted him to have a community, to feel comfortable, to have family. When he started 3K, he was so happy. He was excited to be in the classroom. So we just knew that that was the school for him,” Jazmin Ramroop, a parishioner of St. Mark-St Margaret Mary Parish, told Currents News.

“Every school we took him to, he was nervous, hiding behind us. and we decided to give Saint Mark’s a try,” added Kenwyn. “As soon as we get there, he was so comfortable.”

The couple had struggles building their family, losing a son Gabriel in 2017 before having Karter.   

“Start praying, start getting our lives together and we ended up having Karter in 2020, so it was really great,” said Jazmin of how they addressed the loss. 

After Karter was born, the Ramroops wanted to focus on building a spiritual life together. 

“As a family we wanted to grow up our son into, you know, get[ting] to know the Lord much better,” said Kenwyn. 

Jazmin was raised Pentecostal while Kenwyn was raised Catholic, but never baptized. 

The Brooklyn parents have been so impressed by Karter’s education that they decided to join the church.

“This is where I find joy and  that’s where I want to raise my son, is to find joy in the call, to listen, to hear the Lord, let him speak to you,” said Jazmin.

Karter was baptized in February with his parents proudly looking on.

Now it’s his parents’ turn as the pair enrolled in OCIA, or Order of Christian Initiation of Adults classes at St Mark-St Margaret Mary parish.  

“We actually started reading the Bible more, looking for saints. We are studying the saints right now, too. So it’s very interesting. It’s really interesting to like to get knowledge more of the Catholic Church,” Kenwyn told Currents News.

They are looking forward to the day they are baptized into the Catholic faith. 

“I’m going to get goosebumps. I feel like I’m going to have just a warmth of just relief, a feeling of, just ‘I did it, I did it,'” said Jazmin.

“I can’t wait, but I believe it’s a very great feeling,” added Kenwyn.

It’s another step in raising their son to be closer to God.

Catholic Relief Services Continues to Help the Poor and Vulnerable Despite Funding Cuts

By Katie Vasquez

As rescue efforts continue in Myanmar and Thailand after a 7.7 earthquake on March 28th, Catholic Relief Services is on the ground helping. The charity founded by US Catholic Bishops in 1943, helps 120 countries around the world. 

Brooklyn’s auxiliary Bishop Emeritus Octavio Cisneros has witnessed their work in action. In 2022, he traveled with a CRS group to Nepal, where they were building earthquake proof homes after the region was hit in 2015.

 “We went that day that their house was being given to them. They received the keys that day. Oh, what joy,” said Bishop Cisneros. 

But soon that life-saving aid will be heavily impacted.

The non-profit started layoffs and halted programs because of federal cuts to the U.S. Agency for International Development also known as USAID. The funding supplies half their budget. 

“Catholic Relief Services is the largest non-profit, faith based non-profit that partners with USAID,” said Meghan Clark, the faculty co-chair of St John’s University CRS Global Campus Committee. 

Parishioners in the Diocese of Brooklyn are being urged to step up.

“The extra collection is very much needed. otherwise CRS has to pull back, and who else is going to help some of these, these folks,” said Father Thomas Ahern, the CRS liaison for the Diocese of Brooklyn. 

And help out with their various charitable works, like their annual rice bowl campaign.

The Lenten program was founded 50 years ago and has since expanded to help more than 200 million people around the world. 

“It is one of the best ways for us to really kind of connect giving of money and resources,” said Clark. 

Although the organization is facing cuts, Bishop Cisneros says the mission will continue regardless. 

“We will continue to take care of those projects that are essential. essential, for people to eat, to sustain their lives,” said Bishop Cisneros. 

If you would like to help Catholic Relief Services make up their losses, head to https://www.crs.org/

Catholic News Headlines for Thursday 4/3/2025

Catholic Relief Services is facing steep cuts to federal funding – Currents News reports on how the organization is preparing to do more with less.

Nearly 700 people are preparing to join the Catholic Church in the Diocese of Brooklyn this year. Meet one couple who is counting down the days until the Easter Vigil.

Students at a Queens Catholic academy are encouraging kindness with a new community garden project.

St. John Paul II Tirelessly Served Church, Embraced World, Cardinal Says

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — During his long and fruitful pontificate, St. John Paul II embraced the entire world, which stands yet again in need of his blessing, Cardinal Pietro Parolin said.

“Bless us, Holy Father John Paul II. Bless the Lord’s church on its journey, that it may be a pilgrim of hope. Bless this lacerated and disoriented humanity, that it may find the way back to its dignity and its highest vocation, that it may know the riches of God’s mercy and love,” the cardinal said during a memorial Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica April 2, the 20th anniversary of the late Polish pope’s death.

Hundreds of faithful attended the Mass, including Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, a small government delegation representing Poland as well as cardinals and bishops living in Rome and diplomats accredited to the Vatican.

Retired Polish Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz, who served as St. John Paul’s personal secretary from 1966 until the pope’s death in 2005, greeted and thanked all those who were present.

“Our hearts go out to the Holy Father Francis,” who could not attend as he continues to recover in his residence, the Polish cardinal said. “We know that right now, he is spiritually united with us.”

“We pray for his health, that the Lord will give him the strength he needs to lead the pilgrim church in this Jubilee Year, under the banner of hope in these difficult times for the church and also for the world,” the cardinal said.

Pope Francis had sent Cardinal Dziwisz a letter before his hospitalization Feb. 14, expressing his wishes for a peaceful Holy Year lived in a spirit of hope and offering his blessings to all those taking part in events April 2.

Cardinal Parolin, who began serving in the Vatican Secretariat of State under the late pope starting in 1986, gave the homily, which recalled the legacy and spirituality of the Polish pope, whose pontificate of more than 26 years was the third longest in history.

Pope John Paul exclaimed “with impressive force from the very first unforgettable homily at the inauguration of his pontificate, ‘Do not be afraid. Open wide the doors for Christ,'” who knows what humanity is meant to be and points the way to eternal life, the cardinal said.

Because of that conviction, the late pope “could address with authority and firmness not only the Catholic faithful, but also peoples and government leaders,” urging them to “be aware of their responsibility to defend justice, the dignity of human persons and peace,” he said.

“We remember with gratitude and admiration his tireless service of peace, his passionate warnings, his diplomatic initiatives trying to avert wars” even when he was experiencing difficult moments in his life and “the fragility of physical strength was already evident,” Cardinal Parolin said.

St. John Paul never gave up, he said, even while “many of his appeals remained unfortunately unheeded, as happens even to great prophets.”

Another unforgettable hallmark of Pope John Paul’s legacy, he said, was the great Holy Year of 2000 and his ushering the church and the world into the third millennium.

The pope invited the church to confidently set out to sea and cast wide its nets with the new evangelization, he said.

“His words continue to inspire us and are echoed today by his successor, Francis, in this new jubilee,” which also sees the church’s faithful as setting out into “troubled waters, but still pilgrims of hope,” he said, “guided by Peter’s successor and assisted by the Holy Spirit.”

Like the “countless pilgrims who continually come to this basilica and ask for his intercession at the altar where his body rests,” Cardinal Parolin prayed the saint would continue to bless all the faithful, the church and humanity so that everyone would know God’s mercy and love.

After the Mass, dignitaries processed to St. John Paul’s tomb to pray. Cardinal Dzivisz placed a lit white candle on the altar and four representatives of Poland set a large bouquet of red and white roses, the colors of the Polish flag, next to the tomb, which was adorned with many flowers.

Cardinal Baldassare Reina, the papal vicar of Rome, read a prayer, asking for the saint to bless the world’s young people and the faithful so they would be “tireless missionaries of the Gospel today.”

“Bless every family,” he said, underlining how the pope warned against “Satan’s assault against this precious spark of heaven that God has lit on earth. Make us strong and courageous in defending the family.”

“Pray for the whole world, scarred by so many injustices and lacerated by absurd wars, which turn the world into a bloody battlefield, deliver us from war, which is always a defeat for everyone,” Cardinal Reina said.

TONIGHT AT 7: Catholic Relief Services Asks for Critical Funding as Cuts Stifle Lenten Outreach

This Lenten season, Catholic Relief Services marks 50 years of life-saving and community-building efforts through its annual Rice Bowl almsgiving program. However, CRS now faces deep cuts in funding through the Trump Administration’s freezing of funds flowing from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), from which CRS gets half of its $1.5 billion budget. Now, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops is asking for critical funding.

St. Andrew Avellino Chuch Hosts Diocese of Brooklyn’s Lenten Pilgrimage

On Tuesday, the Diocese of Brooklyn’s Lenten pilgrims made their way to St. Andrew Avellino for an evening dedicated to the eucharist. Bishop Robert Brennan lead the pilgrims and the Flushing parish in the benediction of the blessed sacrament before celebrating mass. The Brooklyn shepherd thanked the pilgrims for taking time to be with Christ, saying their show of faith touched his heart and many others.

Saint Luke’s School Students Create Garden of Inspiration in Whitestone

By Currents News

Students at Saint Luke’s School are giving themselves a round of applause for spreading kindness with their new garden of inspiration!

The garden is filled with rocks painted with vibrant colors and inspirational quotes like “Be kind” and “Like the moon, not always full, but beautiful.”

The kids gathered outside the Whitestone school with their teachers and principal for a prayer and a blessing of the rocks led by Father John Costello, who called the garden a gift to the neighborhood.

Catholic Academy Students Celebrate International Day

By Currents News Staff

Students at saint elizabeth catholic academy went on a pilgrimage around the world, and didn’t even have to leave their school!

The Ozone Park students celebrated International Day, learning about different countries.

First graders represented China– wearing traditional Chinese clothing. While the fourth graders embraced the Nigerian culture, showing off their dance moves.

Parents also joined in on the fun by buying passports and touring the classrooms to get them stamped.