Texas Community Turns to Prayer as 19 Children and Two Teachers Killed Inside Fourth Grade Classroom

Currents News Staff

The community of Uvalde is turning to prayer as they mourn the 19 children and two teachers gunned down inside a fourth-grade classroom at Robb Elementary School.

Twenty-one people in total are now gone including 10-year-old Amerie Jo Garza whose father confirmed her death on Facebook, writing in part “my little love is now flying high with the angels above.”

Eva Mireles was a fourth-grade teacher and educator for 17 years according to her online school profile. She was a wife and mother who loved running, hiking and bike riding. Her co-teacher Irma Garcia worked at the school for 23 years and was married with four children.

Xavier Lopez was seen smiling in a photo after making Honor Roll that morning. Then, there’s 10-year-old Annabelle Rodriguez whose parents were frantically searching for her during the chaos after the shooting.

“Looking for my daughter,” said Jessie Rodriguez. “I mean, after the shooting, they don’t know where she’s at. We don’t know a list of who’s gotten flown out and you’re not letting us in at the hospital right now. So we’re at, we don’t know where to go. We need somebody reply to us, you know, where, tell us where, where my daughter’s at.”

San Antonio Archbishop Gustavo Garcia-Siller vowed that the archdiocese will be there for the victims’ families and do whatever it takes to support them. He celebrated Mass last night at Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Earlier in the day, in an interview with The Tablet newspaper, he spoke out against U.S. gun culture and our elected leaders.

“This is just outrageous,” the archbishop said. “So many people are killed daily all over the country because of the use of guns and we protect them. We need to protect people.”

The archbishop is challenging the Catholic Church in the U.S. to be more vocal on the topic of gun violence.

San Antonio Archbishop Gustavo García-Siller Consoles Community and Celebrates Mass For Texas School Shooting

Currents News Staff

Mourners attended a Mass for Tuesday’s Texas school shooting victims.

San Antonio Archbishop Gustavo García-Siller celebrated an 8 p.m. Mass at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Uvalde for the community and for the people who have been impacted directly. Uvalde is 85 miles west of San Antonio.

“I don’t know what to make of all of this,” Archbishop García-Siller told The Tablet. “It’s horrible news in the middle of the pandemic, the war, social unrest, the division, the political debates that are fragmenting more and more of our society and something like this is wounding people’s lives in a very profound way.”

The students were scheduled to celebrate their last day of the school year on Thursday.

Catholic News Headlines for Tuesday, 05/24/22

The suspect wanted in connection with a deadly subway shooting has been taken into custody.

Title 42 remains in place, for now, at the southern border.

 House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has finally responded to a communion ban imposed by Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone.

Funeral Held For Another Victim of Buffalo Mass Shooting

Currents News Staff

The music-filled service began with Rev. Frank Bostic sharing a story of determination about Katherine Massey who lived down the road from him.

“We just got some new trees and she came and woke me up that morning,” said Rev. Bostic from Pilgrim  Baptist Church.

Before family, friends, and dignitaries, he spoke of the trees she fought for, to beautify Cherry St. in the city’s fruit-belt neighborhood.

“They tried to take these new trees back and she said ‘no no no no no.’ They said, ‘well they said,’ and she said, ‘I don’t care what they said. We’re going to put these trees right here, that goes for his house and we gon’ put the other one here,” Rev. said, “and that’s what we’re gonna do about it.'”

Katherine was remembered as a fierce advocate for her community.

“She was a queen mother of this community,” said Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown. “She was a leader, leading with warmth and intelligence and the power of her pen.”

Katherine fought to reduce gun crime and improve education. Buffalo Board of Education Member Sharon Belton Cottman was Kat’s longtime friend  and offered assurances to a grieving community.

“We cannot allow anyone to steal our joy or try to take from us,” Sharon said. “It’s not an option.”

Family paid their respects with collective gratitude for Kat’s tireless work.

Baby Goes Into Anaphylactic Shock From New Formula

Currents News Staff

Three-month-old Adelina’s doing much better than she was just over a week ago.On May 15, her mom, Natalya Renteria, was up in the middle of the night looking for Enfamil Gentlease.

She says it was impossible to find, so she settled on a brand she hadn’t used before.

“It was liquid form,” said Natalya. “And I had already kind of been skeptical about some like just because I hadn’t.”

She says Adelina started to get a rash after the first bottle.

“It wasn’t just her face was half of her body,” said Jessica Reyes, the grandmother. “And that’s when we decided that that we needed to get her into the doctor immediately.”

Jessica says they rushed the baby to the hospital.

“It was heart wrenching,” said Jessica, “because her face just turned blue and she just was so limp and my arms.”

Jessica says doctors gave Adelina an allergy medicine right away.

“I didn’t know what to do,” Natalya said. “I didn’t know how to help her. I really couldn’t help her. There’s nothing really I could do.”

Turns out – Baby Adelina is allergic to safflower and eggs.

The primary care medical director for Chi Health says formula changes can cause a range of reactions.

“It can be mild from just a rash on the baby to severe to the point of anaphylaxis,” said Dr. Michael Schooff, “where the throat swells up and the baby can potentially stop breathing.”

Chi Health says fortunately this reaction is rare. Adelina’s is the first case they’ve seen so far since the shortage began. Her family just hopes store shelves are full again soon.

“Hopefully that we bounce back and real soon because the babies are in need,” Jessica said.

Title 42 Remains For Now as Migrants Continue to Flood the U.S.-Mexico Border

By Currents News Staff and Rhina Guidos

WASHINGTON (CNS) — The much-anticipated May 23 deadline on Title 42 came and went at the U.S.-Mexico border without any changes allowing migrants in, including asylum-seekers, after a federal judge blocked the government from lifting the health measure instituted during the pandemic.

Biden administration officials had announced the government would do away with Title 42 on that date. The Trump-era restriction kept migrants from entering, citing health concerns at the start of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020.

But just as it was about to be lifted, Judge Robert R. Summerhays, a Trump appointee on the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Louisiana, said May 20 that “the court concludes that the public interest would be served by a preliminary injunction preventing the termination of the CDC’s Title 42 orders.”

The Biden administration, criticized for not ending the measure sooner, said it was waiting for direction from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to end Title 42. That direction came in early April, when the CDC determined that because of better access to vaccines, a plan to immunize migrants and lower infection rates, the order could be lifted.

Authorities at the U.S.-Mexico border began preparing for an immigration surge even as politicians from both parties objected to the end of Title 42.

The ruling was a response to a lawsuit in which 24 “plaintiff states” said the health agency “failed to consider the effects of a Title 42 termination on immigration enforcement and the states.” That includes having to spend resources on “education, health care and criminal justice costs” because of a “surge in border crossings and that this surge will result in an increase in illegal immigrants residing in the states.”

Faith-based groups, including organizations affiliated with the Catholic Church, that support immigrants were quick to respond to the ruling. Tucson’s Bishop Edward J. Weisenburger said he was ‘greatly disappointed’ by the extension.

“I have seen first-hand the impact that it has on vulnerable families who have fled violence and now find themselves stranded on the Mexican side of the border,” Bishop Weisenburger told The Tablet.

“Because of Title 42, mothers, fathers, and children are stuck in situations of danger and economic precarity,” Bishop Weisenburger said. “They are unable to reunite with their family in the U.S. Our diocese does extraordinary work every day to provide welcome to asylum seekers and we believe our capacity to welcome can rise to the challenge to provide hospitality to families who are currently excluded by Title 42.”

“Using the COVID-19 pandemic as a pretext to close the U.S. border to those seeking protection, the policy has resulted in over 1.9 million expulsions without due process,” said the Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service in a May 20 statement.

The ruling, LIRS said, “means that Title 42 will not be rescinded on May 23 as planned by the administration, preventing people fleeing violence and persecution from exercising their legal right to seek asylum.”

Network, a Catholic lobby for social justice, said the ruling was sending asylum-seekers “back to harm.”

“Continued Title 42 expulsions will only mean more danger and death for migrants seeking safety at the U.S. border,” said Ronnate Asirwatham, Network’s director of government relations. “Title 42 was first invoked as a health policy. Since then, it has been used as an expulsion policy to end asylum as we know it.

“Seeking asylum is legal. Justice-seekers will not allow our federal policies to bend to xenophobia.”

The Biden administration said it would appeal the ruling, but also would continue to enforce it until then.

“This means that migrants who attempt to enter the United States unlawfully will be subject to expulsion under Title 42,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in a May 20 statement.

Catholics working with migrants in Mexico and Central America expressed disappointment with the court’s Title 42 ruling.

“Title 42 only meant more people were deported. But the intention to migrate remains the same,” Scalabrinian Sister Nyzelle Juliana Donde, director of the Honduran bishops’ migrant ministry, told Catholic News Service. “The exit from Honduras continues every day.”

“Somehow they think they’ve kept COVID out of the United States” with Title 42, said Scalabrinian Father Pat Murphy, who directs a migrant shelter in Tijuana, Mexico.

“Maybe at the beginning (Title 42) had a logic. But not once they opened up the border in November (2021) to everyone that wants to go back and forth; why would migrants have COVID and tourists would not have it?”

Father Murphy said May 20 that the numbers of migrants arriving in Tijuana were “the most since 2020.” He said he had 105 guests in his shelter.

Dominican Brother Obed Cuellar, director of the diocesan migrant shelter in Piedras Negras, opposite Eagle Pass, Texas, was serving meals to more than 300 migrants daily as people arrived in large numbers in advance of Title 42 possibly being lifted.

“We’re not prepared, because there’s no help from anywhere: not the government, not the church, not from anyone,” he said. “People are sleeping in the street.”

Brother Cuellar reported at least 80 people drowning in 2022 in attempts to cross the Rio Grande, something he attributed to “more people arriving and trying to cross.”


Contributing to this story was David Agren in Mexico City.

Knights of Peter Claver to Host Online Prayer Service for Buffalo Mass Shooting Victims

Currents News Staff

An online prayer service for the victims of the Buffalo supermarket rampage is set for Tuesday night, May 24.

It will pay tribute to the 10 people killed in the mass shooting at the Tops Supermarket more than a week ago.

The prayer service is hosted by the Knights of Peter Claver and the Ladies Auxiliary Subcommittee on Racism. Those interested in attending the online event must pre-register.

May 24, 2022

8:30 p.m.

The Zoom link to register and attend is kofpc.org/buffalo

 

Catholic News Headlines for Monday, 5/23/22

As the New York City mayor apologizes, the NYPD releases new surveillance pictures to catch the gunman in a deadly subway shooting.

78,000 pounds of baby formula was flown in from abroad — but there are concerns it will do little to ease the nationwide shortage.

An air traffic controller helps a passenger safely land a plane after the pilot becomes incapacitated.

How a woman celebrated her 100th birthday — with a thrill ride and some wind in her hair.

Getting Down Safely: How One Passenger Landed a Plane After the Pilot Suffers Medical Problem

Currents News Staff

Meet Robert Morgan, a Jupiter Florida resident, dad of three and now a certified hero.

“I just feel like it was probably meant to happen,” he said.

It was around 12:30 on a Tuesday when Robert, an air traffic controller at PBIA, was outside the tower reading a book on a break.

“There’s a passenger flying a plane that’s not a pilot and the pilot is incapacitated so they said you need to help them try and land the plane,” he said.

He was the man for the job. In addition to his 20 years in tower control, he’s also a flight instructor with around 1,200 hours under his belt.

“I knew the plane was flying like any other plane,” Morgan said. “I just knew I had to keep him calm, point him to the runway and tell him how to reduce the power so he could descend to land.”

He had never flown the specific model – a Cessna Grand Caravan – so he used this picture of the cockpit to understand the specifics the novice was working with.

“I said, ‘all right, we are going to get you to a runway, what do you see now,’” Morgan said. “He said he was just passing the shoreline near Boca. Before I knew it, he was like ‘I’m on the ground, how do I turn this thing off?'”

Together Morgan and the passenger had pulled off the impossible. They met on the tarmac and hugged it out.

“It felt really good to help somebody,” Morgan said, “and he told me that he was going to go home tonight to see his pregnant wife.”