Pope Francis Shares Reports From His Envoy in Ukraine: “Savagery, Monstrosities”

Currents News Staff

During his General Audience, Pope Francis shared what his envoy to Ukraine, Cardinal Konrad Krajewski, has seen in the country. He was visibly moved and worried.

“Yesterday he called me. He is spending time there helping around Odessa and nearby. He told me of the pain of these people. The savagery, the monstrosities, the tortured bodies they find. We join ourselves to this noble and martyred people,” said Pope Francis.

During the audience, the Pope recalled his trip to Kazakhstan to participate in a congress with interfaith leaders. There, he signed its final declaration which asks the international community to commit itself to peace and condemned religious extremism—efforts Pope Francis says the Church has long supported.

“I like to see this as a step forward, a fruit of a path that began long ago. Naturally, I think of the historic interfaith meeting for peace called for by Saint John Paul II in Assisi in 1986,” said the Holy Father.

The Pope also spoke of his meeting with Kazakhstan’s Catholic community, a land of martyrs that suffered greatly under the Soviet regime, and which remains very small, despite now living in peace.

“Catholics are few in this vast country, but this condition, when lived with faith, can bear evangelical fruits. Above all, the beatitude of smallness, of being yeast, salt and light, depending only on the Lord and not on any human strength,” he continued.

After the audience, the crowd fell silent to listen to members of the Croatian navy who sang Marian hymns before the Pope greeted the crowds.

Cardinal Recalls His Kidnapping by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia

Jorge Jiménez Carvajal is one of the new cardinals created in the August consistory. He comes from Colombia, where he is also archbishop emeritus of Cartagena de Indias.

In 2002, he was kidnapped by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia together with another priest. In that moment, he says he remembered a phrase from the Bible: his tongue clung to the roof of his mouth.

New York Attorney General Files Civil Fraud Lawsuit Against Trump, Some of His Children, and His Business

The New York state attorney general filed a sweeping lawsuit against former President Donald Trump, three of his adult children and the Trump Organization, alleging they were involved in an expansive fraud lasting over a decade that the former President used to enrich himself.

The more than 200-page lawsuit alleges the fraud touches all aspects of the Trump business.

According to the suit, The Trump Organization deceived lenders, insurers, and tax authorities by inflating the value of properties with misleading appraisals.

New York’s Attorney General alleges Trump lied over 200 times over the course of 10 years about the values of his assets.

Also named in the lawsuit are his children, Donald Trump jr., Eric Trump, and Ivanka Trump, among others.

The state is seeking 250-million dollars and to permanently bar trump and his children from serving as the director of a business registered in New York state.

It also aims to cancel The Trump Organization’s corporate certificate, which, if granted by a judge, could force the company to stop operating in New York.

Trump has previously denied any wrongdoing. He has called the investigation a partisan “witch hunt.”

Catholic News Headlines for Tuesday 09/20/22

Bishop Robert Brennan was in Douglaston this morning for a rosary rally.

We’ll also speak with the bishop on Currents News about the importance of faith formation.

Hurricane Fiona is continuing its destructive path as it moves north toward Turks and Caicos.

DeSales Media Group Captures Rosary Rally with Bishop Brennan and Diocese of Brooklyn Students

By Jessica Easthope

Students from five Catholic academies in the Diocese of Brooklyn are exploring their faith outside the classroom and experiencing the rosary like never before.

“I felt really felt honored, I did, that’s once in a while, once in a lifetime,” said Naika Exume a seventh grader from Ss. Joachim and Anne School in Queens Village. 

DeSales Media Group, the communications and technology arm of the Diocese of Brooklyn that operates NET-TV filmed the 2022 rosary rally at the Immaculate Conception Center in Douglaston. Seventy-five students prayed the rosary with Bishop Robert Brennan and superintendent Deacon Kevin McCormack in five different languages.

“It’s important they see the rosary as an important tool for drawing closer to God but seeing other children praying the rosary and saying we have something in common here,” said Bishop Brennan. 

“I was taken aback by the ability of these kids to pray and the ability for the Lord to hear each of us in such a unique way, it made it really special,” said Deacon McCormack. 

A rosary rally hasn’t been done like this since before the pandemic. Father Joseph Gibino had the students sit together in the shape of a human rosary while they prayed in English, Polish, Mandarin, Spanish and Creole.

“We so often hear the youth is the church of the future, no they’re the church of today, of now and here is an opportunity for the Diocese to be led in prayer by our youth and young adults,” said Fr. Gibino, the vicar for evangelization and catechesis for the Diocese of Brooklyn. 

“It was cool to see a bunch of different cultures coming together, to see how peaceful people can be together,” said seventh grader at Ss. Joachim and Anne School, Nathaniel Godard. 

The rally which will air on NET-TV shows viewers there’s a lot to learn from students and that how we worship is reflected in the diversity of the Diocese of Brooklyn.

“For those that are not able to say it in their native language it’s an opportunity for them to listen and learn,” said Sr. Elizabeth Ogbu, instructional media programming assistance for DeSales Media Group. 

“And bring unity,” added director of programming and production Alexandra Piña. “That’s the number one word for today, unity, we are the Diocese of Immigrants and we shared one common goal to pray with the Bishop and I think we accomplished that today.” 

The rosary rally will air on NET-TV on the feast of Our Lady of the Rosary, October 7 at 7:30 p.m. and will be distributed to schools in the Diocese of Brooklyn to be used in class and faith formation programs. 

DeSales Media Group Employee Living in Puerto Rico Describes Hurricane Fiona’s Aftermath

Currents News Staff

The category one storm ravaged Puerto Rico, nearly five years to the day Hurricane Maria, a category five storm hit the island.  But officials there say Fiona’s flooding is worse.

The island-wide blackout caused Cristian Ortiz and his wife Crystal to temporarily move into a hotel.

Cristian works for DeSales Media Group, parent company of Currents News. He was in Puerto Rico during Maria and says the slight improvements to the infrastructure since then didn’t hold up.

Los Angeles Archbishop Issues New Call for Immigration Reform

By John Lavenburg

PROSPECT HEIGHTS — Speaking to the faithful ahead of National Migration Week, Archbishop Jośe Gomez of Los Angeles encouraged prayer for a society of “solidarity and compassion” that better serves the “poor and least among us.”

“My brothers and sisters, once again, we are called to help our neighbors and leaders to feel compassion for the common humanity and destiny that we share with one another, including our immigrant brothers and sisters,” Archbishop Gomez said. “So let us keep praying for our nation and working hard for immigration reform, and let us remember to keep our lives centered on Jesus.”

Archbishop Gomez, the president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, made the comments during his homily at an afternoon Mass on Sept. 18 to commemorate the start of the U.S. Catholic Church’s National Migration Week, Sept. 19-25.

Before the Mass, held at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in Los Angeles, 50 ministry leaders were honored for their work and support of immigrants and their families. Civic and diplomatic leaders, including the Consuls of Mexico and Guatemala, were present.

Archbishop Gomez celebrated the Mass and was joined by clergy from the Dioceses of San Bernardino, Orange, and San Diego. Relics of St. Junipero Serra, St. Frances Xavier Cabrini, and St. Toribio Romo — all saints of great significance to the immigrant community — were placed by the altar during the Mass.

During the homily, Archbishop Gomez lamented that the nation’s immigration system hadn’t been addressed for decades, saying that “we need to pray harder for our government officials and lawmakers” while never losing hope that immigration reform can be realized.

This year’s National Migration Week comes amid an ongoing immigration crisis in the U.S. There were more than 2.2 million migrant encounters nationwide between October 2021 and July 2022, and specifically more than 1.9 million migrant encounters at the southern border during the same span, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection data. Both figures well exceed the respective totals for Fiscal Year 2021 by more than 200,000.

U.S. Bishops and Catholic immigration leaders this year have consistently called for long-needed comprehensive immigration reform by Congress, and the elimination of deterrent policies at the border, mainly Title 42, that limit migrants’ legal rights to seek asylum.

They’ve also called for a pathway to citizenship for the approximate 611,000 Dreamers — undocumented immigrants who arrived in the U.S. as children — and for the Biden administration to re-designate Venezuela and Syria for Temporary Protected Status, citing the ongoing humanitarian crises that exist in each country.

Another call has been for the passage of federal legislation that would provide newly arrived Afghans an opportunity to become lawful permanent residents, which would impact more than 80,000 Afghan refugees who have resettled in the U.S. since last August when the Taliban took control of Afghanistan.

In a Sept. 16 statement ahead of National Migration Week, Auxiliary Bishop Mario Dorsonville of Washington, the USCCB’s migration committee chair, highlighted migrants in the U.S., including Dreamers, Afghans, Ukrainians fleeing the war, TPS recipients, and undocumented agriculture workers, and their “important role” in “building the future” of the United States.

“This week provides a special opportunity for encounter, accompaniment, and prayer, as well as a chance for Catholics and others of goodwill to join together in support of those who depend on our collective voice,” Bishop Doronsville said, adding that he hopes this week provides “a renewed sense of what it means to live as brothers and sisters, traveling together on the same journey.”

The statement follows the theme for this year’s National Migration Week, “Building the Future with Migrants and Refugees.” The theme mirrors that of the Vatican’s World Day of Migrants and Refugees on Sunday, Sept. 25.

In recent months, the immigration conversation in the U.S. has been dominated by the actions of Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, busing migrants to Democratic-led cities — Washington, D.C., New York City, Chicago — as a rebuke to President Joe Biden’s border policies. The move has led to a constant war of words between the cities’ mayors and Abbott as the cities struggle to respond to the migrants’ needs.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis initiated his own migrant-moving campaign last week, sending about 50 migrants on two flights to Martha’s Vineyard, an island off Massachusetts. Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker announced days later that the migrants were moved to a temporary shelter on the mainland that could better accommodate their needs.

Cardinal Séan O’Malley of Boston responded to DeSantis’s action on Sept. 16, focusing on the need to fix a broken immigration system that led to the present situation.

“From the Dreamers who still seek legal stability in their lives to those fleeing war in Ukraine, poverty in Latin America and Africa, or crises in the Middle East, the call of our common humanity will be with us for years to come,” he said. “I pray we will be equal to the challenge.”

Cardinal Blase Cupich of Chicago, where Abbott began busing migrants on Aug. 31, focused his National Migration Week message on the importance of welcoming the stranger.

“As Christians, we are called to welcome the stranger, the refugee, the marginalized and displaced persons, because they are children of God,” Cardinal Cupich said in a Sept. 15 statement. “Each migrant has a name, a face, and a story, and, as they arrive in our archdiocese, let us continue to welcome them with peace and fraternity.”