Currents News full broadcast for Tues, 10/6/20 (Catholic news)

Currents News reports secular and religious news from the Catholic perspective.

Some of the top stories on this newscast:

Parents and students at Good Shepherd Catholic Academy protest the sudden closure of their school.

Governor Cuomo announced new restrictions on churches in the coronavirus hotspots and surrounding areas.

How the power of prayer is helping so many Catholics during the COVID crisis.

Joe Biden says he’ll make Roe v. Wade the law of the land – as Republicans push to confirm Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court.

Parents, Students Protest Catholic School Closure as Brooklyn COVID Hot Spot Faces More Restrictions

By Emily Drooby

Parents and students outside of Good Shepherd Catholic Academy in Marine Park, Brooklyn are demanding the State of New York let the school reopen.

“I said, ‘This time we’re not doing this without a fight,’ because there’s really no reason this time for the shut down,'” parent Katie Biscione told Currents News.

The parent organized protest was in response to the last-minute forced closure of all schools in nine COVID hot spot zip codes.

“It just came as a shock, seeing the kids coming out of school crying was a real heartbreaker, and that’s why today as parents our voice needs to be heard,” David Evans, who helped organize the event, explained.

Parents argued that the school has been safe, while Principal John O’Brien they’ve had zero cases of COVID since they opened on September 9.

“So, why should our students have to be home today? They’ve been taking their precautions. They’re healthy, thank God,” he said.

The school was already using a hybrid model of learning.

Five other Catholic schools in the Diocese of Brooklyn have been affected by the closure: St. Edmunds Prep, Brooklyn Jesuit Prep, Our Lady of Grace Catholic Academy in Gravesend, St. Edmund Elementary School in Sheepshead Bay, and St. Athanasius In Bensonhurt.

Superintendent of Schools for the Diocese of Brooklyn, Thomas Chadzutko, is proud of how schools handled the last-minute closure, they were given less than 24 hours’ notice.

“We were able to do what we really wanted to do and to teach the children this morning and make sure they had best they could a normal day, because children are upset,” he explained.

Parents that spoke out at Good Shepherd Catholic Academy said they’re considering legal actions.

Just a few hours after the protest, the governor announced further restrictions to attack these COVID clusters. There will now be three zones around them – red, orange and yellow. All schools in the red and orange zone will be closed, while all schools in the yellow zone will be subject to mandatory testing.

As of right now, the schools office tells Currents News they are not yet sure which schools these new changes will affect.

The new rules will last for at least two weeks. They have to be in effect no later than Friday.

Bishop Paprocki Challenges Government Mandated Lockdowns

Currents News Staff

Prolonged government shutdowns and the threat of renewed coronavirus lockdowns are pushing many communities to their breaking point. 

Joining Currents News is the Bishop of Springfield, Ill., Bishop Thomas John Paprocki, who has been living through stay-at-home orders for months and is now suggesting that some measurements should be avoided in the future.

 

 

How Praying the Rosary Helped One Woman Through COVID-19 Loss

By Jessica Easthope

Liz Basile’s faith has always been strong.

“We always went to church together and learned the rosary from the time we were young,” Liz said.

So when the unthinkable happened, her first instinct was to pray.

“I prayed, I watched the Mass every day on Zoom at St. Patrick’s Cathedral,” she explained. “I read my ‘Jesus Calling,’ that was certainly my first reaction,” she said.

Earlier this year coronavirus devastated Liz’s family. Liz, her husband Allen, her brother Michael and her mother Josephine all contracted the virus.

“The virus and the power that it has is something you just can’t battle,” Liz said.

After lengthy stays in the hospital, her brother and husband thankfully recovered. But her mom, Josephine lost her battle with coronavirus on April 11.

“She was a diabetic and she was 90 and when people say how old that doesn’t necessarily mean she was ready to pass,” Liz said with tears in her eyes.

For as long as Liz can remember, Josephine’s faith and family were the center of her life. During the pandemic, Liz became attached to the rosary and began to view it with the same devotion as her mother did.

“She had rosaries all over her house and she never was afraid and she said I prayed my rosary why would I be afraid,” said Liz.

When it felt like the virus had defeated her big, tight knit family, Liz found her strength in faith. Her prayer group, her parish —  St. Patrick’s on Staten Island, and a bereavement group have been sources of comfort. But her family is the driving force bringing her closer to God.

“If we turn away we don’t have any hope. If we turn toward, we will be strengthened,” said Liz.

So just like the way her mother lived — without fear — Liz knows exactly where to turn.

Custody of the Holy Land Offers Christians in the Region Affordable Housing, Edu. During Pandemic

By Claudia Torres

For decades, Christians have been leaving the Holy Land for other parts of the world, including the United States, South America and Australia, in search of better opportunities and peace.

“These are the main reasons why the Christians left the Holy Land, because of the war, the continuous war and the difficulties the war gave to them. Especially the economical difficulties pushed the Christians to start leaving in order to find places where they can work, they can gain money and they can live peacefully,”  explained Fr. Ramzi Sidawi, General Administrator of Custody of the Holy Land

That’s why the Custody of the Holy Land, part of the Franciscan mission there, has been offering Christians affordable housing and education, with a number of low-tuition schools for kids to attend.

The Custody has over 500 houses in the city of Jerusalem alone; some in Bethlehem and a few in Nazareth. It’s working on setting up additional houses, renting them out for no more than 25 percent of the city’s normal rental price.

“For other communities, where they don’t have this possibility of having these houses, a lot of people left. So we understand now that giving this possibility of having a peaceful house helped a lot the Christians to remain here,” Fr. Ramzi told Currents News.

The situation is becoming even more precarious, as Israel is the first country to go into a second full lockdown because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Now the tourist industry is completely shut down, and the number of pilgrims is down to zero. This has been a crippling blow especially for the Christian community, whose livelihood relies heavily on these sectors. All of this is added to the long-standing challenges of being a relatively tiny religious group in the region.

“We are living among our brothers, Jews and Muslims. We live together. We study together. We work together, and we want to remain. The future for us is the same future for the Holy Land. So what’s going to happen for everybody, it’s going to happen for our people,” Fr. Ramzi said.

With the future of the Holy Land so uncertain, Fr. Ramzi is concerned that Christians will be the first to suffer because they are such a small group. That’s why the Custody continues to offer them as much support as it can.

NYPD Memorial Mass Remembered Officers Lost to COVID

Currents News Staff

New York’s finest are praying for their fellow officers who were lost due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Memorial Mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Manhattan remembered and honored 46 brave men and women who returned to the Lord. The service had limited seating due to the pandemic and social distancing restrictions.

In attendance was Mayor Bill de Blasio and NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea.

New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan and Brooklyn Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio talk about how the force has stuck together through these tough times.

“They often say the NYPD is a family,” says Cardinal Dolan, “and sometimes that seems like a cliche, but when you see something like this, you know that it’s not, they are a family.” 

Bishop DiMarzio says the families were given comfort and consolation.

“That’s what our remembrance is about,” says Bishop DiMarzio, “We don’t forget. We don’t forget our loved ones. We don’t forget those who served the city. We want to honor them and we have done that today.”

Cardinal Dolan and Bishop DiMarzio also blessed the medallions that were handed out to those families.

Analysis: Like a Century Ago, a Papal Encyclical Tries to Shed Light on a Dark Time

By Currents News Staff and John L. Allen Jr.

ASSISI, Italy (Crux) – A great global crisis has rocked the world, leaving millions afflicted and sowing fear everywhere. The shock polarizes societies, radicalizes opinion, and reinforces trends to a new kind of politics – loud, angry, premised on demonizing others and promising to restore lost national glory.

Unless something dramatic changes, the stage seems set for a long, bloody conflict. In that context, a pope writes an encyclical letter attempting to offer an alternative before it’s too late.

That could easily be a description of Pope Francis and “Fratelli Tutti,” the new encyclical he signed Oct.3 in Assisi and which was released today by the Vatican. In fact, however, it’s the background to “Quadragesimo anno,” the social encyclical published by Pope Pius XI in 1931, now almost a century ago. It was written as the Great Depression was raging, Benito Mussolini was firmly in control in Italy, and Adolph Hitler was moving inexorably towards power in Germany.

In the encyclical, Pope Pius XI laid out the insufficiencies of both free-market capitalism and socialist communism and tried to sketch a third way, rooted in traditional Catholic social teaching but sensitive to the realities of the time.

In a sense, “Quadragesimo anno” was Pope Pius XI’s attempt to defuse the bomb before it went off. (It would become ever more explicit six years later in “Mit Brennender Sorge,” Pope Pius XI’s encyclical denouncing National Socialism.) Those efforts failed, and the explosion Pope Pius saw coming turned out to be worse than even he could have imagined.

Time will tell what impact “Fratelli Tutti” may have, but the parallels are striking.

This is Pope Francis’ third encyclical letter, after “Lumen Fidei” in 2013 (a text largely prepared under Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI) and “Laudato Si’” in 2015, and by far his most comprehensive. One has the sense it’s almost this pope’s social and political testament, an encapsulation of his entire papacy in a little over 40,000 words.

“Fratelli Tutti” contains myriad points, and no doubt will be subject to a thousand different spin cycles. Some may choose to link certain passages to current events – it’s going to be awfully tempting for many Americans, for instance, to flash on the recent Trump/Biden fracas in pondering paragraph 15: “In this craven exchange of charges and counter-charges, debate degenerates into a permanent state of disagreement and confrontation.”

For the record, Pope Francis penned ”Fratelli Tutti” well before the American contenders squared off, and clearly his horizons are much larger than the United States. For that matter, he tells us in paragraph 7 that he began the letter even before the current COVID-19 crisis erupted.

Perhaps the best overall way to frame the encyclical is as an extended meditation on political and economic life in the early 21st century, including the impact of the coronavirus crisis. Pope Francis sees a contest between two flawed alternatives: Neo-liberal individualism, and nationalist populism. His “third way” is a social ethic of human fraternity, rooted for Christians in the Gospel parable of the Good Samaritan.

The Holy Father’s diagnosis of the internal contradictions of neo-liberalism is especially acute in paragraph 168.

“The marketplace, by itself, cannot resolve every problem, however much we are asked to believe this dogma of neoliberal faith,” the pontiff writes. “The fragility of world systems in the face of the pandemic has demonstrated that not everything can be resolved by market freedom.”

It’s important to stress that Pope Francis’ critique of hyper-individualism isn’t just a matter of economics but culture, and it’s not really left v. right. The secular progressive insisting on abortion rights is every bit as much a “neoliberal,” as Pope Francis would see it, as the country club Republican complaining about government intervention. Both reflect what Pope Francis calls a “cool, comfortable and globalized indifference” to others.

As an antidote to neoliberalism, Pope Pope Francis presents the traditional Catholic notion of the universal destination of goods, which means the right to private property always carries a “social mortgage.” That’s consistent with popes since Leo XIII in the late 19th century, though Pope Francis offers a novel twist by linking it to questions of national sovereignty raised by today’s immigration debates.

“Seen from the standpoint not only of the legitimacy of private property and the rights of its citizens, but also of the first principle of the common destination of goods, we can then say that each country also belongs to the foreigner, inasmuch as a territory’s goods must not be denied to a needy person coming from elsewhere,” he says in paragraph 124.

As for today’s brand of populism, the critical assessments offered in ”Fratelli Tutti” are too numerous to mention. Suffice it to quote paragraph 11’s denunciation of “myopic, extremist, resentful and aggressive nationalism,” which sets the tone for much that follows.

Anyone who follows political discussion these days, anyone who watches the news or who has a twitter account, certainly can confirm the pontiff’s diagnosis that such exchanges are increasingly nasty, exhibiting a kind of open rage that tells us something is seriously amiss.

“Things that until a few years ago could not be said by anyone without risking the loss of universal respect can now be said with impunity, and in the crudest of terms, even by some political figures,” Pope Francis writes in paragraph 45.

Pope Francis’ proposed remedy, human fraternity, may seem a bit fuzzy, and Pope Francis does not offer a detailed blueprint. However, he does give hints of planks for a platform along the way: Care for the elderly, combatting racism and sexism, compassion for immigrants, debt forgiveness for impoverished nations, a strong role for the U.N. and for regional alliances, and abolitionist positions on both war and capital punishment.

More than anything else, the specific issues treated in ”Fratelli Tutti” appear to be in service to illustrating an ethic of fraternity, one which begins with rejecting aggression as a means of relating to others – and the tendency to aggression, he believes, has been made significantly worse by the coronavirus and the shift to increasingly “virtual” relationships.

He’s equally clear that blood in the streets, in the name of whatever cause, isn’t the answer: “Violent public demonstrations, on one side or the other, do not help in finding solutions,” he writes in paragraph 232.

Make no mistake, Pope Francis isn’t terribly optimistic about where things are trending. He praises various points of light, including the emergence of popular social movements that he lyrically refers to as “social poets.” Nevertheless, it’s telling that even the sections of ”Fratelli Tutti” ostensibly devoted to hope quickly digress into various laments.

In a nutshell, Pope Francis sees these two great social “pandemics” – privileged individualist indifference and blind populist rage, apparently mutated into even stronger forms by the literal pandemic of the coronavirus – setting the stage for calamity unless some new force arises to counteract them.

In the short run, papal biographer Austen Ivereigh isn’t sanguine about the likely result.

“Just like the popes of the 1920s-30s, Pope Francis sees a dark road ahead, and he’s creating a space for Christians and others of goodwill to occupy in the coming conflict,” Ivereigh told me via email. “Like those earlier popes, he may not be listened to until we’re much further down that dark road.”

On the other hand, Duke historian James Chappel, author of the 2018 book, “Catholic Modern: The Challenge of Totalitarianism and the Remaking of the Church,” argues persuasively that those same 1920s and 30s-era popes saved the Church by shifting from condemning modernity from the outside to attempting to leaven it from within.

“The struggle against totalitarianism has concluded, Catholics won, and the contemporary Church was shaped to the core by that battle,” Chappel wrote.

Has Pope Pope Francis provided the Church with the resources to navigate another such great global struggle and come out the other side, alive and kicking? Only time will tell, but when that assessment eventually is drawn up, the conversation almost certainly will begin with ”Fratelli Tutti”.

Currents News full broadcast for Mon, 10/5/20

Currents News reports secular and religious news from the Catholic perspective.

Some of the top stories on this newscast:

In addition to closing all schools – including Catholic academies in the hot spot neighborhoods – the Governor has a warning about religious worship.

 The latest on President Trump’s condition as he’s treated for coronavirus.

 Paying tribute to the men and women of the NYPD who we’ve lost to coronavirus.

The Holy Father sharing his ideas on how we should face the world after the pandemic.

Brooklyn Diocese Asks Cuomo to Keep Catholic Schools Open Safely – Not Online – in COVID Hot Spots

By Emily Drooby and Erin DeGregorio

WINDSOR TERRACE — Parents from Good Shepherd Catholic Academy (Marine Park) will be meeting on the block of their school at noon on Oct. 6. In a socially distant manner, they will be expressing their frustration over Governor Andrew Cuomo’s announcement that certain Catholic academies and schools are included in temporary school closures in nine hotspot ZIP codes.

On Oct. 5, Gov. Cuomo announced all New York City schools within nine hotspot ZIP codes will physically close and pivot to remote learning on Oct. 6. This comes after New York Mayor Bill de Blasio announced a proposal on Oct. 4 to shut down schools and non-essential businesses within the areas with high positivity rates.

The neighborhoods/ZIP codes that have had above 3 percent coronavirus positivity rates for at least seven consecutive days include Edgemere/Far Rockaway (11691), Borough Park (11219), Gravesend/Homecrest (11223), Midwood (11230), Bensonhurst/Mapleton (11204), Flatlands/Midwood (11210), Gerritsen Beach/Homecrest/Sheepshead Bay (11229), Kew Gardens (11415), and Kew Gardens Hills/Pomonok (11367).

Five parish schools, Catholic academies, and high schools in the affected ZIP codes are Good Shepherd Catholic Academy (11229), Our Lady of Grace Catholic Academy (11223), St. Athanasius Catholic Academy (11204), St. Edmund School (11229), and St. Edmund Preparatory High School (11229).

During the Mayor’s press conference on Oct. 5 — a few hours after Gov. Cuomo’s press conference — Mayor de Blasio said the physical closures of schools could last two weeks minimum (with positivity rates under three percent for seven consecutive days) or as many as four weeks (whereby the last day of the four weeks positivity rates are under three percent).

Reaction from the Diocese of Brooklyn

Catholic academies and parish schools in Brooklyn and Queens are asking Gov. Cuomo to immediately reverse his decision and allow four schools that have been operating safely for weeks, within the COVID-19 ‘hotspots’ ZIP codes, to continue in-person learning.

In the three Catholic academies and one parish school located in the affected areas (St. Athanasius Catholic Academy, Our Lady of Grace Catholic Academy, St. Edmund Elementary School, and Good Shepherd Catholic Academy), enrollment totals 1,070 students, and there has only been one confirmed COVID case. “These statistics prove that the Diocesan COVID-19 safety policies are effectively protecting our students and teachers,” read a statement from the Diocese of Brooklyn.

“This decision by the Governor clearly fails to take into account the positive progress our Diocesan school system has made so far this school year,” said Brooklyn Diocese Superintendent of Schools Dr. Thomas Chadzutko.

“It is unconscionable to think that after the many sacrifices our staff, students, and parents have made, and in spite of our almost non-existent infection rate, the Governor has decided to force our four schools to close,” Chadzutko added. “The Governor should delay the order related to our schools and visit each one before holding firm to his decision.”

Click here to read the statement from the Diocese of Brooklyn

Other Areas to Watch

Mayor de Blasio has also said high-risk activities in 12 other ZIP codes — which have had climbing positivity rates for seven consecutive days — are being closely monitored. The areas could see closures of indoor dining, gyms, and indoor and outdoor pools beginning Oct. 7.

These 12 neighborhoods/ZIP codes include Bedford-Stuyvesant (West)/Clinton Hill/Fort Greene (11205), East Williamsburg/Williamsburg (11211 and 11249), Brighton Beach/Manhattan Beach/Sheepshead Bay (11235), Bergen Beach/Flatlands/Marine Park/Mill Basin (11234), Crown Heights (East) (11213), Kensington/Windsor Terrace (11218), Rego Park (11374), Fresh Meadows/Hillcrest (11366), Hillcrest/Jamaica Estates/Jamaica Hills (11432), Auburndale/Fresh Meadows/Pomonok/Utopia (11365), and Forest Hills (11375).

Trump Tweets That He Is Leaving Hospital, ‘Feeling Really Good!’

By Currents News Staff and Bill Miller

WINDSOR TERRACE — President Donald Trump departed the hospital shortly after 6:45 p.m. Monday, Oct. 5, wearing a mask and giving a thumbs up, following a weekend of medical treatments for COVID-19 virus.

Trump’s departure aboard a Marine One helicopter was shown in live streaming on numerous media outlets broadcasting from outside Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, MD.

Trump had tweeted earlier Monday that he’d be leaving the hospital at 6:30 p.m. He emerged at 6:39 pm., wearing a blue suit and blue-striped tie.

Camera shutters clicked away as a few reporters shouted questions. The president only said, “Thank you,” before stopping briefly alongside a Secret Service vehicle to give another thumbs up to the media.

The helicopter lifted off at 6:46 p.m. for the flight back to the White House.

Trump spent the weekend at the medical  center after testing positive for the COVID-19 virus.

“I will be leaving the great Walter Reed Medical Center today at 6:30 p.m.,” Trump wrote on Twitter at 2:37 PM on Monday, Oct. 5. “Feeling really good! Don’t be afraid of COVID. Don’t let it dominate your life. We have developed, under the Trump Administration, some really great drugs & knowledge. I feel better than I did 20 years ago!”

The Associated Press, meanwhile, reported that Trump’s physician, Dr. Sean Conley, said the president “may not entirely be out of the woods yet.”

Conley added, however, that members of the president’s medical team “agree that all our evaluations and, most importantly, his clinical status support the president’s safe return home, where he’ll be surrounded by world-class medical care.”

Doctors also said Trump would continue receiving treatments at the White House, according to the AP.