Author: Anne Dickinson

Teachers commissioned to spread the Good News

Features 31 March 2012 Teachers throughout the archdiocese were commisioned at a special Mass last month and reminded of their particular role in enabling others to grow, fostering a love of learning and encouraging pupils in their development. St Patrick’s College Kilbirnie principal Paul Martin sm told a packed cathedral on Tuesday February 19, ‘Teachers […]

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New Caritas director’s life a primer in social justice

Features Cecily McNeill31 March 2012 The new director of Caritas is keen to boost the agency’s profile so that whenever Catholics want to support development and humanitarian work through donations, they think Caritas. Julianne Hickey took over from Mike Smith at the start of the year after a long involvement as a volunteer for the […]

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Reflections on a cricket match

Features Julianne Hickey31 March 2012 When my new colleagues in the Caritas office heard that I was going to go to Napier before the first week in my new role was finished, some were puzzled particularly as I was going to watch a test cricket match. However, I have been a supporter of Zimbabwean cricket […]

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Thai’s case heard in several courts

Features John Maynard31 March 2012 As Somyot Pruksakasemsuk shuffled into the court room in central Thailand on January 16 dragging leg chains across the wooden floor, I saw the same warmth in the greeting that I had seen 30 years earlier. Somyot was the first Thai person I ever met – then he had been […]

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Children’s liturgy of the word studied in Masterton

Features Sue Ryan31 March 2012 Four parishioners of St Patrick’s Masterton took part in the first of a series of workshops that are envisaged for the parish. The first workshop last month was a gentle introduction into the topics of:What is Children’s Liturgy of the Word?Why do we have it?How should we celebrate it?How often […]

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My name is David after the saint

Features Michele Lafferty31 March 2012 Before Christmas we went to visit our friend Veronica Williams who is in the Taita cemetery. She always was a great one for celebrations and I didn’t want her to miss this one. I laid the flowers on the headstone and noticed that her grave was in a state of […]

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Good popes, bad popes – the first millennium

Features Mgr John Broadbent5 April 2012 Papal reputations are often shaped by the era in which they lived. As seen in the series the Borgias screened on television last year, standards of morals and behaviour were at times quite different in the history of the church from those that guide today’s society. According to the […]

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From Jerusalem to Hiruharama – making the links

Features Martin de Jong5 April 2012 Halfway through her visit to Aotearoa New Zealand, Claudette Habesch, chief executive of Caritas Jerusalem, visited heartland territory: Hiruharama – or Jerusalem on the Whanganui River. This pilgrimage with Caritas staff from the Holy City to one of our own wāhi tapu gave Claudette an insight into some of […]

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First millennium popes – from martyrdom to greatness

Features Msgr John Broadbent4 May 2012 During the second period of the first thousand years, the popes became political leaders in Rome. The emperor Diocletian had divided the vast Roman Empire in two because with Rome as the only centre it was difficult to move troops from the Persian to the German border. The emperors […]

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Caritas responds to drought crisis in the Sahel

Features 4 May 2012 The Caritas aid network is responding across five countries in West Africa where millions of people are at risk from drought and poor harvests in the Sahel region south of the Sahara. A May update on the situation says ‘we’re on the brink of a serious humanitarian crisis’. Around 15 million […]

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