Author: wmc

Seek equality for all

In a statement for Social Justice Week 2010, the New Zealand Catholic Bishops remind us that at Pentecost we celebrate the commissioning of the disciples to go forth and embrace all peoples and cultures in the name of Jesus.

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Creating inclusive and connected communities

We also need to ensure that newcomers are welcomed and included in all aspects of parish life, including parish committees and decision-making processes. Perhaps for the first time in their lives, some parishioners are having to adjust to being ministered to by priests and religious from cultural and ethnic backgrounds different from their own.

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Grandparents choose to go back at school

We were then invited to share lunch with the children on this lovely, sunny day. My grandchildren took me on a tour of their classrooms, proudly showing me their work and introducing me to their friends.

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St James’ kapa haka for Matariki

The whānau at Te Kura Tuatahi o Hāto Hēmi, (St James’ School) wanted to support the moemoeā (vision) of whāea Jude Wills and past whānau to provide an opportunity for the school community to host a whānau evening through whakawhanaungatanga and the performing arts, to share the talents of students and whānau of other Catholic schools in our district. Matariki 2010 provided the theme and occasion.

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A mission history

In the past two months the Sisters of Our Lady of the Missions have launched their province history, Call to Mission: The Story of the Mission Sisters of Aotearoa New Zealand and Samoa 1865 − 2009 in parts of New Zealand where they have had a strong presence.

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Go gently with prayer post-trauma

When I had the stroke five years ago, I really had no religious feelings at all for several months. I had to grow into it again. It was almost like relearning my faith.

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Gazans in a miserable prison

A Palestinian leader from Gaza has appealed to New Zealanders who are ‘people of conscience’ to ask the government to use all available channels to see his people ‘set free from our oppression’. Constantine Dabbagh told a Wellington audience on August 12 that the Palestinians in Gaza are a peace-loving people who are living in a huge prison, in miserable conditions with only six hours of electricity a day.

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