Tuesday, July 07, 2026

Report makes 70 recommendations for Northern Ireland institutional abuse inquiry

A failure by the state in Northern Ireland to regulate mother and baby homes and Magdalene Laundries was a serious human rights issue that should be examined in an upcoming public inquiry, a report has found.

It is one of 70 recommendations by a panel of experts which will feed into the inquiry.

Stormont passed legislation last month to facilitate such an inquiry.

Almost 16,000 women and children passed through the institutions, most of which were run by religious institutions including the Catholic Church, the Church of Ireland and Presbyterian Church as well as the Salvation Army between 1922 and 1995.

Set up in 2023 by the Northern Ireland Executive, the Truth Recovery Panel consists of 10 people and includes experts in human rights, genealogy as well as victims and survivors of the system.

It published its final report today.

Report marks 'a significant milestone'

"This report marks a significant milestone in the pursuit of truth and justice for victims - survivors who spent time in these institutions," said panel co-chairs Professors Leanne McCormick and Sean O'Connell.

"During the past three years, victims - survivors have been generous with their time, revisiting difficult experiences and trauma, to bravely ensure their testimonies are recorded to inform the panel's report and to assist the public inquiry to bring justice and accountability to the institutions involved."

The panel gathered testimony from 300 people who had experience of the institutions.

Many of the women had become pregnant as a result of rape. Many spoke of "abuse, neglect and inadequate care" in mother and baby homes.

"In many cases their experiences amounted to degrading treatment," the report said.

They included allegations of sexual abuse by a member of the Good Shepherd Sisters, known as Sister Z, in the Marianville Mother and Baby Home in Belfast.

The report said these allegations merited "special attention" in the upcoming inquiry.

Women told the authors they had been placed in homes against their will, forced to remain, and forcibly returned if they left.

The report said that in some homes pregnant women and new mothers were made to work in the institutions or sent out for domestic service in private homes.

It was often involuntary and unpaid.

The Marianville Mother and Baby Home was also used as a "de-facto adoption agency".

More widely across the institutions there was little evidence that rules around cross-border transfers of children were complied with.

From one home in Newry alone 225 babies were sent to other institutions in Co Meath, Co Donegal and Dublin.

Young pregnant women from the Republic of Ireland were often sent over the border to mother and baby homes in Northern Ireland.

Those seeking to reconnect with birth mothers or children often found it difficult due to a lack of record keeping.

In June, Stormont passed legislation to establish a public inquiry and a redress scheme relating to mother and baby homes.

It is expected to last around three years and cost around £14 million.

Under the financial redress scheme, any mother or child who spent time in any of the institutions will be entitled to £12,000.

There will be a reduced payment of £2,000 for family members of those who have died since the early 1950s.

It is estimated the redress scheme could see some 10,00 applications and cost in the region of £90m.

The Dunderrow women prove Ireland’s child abuse cover-up never truly ended (Opinion)

The most effective cover-ups are done in plain sight. 

No subterfuge is required. 

There is no need to lie or deny. 

Everything is conducted as if the law is being rigorously applied while, in reality, it is being used as a weapon. 

And then, when somebody has to answer for what’s going on, they can plausibly claim ignorance.

The case of the Dunderrow women that has been in the news recently is a perfect example of the cover-up in plain sight. There are 19 women on either side of the pension age who are being told that logic and reason don’t apply to their case.

They were sexually abused, sometimes routinely, by a teacher, Leo Hickey, in the West Cork school to the point where some of them thought this was a normal part of schooling. 

Two redress schemes were set up to compensate them for the failure of the State to protect their childhoods. Both determined they didn’t qualify for redress for the crimes.

There is no issue about what they suffered. 

Nearly 30 years ago, they provided statements for the criminal case against Hickey. He pleaded guilty to 21 samples counts out of a total of 387, perpetrated against 21 girls in his charge. 

Twenty years later, Hickey would be convicted for a second time for abusing a boy in another school. 

Nobody could claim that the women weren’t entitled to redress, or that any of them were trying it on in pursuit of some easy money. Yet, the State has consistently put up barriers.

“It’s a continuation of the cover-up,” says Martha, one of the women who has thus far been denied redress for what she suffered. 

“To me, it’s just continuing under a different guise. 

We haven’t learned from the mother and baby homes. We haven’t learned from the religious abuse

"We should be learning from all of that by now. Something comes out and everybody is horrified. And then we all move on and the cover up continues.”

Taoiseach Micheál Martin isn’t culpable for how the schemes were set up, but last Wednesday on Morning Ireland, he felt compelled to defend the system.

“There has been a long journey in respect of this issue,” he said, adding that some of the women hadn’t been able to access redress “because of the parameters governing that". 

The parameters governing the schemes were inserted by the State, and they have all the appearance of being done to frustrate applicants.

The reality is that the cover-up of child sexual abuse as a societal problem dates back nearly a century, and continues, as Martha points out, right up until today.

Complete ignorance

When complaints emanating from Dunderrow National School and others like it began surfacing in the 1970s, the official reaction was one of complete ignorance. 

Nobody, in either the permanent or elected government, had any evidence to suggest that this kind of thing could and did happen. Such a positioning was entirely dishonest.

The State was officially aware of the prevalence of child sexual abuse since the completion of the Carrigan report in 1930.

The report was ostensibly into child prostitution and associated activity. It touched on the reality of the abortion boat to the UK and, crucially, that of child abuse. Its purpose was to examine whether laws in this area should be updated.

What emerges from Carrigan is the priorities that were in place when it came to protection and welfare of mothers and children. 

“Illegitimacy” was not central to the terms of reference, but “we felt it necessary to make it a subject of enquiry, as illegitimacy must be regarded as one of the principal causes of the species of crime and vice".

That, rather than the fate of mothers giving birth outside the tight strictures of society at the time, was main concern.

After dealing at some length with the “dance hall craze” which was responsible for dealing a savage blow to general morality, the report got to the serious issue of child sexual abuse.

Specifically, “that there was an alarming amount of sexual crime increasing yearly, a feature of which was the large number of cases of criminal interference with girls and children from 16 years downwards, including many cases of children under 10 years".

The garda commissioner told the Carrigan committee that the force estimated that “not 15% of such cases were prosecuted”. 

A number of reasons were given for this, including the reluctance of parents to pursue it or subject their children to a court appearance and the difficulty of acquiring proof of a sufficient standard.

'Outrage upon young females'

The commissioner also pointed out, in relation to the “numerous case of outrage upon young females”, that the “children of poor classes are less protected than in Great Britain”.

Updates in the law were recommended, including raising the age of consent. 

However, crucially, the report was never published. So the government of the day used it to update the law, which was as it should be, but all the disturbing evidence connected to child abuse was effectively buried.

A memorandum accompanying the report contained advice from the Department of Justice that it should not to be published. 

The report was criticised in several respects, including that “the obvious conclusion to be drawn from it was that the ordinary feelings of decency and the influence of religion had failed in Ireland and that the only remedy was by way of police action”.

So evidence that child sexual abuse was a serious and growing problem was kept secret within the government on the basis that it might suggest the Catholic Church had failed in its mission to impose strict sexual morality on the population.

There was zero consideration for the victims. There was no attempt to protect children from that point

Everything was simply swept under the carpet to maintain a facade.

Carrigan was thus buried for decades, and it was only officially explored again in the late 2000s.

When Louise O’Keeffe, who had been abused as a child in Dunderrow, brought an action against the State in 1998 for its failure to protect her, the State’s response was to contest her claim as if the issue of child sexual abuse was something that had been alien until allegations emerged in the 1970s.

O’Keeffe was fought all the way to the Supreme Court on that basis. It was only when she went to the European Court of Human Rights that the truth emerged. 

In the court’s ruling in her favour in 2014, the Carrigan report is mentioned 11 times. This was, in effect, exhibit A for the case that the State had known for decades of the prevalence of child abuse and that it was a serious problem. 

Once that was established, a glaring question is why no safeguards were put in place in the one location where children spent a large part of their days.

By then, the significance of Carrigan had been exposed in the Ryan report into clerical abuse in the Dublin diocese, published in 2009.

Despite all that, the State continued to, in effect, cover up by denying the rock solid case of the Dunderrow women for redress.

Martha, like many of the others, attempted to get on with her life after having her childhood devastated. 

“I would never have taken a case, but then I got a phone call from another pupil, and then I knew straight away what it was about," she said.

Out of that meeting came the criminal prosecution of Hickey in 1997. After that, they saw Louise O’Keeffe fight her 16 year battle for justice. 

“She was amazing,” Martha says. “We watched her go through it and, out of that, the government was forced to set up the redress scheme. 

"That was all over 10 years ago and here we still are, at a late stage in life, and they are still trying to make out that there was no responsibility for what was done to us.”

It is all being done out in the open, legally, with the tacit backing of the elected government of the day. 

However, the morality of using the law to deny the State’s culpability and its duty to do right by citizens who were wronged cannot be glossed over.

Vatican publishes the working document of the world meeting on Amoris laetitia

The Vatican has published this Monday the thematic itinerary that will serve as the basis for the meeting that Pope Leo XIV will hold from 7 to 14 October 2026 with the heads of the Eastern Catholic Churches sui iuris and the presidents of the episcopal conferences from around the world, on the occasion of the tenth anniversary of the apostolic exhortation Amoris laetitia.

According to the text, the meeting aims «to proceed, in a climate of mutual listening, to a synodal discernment on the steps to be taken to proclaim the Gospel to today’s families, in the light of Amoris laetitia and taking into account what is being carried out in the local Churches».

Five areas of reflection

The itinerary is structured around five major themes that will shape the working sessions of the meeting.

The first will be dedicated to «Today’s families: reality, beauty and challenges», with the purpose of analysing the current situation of families from the pastoral experience of the local Churches. 

Among the issues highlighted are job and housing insecurity, illness, the education of children, emotional loneliness, and the care of elderly people or those with disabilities.

The second block will address «Young people and the discovery of the vocation to marriage». 

The document notes that, in many places, young people’s confidence in the possibility of building a stable marital project has weakened for economic, social and cultural reasons, and raises the need to reflect on the paths of accompaniment and formation towards marriage.

The first years of marriage and situations of difficulty

The third theme will be dedicated to the first years of married life, considered a decisive period for consolidating the conjugal bond and facing the first stages of family life.

The fourth section will focus on families going through situations of difficulty. Among the issues raised are the accompaniment of people living through experiences of suffering, abandonment, separation or divorce, as well as reflection on how to build Christian communities where these people can feel heard and participate in ecclesial life.

The family as a subject of mission

The fifth and final axis of work is entitled «Christian families, subjects of the Church’s mission». The document affirms that families are not only recipients of pastoral action, but also protagonists of evangelisation.

It also recalls the words of Saint Paul VI in Humanae vitae: «Spouses themselves become guides for other spouses». The text also underlines that the family remains the first sphere for the transmission of the faith and raises how to strengthen its contribution to the evangelising mission of Christian communities.

The meeting will be held in Rome between 7 and 14 October and will bring together representatives of the Eastern Catholic Churches and of the episcopal conferences from around the world to share pastoral experiences and reflect on the application of Amoris laetitia ten years after its publication.

Pope Leo XIV proposes Saint Columbanus as a model for a Europe seeking peace

In a new appeal for peace amid the conflicts shaking the world, Pope Leo XIV has stated that reconciliation among peoples requires, above all, a path of conversion and penance. 

In a message sent on the occasion of ‘St. Columbanus Day,’ celebrated this weekend in the Italian city of Lodi, the Pontiff affirmed that «only divine mercy can instill human mercy in hearts and make enemies extend their hands to one another».

The letter, dated July 2 and signed by the Cardinal Secretary of State, Pietro Parolin, was addressed to the Bishop of Lodi, Monsignor Maurizio Malvestiti, on the occasion of the XXVII edition of ‘St. Columbanus Day,’ an event dedicated to St. Columbanus, the sixth-century Irish abbot and one of the great evangelizers of Western Europe.

St. Columbanus and the Christian roots of Europe

Born in Ireland around the year 543, St. Columbanus undertook an intense missionary work across the European continent, where he founded numerous monasteries in what are now the territories of France, Switzerland, and Italy, including the famous monastery of Bobbio. 

His influence was decisive in the consolidation of Western monasticism and he is considered one of the great spiritual figures of Christian Europe.

Leo XIV congratulated the organizers for the perseverance with which this initiative has been maintained for nearly three decades, involving more and more ecclesial and civil communities linked to the saint in different European countries.

The Pope especially highlighted that the St. Columbanus Days have fostered encounters among people of different languages and nations, inviting them to rediscover together «the values of the Christian tradition» as a response to the challenges of the present.

Peace begins with conversion

Among these challenges, the Holy Father placed peace first. As he explained, St. Columbanus teaches an indispensable attitude for any process of reconciliation: penance.

Leo XIV pointed out that only those who humbly present themselves before God, acknowledging their own faults, both personal and collective, can embark on a true path toward peace.

In this regard, he warned that when a conflict degenerates into war, with its tragic toll of death and destruction, it is not enough to hold the adversary responsible.

«Instead of accusing one another, we must implore the mercy of God, the merciful judge», the Pontiff states in the letter, adding that «only divine mercy can instill human mercy in hearts and make enemies extend their hands to one another».

A message for Europe today

The words of Leo XIV come in an international context marked by the wars in Ukraine and the Holy Land, as well as other conflicts that continue to claim thousands of victims. 

In this scenario, the Pope once again insists on an idea present since the beginning of his pontificate: peace cannot rest solely on political or military agreements, but requires a genuine conversion of the heart.

The Pontiff added that St. Columbanus also teaches not to keep for oneself the gifts received from God, but to share them with all, fostering encounters among peoples and cultures from the Christian roots of Europe.

Recalling his recent visit to Codogno

In the final part of the letter, Leo XIV expressed his hope that ‘St. Columbanus Day’ may bear abundant spiritual fruits and recalled his recent visit to Codogno, in the diocese of Lodi, where he went to venerate St. Frances Xavier Cabrini.

The Holy Father concluded by imparting the apostolic blessing to all participants and wishing that the example of St. Columbanus may continue to inspire Europe in the pursuit of unity, reconciliation, and peace.

From 89 parishes to 11: this is how France is reorganizing its parish map to address the shortage of priests

The Church in France is re-organizing its territorial presence to respond to the decline in the number of priests and an increasingly secularized society. 

The goal is no longer to keep the structure inherited over centuries intact, but to concentrate resources, strengthen small Christian communities, and promote a more itinerant and missionary pastoral approach.

According to the Agencia Fides, this process is especially evident in dioceses such as Reims, where Archbishop Éric de Moulins-Beaufort has driven a profound pastoral reform since 2018 under the motto «En camino para la misión».

Missionary spaces and itinerant teams

The Archdiocese of Reims has created new missionary spaces served by teams made up of priests, deacons, and laypeople. 

The organization of sacramental life has been adapted to the actual possibilities of the available clergy, setting the locations for Sunday Eucharist celebrations based on existing resources.

Alongside this, a more itinerant model of ministry has been implemented. These teams remain for a period in a specific locality, offering activities adapted to the needs of the place, visiting the sick, accompanying isolated individuals, and reaching out to families who request it.

The aim is to combine welcome with missionary outreach: sustaining Christian life where it still exists and, at the same time, going out to meet those living on the social and spiritual peripheries.

Arras will go from 89 parishes to just 11

The case of Reims is not isolated. The Diocese of Arras has recently announced a major pastoral transformation that will reduce its current 89 parishes to just 11.

The goal of this reorganization is to concentrate available resources, reduce travel, and strengthen local life through small Christian fraternities. It is a direct response to the drop in the number of priests and the difficulty of sustaining the old parish network in a context of greatly reduced religious practice.

France, from a great missionary country to mission territory

The transformation of these dioceses reflects a profound historical shift. During the 19th and 20th centuries, France was one of the major driving forces behind Catholic mission in Africa, Asia, and other territories. Today, however, many French bishops consider that the country itself has once again become mission territory.

The expression is not new. Already in 1943, Henri Godin and Yvan Daniel published the celebrated essay La France, pays de mission?, in which they warned about the de-Christianization of broad sectors of French society. Eight decades later, the diagnosis appears to have intensified.

Currently, barely 2% of the French regularly attend Sunday Mass, although approximately half of the population still identifies as Catholic. 

At the same time, in recent years there has been a significant increase in requests for baptism among young people and adults, a phenomenon that shows that secularization has not completely eliminated the religious search.

Rome observes the French experience

In this context falls the recent appointment of Cardinal Jean-Marc Aveline, Archbishop of Marseille, and Bishop Éric de Moulins-Beaufort, Archbishop of Reims, as members of the Dicastery for Evangelization.

The former has developed a reflection shaped by dialogue, migration, and religious pluralism in the Mediterranean. 

The latter has driven a pastoral reorganization aimed at sustaining the Church’s presence in a diocese affected by the shortage of priests and the decline in religious practice.

Their incorporation into the Vatican dicastery suggests that Leo XIV is looking with interest at the Church in France as one of the laboratories of the new evangelization in Europe. 

A Church that, after sending missionaries to the world for generations, must now learn to evangelize anew in its own territory.

The Failure of Leo XIV (Opinion)

There was a time when excommunication could bring an emperor to his knees or cause an entire nation to apostatize. 

But excommunication is no longer what it once was, and that is the work of the very Church that today wields it against the FSSPX. 

History knows these diminished echoes, those tragedies that repeat themselves as farces, as Marx described when he identified Napoleon III as a ridiculous imitation of his uncle. Nor is Leo XIV Gregory VII. 

But if farce is already a fairly appropriate term to describe this case, with Tucho Fernández, carrying all his record of absurdities, leading the excommunication, we have an even more fitting term for it. It was given to us by the great Valle-Inclán, and as you may have guessed, the term is esperpento. With the aforementioned cardinal, and with the brand-new pontiff who backs him, Canon Law has gone for a stroll down Callejón del Gato. 

Yes, there we have the guardian (sic) of the Doctrine of the Faith turned into a grotesque distortion of his own office. 

The image of the censor of Écône appears at the bottom of the glass, brandishing the Code, after having turned doctrine into something viscous, adaptable, sentimental, contextual, liquid… Such a scarecrow dressed in purple would have delighted Valle-Inclán, who would have known how to make the most of the theatrical effect of that excommunication. 

Taking oneself so tragically seriously when one has long since lost all composure provokes an emotion composed of several ingredients, among them astonishment and laughter, even second-hand embarrassment, but certainly not reverential fear. That such a figure should promote an excommunication in the name of the purity of ecclesial communion is simply the height of it all. 

It is the height of it because one of the aspects that most separates the excommunicated from the excommunicators is that the former denounce, precisely, the extent to which the latter have emptied their acts of meaning.

Doctrine is little more than the report of a working group, always dependent on context; morality has dissolved into that mercy without judgment that accompanies the sinner while trying not to inconvenience him; the liturgy has for decades suffered from parochial creativity; Germany has for years been rehearsing schism in installments, and the Communist Party of China has been ordaining bishops; the Curia appoints cardinals to serve under religious prefects, while homosexual couples are blessed as long as they do not pray in Latin; pastoral care no longer means leading souls toward the truth, but rather sugar-coating that pill until it is completely hidden, and synodality has managed to make old heresies re-emerge, shiny and fresh out of a brainstorming session. 

It is no surprise that with such an emptying-out, the Doctrine of the Faith has ended up in the hands of a cardinal who, without shame, disputes Ratzinger while flirting with contextual theology. 

Yes, for this prefect, backed by the new Pope, ecclesial acts are nothing more than noise. So too is excommunication, despite being the Church’s gravest penalty, for even the most serious weapons become ridiculous when wielded by someone who has turned his own authority into a matter of opinion. 

How can Rome expect its excommunication to be taken seriously after having spent decades demonstrating that everything, or almost everything, could be nuanced, contextualized, negotiated, tolerated, reinterpreted, or blessed with a footnote? It is Rome itself that has devalued for decades the language with which it now seeks to judge. It should not be surprised that its liquid theology fails to impress. Or is not everyone good, excommunicated or not?

That Rome which disorders its own signs of governance and then expects its penal order to sound terrifying has earned, by its own efforts, that its most solemn gesture may sound, in too many Catholic ears, like the night-watchman’s whistle. They have no right to complain.

Max Weber would have understood the scene instantly: no authority lives on command alone. Rome retains all its power, but it has squandered a great part of the credit of its authority. And that is not easily recovered. It is gained through coherence, proportion, justice, and fidelity to the deposit of faith… And not even the first step has been taken! 

When one is sunk, what one must do is stop digging, and the digger Fernández never lets go of the shovel. His excommunication fails twice: juridically, because with a Note it attempts to project onto priests, faithful, and adherents the schismatic condition that can only be declared by means of a penal Decree; politically, because it fires from an authority that has for years been wetting its own gunpowder.

Thus, the sentence dissolves into the voluntarism of one who takes as juridical reality what he barely manages to formulate as a threat. Víctor Manuel Fernández has achieved the feat of turning the Church’s gravest penalty into an esperpento of canonical technique and a public confession of impotence.

And with that impotence he also reveals his weakness. Carl Schmitt would surely have smiled at Rome’s action, considering how much it laid bare the seams. Whoever administers the exception points out where he recognizes the danger, and while Rome has created exceptions left and right for what is most inadmissible, it has placed before Écône an impassable boundary. That “selectivity of the exception” betrays the shortcomings of authority: with Germany everything is process; with Écône, an absolute limit.

The post-conciliar Church has finally discovered that Hell is not empty, but it only sees there the followers of Lefebvre. These children are the only ones given a stone when they ask for bread. There is no better way to confess that the problem is not disobedience, but the direction in which one disobeys.

Leo XIV’s inability to manage that disobedience has made me think, by contrast, of the king in The Little Prince. Saint-Exupéry granted this character a prudence that Prevost has not shown. That monarch waited for sunset to order the sun to set. He knew an elementary truth of governance: an order that is born defeated does not ennoble the sovereign, it exposes him, and Leo XIV has inaugurated his pontificate with that exposure. The first great scene of his reign has been the solemn administration of a fracture.

Wishing to appear as guarantor of communion, Prevost has been portrayed as heir to a squandered authority. He received a Rome accustomed to tolerating the intolerable, and after entrusting the delicate task to the man who symbolizes the worst doctrinal drift, he chose to respond to Écône with the severest gesture when his own word had already been publicly ignored. Without restoring order, he has recorded that he had failed to impose it. 

If the signature is Tucho’s, the failure is Leo XIV’s.

“We want the faith of the Church in order to remain in the Church. And we want the Church for the faith and in the faith,” Pagliarani has said, and it is something that not even the Pope who excommunicates them calls into question. 

Écône speaks of preserving, receiving, transmitting; it speaks of priests who celebrate the Mass, preach the faith, and administer the sacraments as the Church received them. And to all this Rome responds with its power of governance.

Showing the muscle of power is easy, but it does not seem the best way to recover authority. Because what is no longer so easily achieved is convincing others that the FSSPX’s concern arose from an intolerable indiscipline and not from a genuine and holy necessity, attended to for the Glory of God, for the good of souls, and for the sanctification of its members and followers, now excommunicated or clumsily threatened with excommunication.

Too many Catholics have suffered the remnants of its fire to accept without further ado that the refugees are the arsonists. Let us hope in Christ for the Pope’s blessing upon his sons of the Fraternity.

Notre Dame begins the final phase of its restoration and launches a campaign to raise 130 million euros

The restoration of Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris is entering its final major phase. 

The public body in charge of rebuilding the cathedral has announced a new works program that will run from 2027 to 2033 and will allow the definitive completion of the monument’s recovery after the devastating fire of 2019.

According to Tribune Chrétienne, this new phase will cost 150 million euros, of which around 20 million are already available. 

Project leaders have issued a new appeal for patronage and donations to raise the remaining 130 million euros.

The restoration of the great stained-glass window and other historic elements

Philippe Jost, president of the public body Rebâtir Notre-Dame de Paris, explained that the goal is to complete the restoration of elements that could not be addressed during the works that enabled the cathedral to reopen for worship in December 2024.

Among the most important interventions is the full restoration of the great western rose window, one of the jewels of the 13th century, which has not undergone a complete intervention since the restoration led by Eugène Viollet-le-Duc in the 19th century.

The program also includes the recovery of the north transept façades, several medieval sculptures, and other architectural elements particularly affected by the passage of time.

Beyond reconstruction after the fire

The reopening of Notre-Dame in December 2024 marked a milestone by returning the cathedral to worship and to the millions of pilgrims and visitors who come to the church each year. However, that phase did not mark the end of the works.

Officials recall that many parts of the building already had significant conservation needs even before the fire of April 15, 2019. 

Therefore, this new campaign will not be limited to repairing the damage caused by the fire, but will also allow the restoration of historic elements whose intervention had been pending.

A new appeal to generosity

The success of the first international donation campaign made it possible to finance the cathedral’s reconstruction and meet the goal of reopening the church within five years.

Now, the responsible body hopes that individuals, companies, and organizations will once again support the project to raise the 130 million euros needed to complete the restoration definitively.

Beyond its extraordinary artistic and heritage value, Notre-Dame remains a living cathedral, where the Holy Mass, the Liturgy of the Hours, and other religious celebrations are held daily. 

With this final phase of works, France aims to ensure the preservation of one of the main symbols of European Christianity for future generations.

This new restoration program does not, for the moment, alter the controversial project promoted by President Emmanuel Macron to replace six 19th-century stained-glass windows, designed by Eugène Viollet-le-Duc, with new contemporary windows by artist Claire Tabouret. 

The initiative remains pending several legal appeals filed by heritage defense associations, which argue that the current pieces survived the 2019 fire intact and should not be replaced.

Uncertainty grows in Nicaragua over Bishop Abelardo Mata as the Ortega regime denies he is under arrest

It continues to be impossible to independently verify the situation of Monsignor Abelardo Mata, bishop emeritus of Estelí, several days after his detention by Nicaraguan authorities. 

While the government of Daniel Ortega maintains that the prelate is free and in good health, independent media outlets and organizations close to the Church insist that he remains under house arrest under strict police surveillance.

In a statement, the Ministry of the Interior assured that the bishop was only questioned as part of an investigation into alleged corruption offenses and that, after giving his statement, he returned to his residence “in perfect health” and after having received “respectful” treatment.

However, to date no recent images have emerged nor has there been any public appearance by Monsignor Mata that would corroborate the official version.

No independent evidence of his situation

Nicaraguan media in exile such as Confidencial, Despacho 505 and 100% Noticias agree that it has not been possible to establish direct contact with the prelate or to verify that he can move freely.

Various reports suggest that the 80-year-old bishop remains in his residence in Tisma under permanent police surveillance, although no independent source has been able to officially confirm this circumstance.

The lack of information has increased concern inside and outside Nicaragua about the bishop’s health, as he requires periodic check-ups due to the pacemaker he has implanted.

A new episode in the persecution against the Church

The situation of Monsignor Mata occurs within the framework of the persecution that the Sandinista regime has maintained for years against the Catholic Church.

Since the 2018 protests, numerous bishops, priests and religious have been detained, expelled or forced into exile, while hundreds of processions have been banned and various Catholic institutions have been closed.

Monsignor Abelardo Mata has for decades been one of the most critical voices against the government of Daniel Ortega, repeatedly denouncing violations of fundamental rights and the country’s authoritarian drift.

Catholic sect in Cork says prayers for Pope Leo after being excommunicated by pontiff

Prayers were said for Pope Leo on Sunday morning at the Cork church of a breakaway Catholic group excommunicated en masse by the Vatican in recent days.

Last Thursday, the Vatican decreed that priests and lay Catholics who are part of the ultraconservative group the Society of St Pius X (SSPX) are now excommunicated.

It came the day after the rebel group defied Pope Leo XIV by ordaining bishops without his consent, thus creating a schism in the 1.4bn-member Church.

The Catholic Church considers the unauthorised ordination of bishops so serious that it causes those taking part in the ceremony to be automatically excommunicated.

The society was founded in the Swiss village of Écône in 1970 by the arch-conservative Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, and denies the teachings of the Second Vatican Council.

Vatican II, as it is widely known, introduced a range of reforms for the Catholic Church,  seeking to repair its relations with other Christian denominations and with the Jewish people.

The council also allowed for the Mass, until then said only in Latin, to be celebrated in local languages, a change the SSPX rejects, citing a preference for the Latin rite’s sense of mystery and formality.

The SSPX has approximately 1,500 priests, seminarians, and other vocational members worldwide, with a following estimated to be in the region of 200,000 people. It is thought that, in Ireland, about 500 people attend its weekly Masses.

On Sunday morning, Latin Mass went ahead as usual in Our Lady of the Rosary Church in Shanakiel, with a congregation of about 100 people praying for the pontiff.

The church has belonged to the SSPX since the 1980s, and the Mass was sung almost entirely in Latin, with incense burning throughout the ceremony.

Those attending ranged in age from small children to retired people, with many members reading from their own Bibles and missals during the Mass.

'Survival of tradition'

The congregation seemed to be evenly split between men and women, with the women wearing mantillas, the traditional Christian lace head-covering.

The parish priest, Fr Jules Doutrebente, delivered the reading and read the Gospel in English. 

In his sermon, he said that when Archbishop Lefebvre founded the SSPX, he had called it “the survival of tradition”, and that continued to be the society’s motivation.

In canon law, he said, no penalty could be applied in the case of necessity, and with the SSPX having a necessity for new bishops, its members could therefore not be excommunicated. Thus, he added, there was no schism, and the society's members were not excommunicated.

“At every Mass, we name the name of the Pope; in order that the Pope may help us, we pray for him,” he said.

During the sermon, Fr Doutrebente announced that he will soon be replaced by a newly ordained priest, Fr Colm Begley, who will next month make Our Lady of the Rosary his first parish.

After the Mass, Fr Doutrebente told the Irish Examiner he was not authorised to speak for the SSPX, joking that, being French, his English would not be good enough anyway.

Cork church has to speak out on false rumours that 'refugees are sleeping in the chapel'

One Cork parish has had to issue a statement refuting claims that '50 non-nationals are sleeping in the chapel'.

The statement follows recent cases that included;

  • A Cork TD urging people to ignore rumours about a 'secret IPAS centre' that was actually opening as a creche

  • Thugs vandalising a construction site on the northside of Cork city after rumours spread it was 'for refugees' - in reality, it was social housing.

  • Reports of a 'foreign man with a samurai sword' on Cork's northside - who turned out to be a well-known local 'character'.

Now the Church of Ireland, Carrigrohane Union of Parishes has had to issue a statement after rumours started circulating on Facebook and TikTok that the church in Blarney Square was 'housing up to 40-50 foreign nationals'.

The rumours might strike most people as highly unlikely - churches are not designed to house 40-50 people for any period of time, and there is - obviously - no way any church would be given permission to host people in such unsuitable conditions.

However, researchers studying the growing threat of malicious rumours spread online say they can catch out people who are vulnerable, who may lack the critical thinking skills needed to spot glaringly obvious falsehoods, or who may simply want these kinds of rumours to be true, whatever the actual reality.

The rumours have real-world consequences, as has been seen with serious incidents of vandalism in Cork or shocking violence like the attempted firebombing of a house in Drogheda in November last, in which people, including 4 children and a 20-month-old baby, were sleeping.

In Blarney, the Church of Ireland Rector, Canon Robert Ferris, told CorkBeo that he hoped his statement would be enough to counter the rumours spreading on social media.

In his message to his parish and beyond, Rev Ferris said: "Recent reports circulating on TikTok regarding the Church of Ireland church in Blarney Square are completely false. There is no one residing in the church."

"As Rector, I want to reassure the people of Blarney that the church has recently reopened following a planned renovation to address damp issues. We are delighted to have this much-loved building back in regular use.

The Church of the Resurrection is open for public worship on the first and third Sundays. of each month and continues to be used throughout the week for prayer, community activities, baptisms, weddings and funerals.

We are grateful for the continued support of the local community and encourage anyone with questions to contact the parish directly rather than relying on inaccurate information shared online."

The Rector said he hoped people would stop spreading - or responding to - malcious rumours that are distressing for the whole community in Blarney.

Wasp infestation forces Church change for Donegal Massgoers

A Mass infestation at a west Donegal Church has prompted the relocation a weekly service.

The unexpected swarm of wasps has forced the relocation of Sunday's 9am Mass at St Patrick’s Church in Meenacross. 

Parishioners are now asked to attend St. Crona's Church in Dungloe instead.

While it's certainly one of the more unusual reasons to relocate Mass, the decision was made to ensure everyone's safety.

Parish officials were stung, but had little choice to move the service.

Chinese underground church figure Jin Mingri freed from prison

Underground church leader Jin Mingri has been released from prison in China and has travelled to the US, less than two months after his incarceration was raised directly by Donald Trump.

The pastor and founder of the Zion Church had been imprisoned following overnight raids across China in October, described by Christian groups as one of the strictest crackdowns on religious activity in the country's modern history.

The Chinese government tightly controls religion and officially promotes atheism.

Jin's family thanked supporters in a statement, adding: "We truly witnessed a miracle and we are feeling so overwhelmed with joy". The Chinese foreign ministry has not officially commented on his case.

The family thanked the US president and the Trump administration "for their tremendous leadership", and said they knew "this could not have happened without the direct intervention from [Chinese President] Xi Jinping".

"We hope this is a signal of a positive turn for people of faith in China and relations between our two nations."

US-based rights group ChinaAid, which monitors relgious persecution, confirmed Jin, also known as Ezra Jin, had arrived in Los Angeles in the US following his release.

Its founder Bob Fu welcomed his release, while noting that "countless" religious practitioners, including eight belonging to the Zion Church, remained incarcerated in China.

The Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China, a group of Western lawmakers that includes dozens of UK MPs, said it was "overjoyed" with the news.

Trump had urged Xi to release Jin during direct talks between the two while in Beijing for a state visit in May.

"He said he's gonna strongly consider the pastor," the US president said afterward.

Trump also raised the detention of pro-democracy Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai, who was sentenced earlier this year to 20 years in prison for colluding with foreign forces under the city's controversial national security law.

Jin started the Zion Church in 2007 with just 20 people. It grew into one of China's largest unregistered churches, with a network of some 10,000 people in 40 cities across the country.

It was officially banned by the Chinese Communist Party in 2018 after resisting government pressure to install security cameras at its property in Beijing.

Many of its branch congregations across the country have since been investigated and shut down.

Christians have long been pressured to join only state-sanctioned churches that are led by government-approved pastors and toe the party line.

Thirty church leaders were reported to have been detained in overnight raids last October.

This was followed by a similar crackdown against another church in January, in which nine people were detained.

American priest stole stone from an ancient site in Rome

A 37-year-old American priest faced charges of aggravated theft of cultural heritage after stealing a stone fragment from an ancient archaeological site on Rome's Coelian hill.

The unusual case, reported by Rome newspaper Il Messaggero, occurred on the morning of 23 June when a tour group from a Catholic parish in Louisiana entered the Case Romane del Celio for a scheduled visit.

The underground site near the Colosseum comprises 20 rooms on various levels under the church of SS. Giovanni e Paolo, dating from between the second century and fourth century AD.

What happened

During the visit, the US priest was leading the group of around 16 people when - thinking he was unobserved - he picked up a fragment of white limestone off the floor of the Cella Vinaria and slipped it into his backpack.

The tour concluded, the theft went unnoticed by museum staff, and the group moved on to their next stop.

The theft was witnessed however by a member of the tour group. 

Initially she said nothing before deciding a few days later to tell the Carabinieri what she witnessed, going in person to a police station near Castel Sant'Angelo.

Police intervene

That same evening, Il Messaggero reports, police interrupted the dinner of the pilgrims and their spiritual guide at a restaurant in the St Peter's area.

When questioned about the theft, the priest immediately admitted what he did, telling officers that he wanted to take home a memento of his trip, without knowing what exactly he had stolen from the museum.

The Carabinieri contacted the management of the Case Romane del Celio and the city's archaeological superintendency, who confirmed that the fragment was of no artistic or historic value.

The stone was returned to its original location and, according to La Repubblica newspaper, the case is likely to be closed.

Case Romane al Celio

According to tradition, the site was the residence of the fourth-century martyrs John and Paul who were buried in their house following their execution.

The complex features the remains of several Roman houses of different periods, including an insula, or apartment block, and a wealthy domus later converted into an early Christian church.

Many of the rooms are decorated with frescoes and the site also includes a museum room containing Roman amphorae, pots and ancient Roman bricks complete with their imprinted stamps.

London priest prohibited from ministry after affair with his lodger

A SUBMISSION of 1,000 pages of WhatsApp messages, Snapchat messages, and photographs has proved decisive in a Tribunal concluding that a sexual relationship took place between a priest and his lodger.

On 16 June, it ruled that the Revd Sam Cross (also known as Sam McNally-Cross) should be removed as Vicar of St Thomas, St Andrew and St Philip, Kensal Town, in the diocese of London and prohibited from ministry for a period of five years.

The Tribunal expressed concern that Mr Cross had “failed to show any insight or remorse about entering into a sexual relationship with the complainant whilst he was still married” and cited as a “major aggravating feature” that “he did not admit the allegations made against him and, therefore, put the complainant through the unnecessary ordeal of giving evidence to her distress and psychological impact.”

The Tribunal found that he had “consistently lied in these proceedings both in his witness statements and oral evidence”, and that this was “consistent with how he deliberately chose to deceive his church about his relationship with the complainant, keeping it private from the churchwardens, PCC and other members of the clergy”.

The complainant lived as a lodger at the vicarage from August 2021. Initially she was a university student but then became employed by the diocese as an apprentice children’s worker in the parish in September 2022. Mr Cross separated from his former wife in October 2021 and they were divorced on 20 January 2023.

The Tribunal accepted two of three charges: that, being a married man, he had engaged in a sexual relationship with Person A from about October 2021 until January 2023; and that, after January 2023, he “continued to engage in an inappropriate relationship with the said complainant and by his actions failed to maintain any or any proper professional or pastoral boundary”. It rejected the claim that he had behaved “in a manner which was coercive and controlling”.

The evidence from the parties was “directly contradictory”, the Tribunal found. The complainant described the relationship as “sexual from close to the beginning” while the respondent described it as “chaste . . . with no more than kissing, holding hands and cuddling whilst they were in private”.

The Tribunal concluded that “the contemporaneous records support the complainant’s evidence that there was a sexual relationship between the complainant and the respondent.” The messages were “flirtatious” early on, the Tribunal states, and the two were dating, notwithstanding that Mr Cross’s wife was continuing to live in the vicarage.

It accepted that a “serious degree” of harm had been caused by Mr Cross who was, “for a considerable period”, the complainant’s priest, partner, landlord, and line manager.

It took into account that he was of previous good character, and that the relationship “was probably not destructive of the respondent’s marriage and did not involve anybody else’s marriage”. Character responses were “supportive of the respondent being a capable and effective parish priest in a difficult area”.

A future pope will 'welcome us back', says priest from excommunicated Catholic sect

A priest from a Catholic splinter sect that was excommunicated ‌earlier this past week told worshippers on Sunday that the breakaway group would be welcomed back to the Church under a different pope.

The Society of St. Pius X - a rebel group of ultra-conservative ​Catholics - was excommunicated after four bishops were ordained without Pope Leo's approval ​on Wednesday. 

The group has been unrepentant over the schism with Rome, ⁠saying Leo had failed to hear their concerns.

“There will one day be another pope ​who opens the door and welcomes us back. Just like Pope Benedict," Georg Kopf ​said at a mass held in the north-eastern Swiss town of Wil.

Established in 1970, the group - which is based in Switzerland but has followers worldwide - accuses the Church of straying from the true ​faith. It practices old-style Latin Mass and does not believe in formal dialogue ​with non-Catholics.

REPEATING HISTORY

The group has endured a rupture with the Vatican before. In the late 1980s, its ‌founder ⁠Marcel Lefebvre consecrated four bishops without the approval of Pope John Paul II, leading those involved to be excommunicated.

They were welcomed back in 2009, however, when Pope Benedict XVI sought unification by lifting the judgement.

"I am convinced that there will be another ​pope like him who ​will give tradition ⁠its rightful place again. Of course, we’d like that to happen tomorrow," Kopf added.

The Vatican said dialogue was offered to the ​group ahead of the schism and that the step of ordaining ​bishops without ⁠Church approval was considered so grave that excommunication was automatic.

"Nothing that happened on July 1 was intended to establish a parallel church or to break with Rome," Kopf said ⁠in ​his sermon given in German, "On the contrary, it was ​precisely out of love for the Church and the pope that these ordinations were carried out, in ​order to look after the salvation of souls."

Humanitarian award will honour North Cork priest who saved thousands of lives during World War II

A net is being spread far and wide in the name of a North Cork priest who saved thousands of lives during World War II in a bid to honour those who have followed his example. 

The Hugh O’Flaherty Memorial Society is searching the globe for worthy nominations for an in international humanitarian award in the name of the Catholic priest who, while in Rome helped around 6,500 Jews and Allied soldiers escape the clutches of the Nazis.

The award is dedicated to the life of the late Monsignor Hugh O’Flaherty, who followed a long and continuing tradition of humanitarian service by Irish people, both overseas and at home.

In Nazi-occupied Rome during 1943-44, the 'Rome Organisation' he created, provided refuge and assistance to the hunted and oppressed. It is almost certain that thousands would otherwise have faced imprisonment and, in many cases, almost certain death.

Throughout the period of occupation, Kiskeam-born Msgr O’Flaherty, and his many colleagues were under death sentence by the Gestapo if captured. Sadly, some members of the Rome Organisation were captured, tortured and executed.

Msgr O’Flaherty’s exploits were such that Hollywood made a blockbuster film about him 'The Scarlet and the Black' in 1983. It starred Gregory Peck in the priest’s role and Christopher Plummer as the Gestapo head in Rome who knew Msgr O’Flaherty was in charge of the escape line, and was determined to kill him.

Plummer played the role of SS Lieutenant Colonel Herbert Kappler. Ironically, after the Allies took Rome they captured and imprisoned him. O’Flaherty was his only visitor and converted him to Catholicism.

The Monsignor retired to Cahirciveen, Co Kerry for the last three years of his life and in October 1963 he died.

Msgr O’Flahery had won a number of prestigious international awards for his work saving so many during the Second World War, including Commander of the British Empire and the US Medal of Freedom.

His death in 1963 was mourned throughout the world and included a front-page tribute in The New York Times.

Inviting submissions

The Hugh O’Flaherty Memorial Society is now putting out a call for nominations for the prestigious award, inviting submissions from individuals, humanitarian NGOs (operating at home or overseas), and voluntary societies.

The closing date for receipt of nominations is this Friday should be submitted in writing, in less than 500 words, is next, Friday, July 10. 

Full details are available on hughoflaherty.com or can be obtained by emailing the society at oflahertysociety2008@gmail.com.

The winner, or winners, will receive the O’Flaherty Humanitarian Medal, a framed ward scroll from the Mayor of Killarney at a special award ceremony to be held in Killarney at the end of October, and a bursary of €3,000.

Bishop of Kilmore issues stark warning over low number of priests

A crisis is said to be emerging in the Kilmore Diocese over the number of priests serving the area.

The Bishop of Kilmore has issued a warning as part of announcing clergy appointments for 2026

In a statement, the Bishop of Kilmore, Martin Hayes says 30% of priests in the Diocese are over 75, some of whom are retired fully while others choose to be active in parish ministry.

47% of priests are over 70 years old while 60% are over the age of 65.

The statistics also show just one third of priests in the Diocese are under 60.

The Bishop says it means that the task of providing priests for each parish into the future in Kilmore Diocese is challenging and amounts to a crisis.

However, Bishop Hayes says it also affords the opportunity for increased lay involvement in parishes, and appreciation of the availability and giftedness of priests from abroad. Together, they are embracing new models of parish ministry.

Concluding, Bishop Hayes says the Kilmore Diocese will embrace the crisis of the evident reduction in vocations to diocesan priesthood in Ireland.