Thursday, May 07, 2026

Body found close to island where monk went missing

A body has been recovered from the water off the Orkney island of Stronsay, near where a monk went missing last month.

Police Scotland said the body was spotted just after 07:30 and that inquiries were at an early stage. Kirkwall lifeboat responded to a call from coastguards to assist.

Searches have been ongoing for 24-year-old Justin Evans, also known as Brother Ignatius, who went missing from neighbouring Papa Stronsay on 11 April.

Formal identification of the body has not yet taken place, however his family has been informed.

Police said in a statement: "The death is being treated as unexplained. Inquiries are ongoing. A report will be submitted to the procurator fiscal in due course."

The monk, a member of the Redemptorist Community, was last seen at the Golgotha Monastery just before midnight on Saturday 11 April.

The Diocese of Aberdeen previously said it felt "deep sadness" at the "disappearance and presumed death" of Evans, who was originally from New Zealand.

An order of Catholic monks bought Papa Stronsay more than 25 years ago.

The community, which was then based on the Isle of Sheppey in Kent, raised the £200,000 needed for the purchase.

Archbishop McDowell warns on 'so-called Christian Right'

The Church of Ireland Archbishop John McDowell has warned of the dangers posed by "the so-called Christian Right".

Speaking at the Church of Ireland General Synod which is taking place in Newcastle, Co Down, the Primate of All Ireland described the attitude to migration in Ireland, both north and south, as "one of the great touchstones and tests of our Christian authenticity".

In an address to 600 representatives, Archbishop McDowell said official figures last year covering racist violence and racially motivated incidents showed "worrying increases" in Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.

He said it was time to put a few myths to bed: that migration was not some form of "organised conspiracy aimed at the colonial dispossession of the Irish people", which he said had been claimed by the extreme right in Ireland.

"Nor is it an attempt at creating a Muslim majority or a Muslim state, as has been called by many on the British extreme right," he added.

"That increases in migration should be seized on by the extreme right who are bereft of any other ideas is not surprising, although it is less edifying when mainstream parties equivocate in the face of the horrendous violence which migrants suffer," he told those assembled.

Archbishop McDowell said that from the Churches' point of view, the more worrying development was the rise of the so-called Christian Right.

Parading the streets wrapped in national flag not the 'mind of God'

"These groups emphasise what they claim to be the undermining of 'Christian civilisation’ or ‘Judaeo-Christian’ values and the discrimination which they say Christians are subjected to," he said.

"And they use the Cross – the very epitome of powerlessness, and what a very advanced ‘civilisation’ inflicted on Jesus – as some kind of symbol of their dominance and superiority".

He questioned which aspect of discipleship in Jesus Christ was being exercised "by baying outside a hostel" while terrified children were inside.

"How is parading around the streets draped in a national flag representing the mind of the God of all the nations," he added.

"Migrants to this island want what we all want - to bring up children in security and decency; to provide them with a good education and the chance of a stable future. And to contribute to the communities in which they live.

"They bring with them enormous energy and fortitude, and very often scarce skills. For these, and other reasons, there is every rational reason to welcome them."

Archbishop McDowell also used his address to raise the issue of AI and questioned whether it was "another great leap forward in the liberation of mankind".

He told General Synod that Artificial Intelligence may relay information based on "incredible calculations of probability and suitability", but he pointed out that efficiency and convenience should not be used to become "the primary values against which we measure whether this information is worth the resources expended to generate it".

He said the costs were human and social as well as environmental.

Azerbaijan continues ‘caviar diplomacy’ with Vatican after cathedral demolition

Azerbaijan and the Vatican signed an agreement on April 30 for the renovation of four statues at the Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls, weeks after the Azerbaijani regime demolished an Armenian cathedral in an occupied region under dispute between both countries.

The announcement was made during a presentation at the Palazzo della Cancelleria in the Vatican, in which a foundation widely considered to be a wing of the Azerbaijani regime’s “caviar diplomacy” showcased the various projects it has funded in the Vatican since 2012.

The event was attended by Msgr. Pasquale Iacobone, president of the Pontifical Commission for Sacred Archaeology, and Archbishop Giovanni Cesare Pagazzi, Archivist and Librarian of the Holy Roman Church and secretary for the Dicastery for Culture and Education.

A Heydar Aliyev Foundation statement said that during the event included the presentation of the book “Pontes Culturae,” showing the works conducted by the foundation in the Vatican, and a documentary about the Holy See’s “friendship and cooperation” with Azerbaijan.

The book was prepared by the foundation, the Azerbaijani embassy to the Holy See, and the Pontifical Commission for Sacred Archaeology.

Ilgar Mukhtarov, the Azerbaijani ambassador to the Holy See said that “these projects are not limited only to the restoration of architectural monuments but also serve as an expression of respect for humanity’s collective memory, establishing a spiritual dialogue between the past and the future, and transferring universal values to future generations.”

During the event, it was announced that the Azerbaijani regime had signed an agreement with the Governorate of the Vatican City State to restore four statues in the Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls on Apr. 29.

A Vatican governorate statement said that two statues of Saint Peter and Saint Paul within the Basilica and two of Saint Paul and Saint Luke in the church’s portico would be restored, and said that the agreement “expressed the sincere friendship and mutual cooperation existing between the Governorate and Azerbaijan.”

The announcement comes days after the Azerbaijani regime demolished the Armenian cathedral of the Holy Mother of God in the city of Stepanakert in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, disputed between Azerbaijan and Armenia since the 1990s, and de facto controlled by Azerbaijan since 2023 after an offensive in the area that displaced 120,000 ethnic Armenians from the region.

Several human rights organizations and Armenian activists described the demolition of the cathedral as a part of a broader pattern of systematic cultural erasure in the region.

The demolition took place shortly before the 111th anniversary of the Armenian genocide, during which an estimated 1 to 1.5 million ethnic Armenians were killed and millions more were forcibly deported by the Ottoman government during World War I.

Construction on the cathedral began in July 2006 and when it was consecrated in April 2019 it became the largest Armenian church in Nagorno-Karabakh. 

The cathedral was used as a bomb shelter during the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War in 2020 but did not suffer significant damage.

Armenian cultural heritage watchdog Monument Watch has reported that the Church of Saint Jacob, built in 2007 and located in the same city, was also demolished in early April.

The Armenian Apostolic Church is the ancient national Church of Armenia, and is one of the Oriental Orthodox Churches, a roughly 70 million-strong communion that also includes the Coptic Orthodox Church.

The Armenian Apostolic Church said in an Apr. 23 statement that “It is obvious that the Azerbaijani government continues to target Armenian Christian holy sites with the aim of erasing the Armenian trace from Artsakh.”

“This state-level vandalism once again proves that Azerbaijan’s anti-Armenian policy has not changed, which makes statements about establishing a stable and lasting peace with Armenia questionable.”

This is not the first time the Vatican has been criticized for its ties to the Azerbaijani regime, which is accused by human rights organizations of ethnically-based persecution of Armenian Christians in border territories.

Azerbaijan signed agreements in September 2025 with the Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital and the Vatican Apostolic Library and Apostolic Archives, alarming critics who accuse the Azerbaijani regime of human rights abuses against the Armenian minority and of practicing “caviar diplomacy” by using its cultural and economic power to influence Vatican policy in the South Caucasus region.

In April 2025, the Azerbaijani regime held a conference at the Pontifical Gregorian University, prompting widespread backlash.

The conference was entitled “Christianity in Azerbaijan: History and Modernity.” 

But Armenian activists and Church leaders called the event part of a broader campaign to erase Armenian Christian heritage from disputed territories.

Promotional materials for the conference included distinctly Azerbaijani texts on West Asian history, including a display of the medieval Armenian monastery of Dadivank, with the claim that it belonged to the “Caucasian Albanian” culture, an Azerbaijani government claim widely disputed by historians.

“This has no basis in reality. They say these are Caucasian Albanian churches, but Caucasian Albanians disappeared in the 8th century,” Orthodox Archbishop Vicken Aykazian, ecumenical director of the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America, told The Pillar back in April 2025.

Despite these controversies, the conference received a letter of congratulations from Cardinal Claudio Gugerotti, prefect of the Dicastery for the Eastern Churches.

Months before the 2020 offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan’s First Lady Mehriban Aliyeva was awarded the Order of Pope Pius IX at the Vatican.

Ilqar Mukhtarov, Azerbaijan’s ambassador to the Holy See, received the same distinction on April 3, 2025.

The Heydar Aliyev Foundation lists the Vatican Apostolic Library and the Vatican Museums among its partners and several restoration projects that it is supporting at the Vatican.

The list includes the Roman Catacombs of Marcellinus and Peter, the Catacombs of Commodilla, and the Catacombs of San Sebastiano, the restoration of a statue of Zeus in the Vatican Museums, the restoration and translation of more than 3,000 books and 75 manuscripts in the Vatican Apostolic Library, the restoration of a bas-relief with the encounter between Pope Leo the Great and Attila the Hun in St. Peter’s Basilica, and the restoration of the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls.

According to Italian outlet Irpi Media, the donations amounted to 640,000 euros (around $730,000). But an Azeri official said publicly in 2020 that the figure was “over 1 million euros.” Many of the restoration works came after 2020, suggesting the actual sum could be even higher.

One of the largest restoration projects was unveiled in 2024, when the Vatican City State Governorate announced an agreement between the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls and the Heydar Aliyev Foundation.

Observers suggest links between the Vatican and the former Soviet republic were strengthened thanks to Cardinal Claudio Gugerotti, who is now prefect of the Dicastery for Eastern Churches and was the apostolic nuncio to Azerbaijan, Armenia, and Georgia from 2001 to 2011.

During Gugerotti’s service as nuncio, Azeri authorities signed a bilateral agreement with the Holy See in 2011, appointing an ambassador the same year, and began to have frequent meetings, both in Azerbaijan and the Vatican, with Holy See officials, among them then-Secretary of State, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, and Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, the then-president of the Pontifical Council for Culture.

According to Irpi Media, Ravasi is another central figure connecting Azerbaijan and the Vatican.

Ravasi opened the doors to Azeri-funded restoration projects in the Vatican with a 2012 agreement to restore Roman catacombs, as well as another to translate and restore manuscripts in the Apostolic Library.

Pope to Swiss Guards: Service enriches personal journey of faith

Pope Leo XIV meets with members of the Pontifical Swiss Guards and their families, expressing his hopes that their years of service to the Holy See may bear spiritual riches as they build an atmosphere of harmony and joy.

After attending the swearing-in ceremony of 28 new Pontifical Swiss Guards on Wednesday evening, Pope Leo XIV met with the Guards and their families on Thursday.

The Pope expressed his gratitude to Switzerland, saying that the Swiss men who serve in the corps should be a source of pride as they bring their nation’s cultural and spiritual values to the Vatican.

He also thanked the Swiss Guards and their families for their “humble and discreet service.”

“The joys and trials you experience together, as well as the strength of the friendships formed among you,” he said, “shape your souls in the sense of honor and duty expressed through the gift of your lives in service to and protection of the Successor of Peter.”

As they serve near the tombs of the Apostles, the Guards have the opportunity to pray and reflect on the beauty of the Eternal City, which he said comes from and leads to God.

Though their mission is primarily military, they are also called to holiness, along with every baptized person.

“I am therefore convinced that your decision to dedicate several years of your lives to the service of the Pope and the Holy See forms part of a personal journey of faith,” he said.

As they assist Curia officials, pilgrims, and guests to the Vatican, the Pope invited the Guards to recall Jesus’ words: “Whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.”

Night shifts especially, he said, offer Swiss Guards the chance to read and meditate, and he invited them to pray with their patron, St. Nicholas of Flüe: “My Lord and my God, take from me everything that keeps me from coming to you; give me everything that will lead me to you; take me from myself and give me wholly to you, so that I may belong totally to you.”

Pope Leo noted that life in the barracks represents a priviledged place to develop the “human virtues of service to one’s neighbor, generosity, and humility.”

“Through the fraternal solidarity that marks your relationships, you will build an atmosphere of harmony and joy within the Guard, which will be reflected in all those you meet,” he said. “I encourage you to persevere on this path, often demanding, but fruitful.”

Finally, Pope Leo XIV renewed his gratitude to the Pontifical Swiss Guards and entrusted them to the maternal protection of the Blessed Virgin Mary and their patron saints, St. Martin of Tours, St. Sebastian, and St. Nicholas of Flüe.

Bank clerk hangs up on Pope Leo

THERE is no way to escape KYC (Know Your Customer) checks, even if you are the leader of the Catholic Church.

A bank clerk stood up to Pope Leo XIV — and even hung up on him — when he called his bank in the US to update his contact details two months after being elected pontiff, a friend has revealed.

“He is a very humble guy. Two months in, he calls his bank in South Chicago to change his phone number and I think his address,” priest Tom McCarthy told the story in a social media video that went viral.

“He gets a lady and says, ‘Yes, ma’am, I’m Robert Prevost. I’d like to change’ — and she asks all the questions and then says, ‘I am sorry, sir, it says here you have to come in person.'”

The leader of 1.4 billion Catholics explained that this would not be possible, as he can only leave Vatican City on papal visits. 

After a brief back and forth with the clerk, he tried one last card: “Would it matter to you if I told you I am Pope Leo?”

“She hung up on him,” Father McCarthy said. “Could you imagine being known as the woman who hung up on the Pope?”

Leo later called a priest he knew in Chicago, who managed to reach the bank’s president — who initially pushed back, defending the policy. 

The matter was eventually resolved, The Times reported, after the president conceded: “We don’t want to lose the account of the Pope.”

Independent safeguarding audit of the Diocese of London published

An independent safeguarding audit of the Diocese of London has been published by the INEQE Safeguarding Group, as part of the Church of England’s national audit programme. Commissioned by the Archbishops’ Council in partnership with the National Safeguarding Team, the programme is auditing all dioceses by 2028. 

Overview of main findings

The London audit identifies progress in safeguarding arrangements across the Diocese. 

It notes that an “overwhelming majority” of respondents from the London Diocesan Fund workforce, parishes and wider worshipping community reported improvements, and said that the importance of safeguarding is now better recognised. 

INEQE found that a safeguarding culture is becoming “embedded” across the Diocese, with respondents describing a growing sense of confidence in reporting concerns.  

The audit also identifies clear areas where further work is needed. It notes that some victims and survivors do not experience safeguarding as sufficiently person-centred or trauma-informed, and emphasises the importance of ensuring that learning from training is consistently applied in practice. 

The audit concludes that, while the Diocese is well-led and progress has been made, further investment will be required to ensure safeguarding arrangements are robust and sustainable across the Diocese. 

The London College of Bishops have issued a joint statement responding to the recommendations of the report.  

The Rt Revd Dr Emma Ineson, Acting Bishop of London and Bishop of Kensington, said: 

We are grateful for this independent audit of our safeguarding practices by INEQE. The report reflects the sustained work at all levels of the Diocese to strengthen our safeguarding culture and practice.  

Serving London through over 500 worshipping communities brings significant safeguarding responsibility, and I want to thank all of the safeguarding staff and parish officers for the dedication, professionalism and care they show in upholding high standards every day.

As the report recommends, we must ensure we learn and listen to a wider range of victim and survivor voices. This should involve scaling up our training programme to ensure safeguarding is increasingly person-centred and trauma informed.

“We must also increase investment so that safeguarding is properly resourced and consistent across the Diocese.”

Responding to the audit’s findings on St Paul’s Cathedral, The Very Revd Andrew Tremlett, Dean of St Paul’s, said:

We receive the findings of the audit with gratitude and a deep awareness of what still needs to be done. We are pleased that INEQE has recognised the progress made at St Paul’s, and I want to thank cathedral staff and volunteers for their dedication in ensuring this is a safe place to worship, work and visit. 

“We are acutely aware that safeguarding is never ‘finished.’ We owe it to victims and survivors, and to everyone who comes through our doors, to listen carefully, to be honest about what still needs to change, and to respond constructively to the recommendations made.”

Sarah McKimm, Independent Chair of the Audit’s Quality Assurance Group and Independent Chair of the Diocesan Safeguarding Advisory Panel, said: 

We welcome the external scrutiny INEQE has brought to the safeguarding arrangements in the Diocese of London.  The DSAP’s regular programme of scrutiny has observed significant improvements in recent years. 

The distributed leadership model, the effective risk management through safety plans, the mandatory induction training for new Parish Safeguarding Officers, the wide-ranging training on complex issues – these are examples of developments now reported and validated by the audit. 

The INEQE audit offers an opportunity to reflect on how far safeguarding has come within the Diocese and to thank all those who are part of that. 

But it also highlights important areas for action. Risks noted include an over-stretched workforce, structural complexity and inconsistency. 

As such, the audit presents a timely challenge to strengthen the arrangements and go yet further. 

“Parishes across the diocese play a central in role in communities and are trusted to be safe, compassionate places. The INEQE findings will be a touchstone for our future scrutiny programme which will be key to ensuring churches are supported in their vital work”. 

Background 

In August 2023, the INEQE Safeguarding Group was appointed by the Archbishops’ Council to carry out the next round of independent external audits of Church of England dioceses and cathedrals. 

The purpose of these audits is to ensure that dioceses, cathedrals and palaces are doing all they can to create environments where everyone feels safe, valued and respected. 

The independent audit programme will run for five years, from 2023 to 2028, with audits commencing in January 2024. 

Audits are now conducted in dioceses and cathedrals at the same time, having previously been carried out separately. 

As part of the Diocese of London audit, INEQE: 

* collated and analysed 330 documents  

* held nine focus groups and 70 engagement sessions involving 154 people, including church officers (staff and volunteers), external partners, victims and survivors 

* received 2,390 anonymous survey responses from victims and survivors, children and young people, worshippers and church workers 

Further information about safeguarding at the Diocese of London, including how to raise a concern or access support, is available on the Diocese’s safeguarding page

Finnish Parliamentarian Convicted of “Insulting” a Group for 20-year-old Church Booklet to Appeal to European Court of Human Rights

A longstanding Finnish parliamentarian criminally convicted in March for “insulting” a group by her country’s Supreme Court has announced that she will appeal her case to the European Court of Human Rights, in the final legal juncture for this critical case for free speech in Europe.

Päivi Räsänen was found guilty for expressing her beliefs about marriage and sexuality in a booklet she wrote for her church over 20 years ago. 

Lutheran Bishop Juhana Pohjola and the Luther Foundation Finland were also convicted for publishing the booklet for the church.

They were criminally convicted under Finland’s 2011 “hate speech” law which prohibits “agitation against a minority group” under a section of the Finnish criminal code titled “war crimes and crimes against humanity”.

The appeal comes after the former Interior Minister’s nearly seven-year prosecution and unanimous acquittal by two lower courts in Finland. 

In March 2026, a mixed Supreme Court ruling acquitted Räsänen for her 2019 Bible verse tweet, but convicted her and Bishop Pohjola for “making and keeping available to the public a text that insults a group” in the 2004 church booklet on sexual ethics, according to a 3:2 majority.

Commenting on her decision to appeal, Räsänen said: “The failure of the Finnish Supreme Court to uphold freedom of speech has set a dangerous precedent in my country and across Europe. I feel it is my duty to appeal this decision, to reinstate respect for the basic human right that all are free to peacefully express their views in the public square.”

“I know I am not alone in facing unjust persecution under ‘hate speech’ laws that make sharing Christian beliefs a criminal offense. I make my appeal in the hope that the European Court of Human Rights will recognise that peacefully expressing one’s beliefs is never a crime, and ensure that this basic freedom is protected for all.”

Final chance for freedom to prevail

Räsänen, a long-serving parliamentarian, medical doctor, and grandmother of twelve, has been criminally prosecuted for nearly seven years for sharing her Christian beliefs about marriage and sexuality in a 2019 tweet and live radio debate, as well as for authoring the 2004 church booklet, 

for which she was charged alongside Bishop Pohjola and the Luther Foundation Finland.

In 2021, Räsänen was formally charged with “agitation against a minority group” under a section of the Finnish criminal code titled “war crimes and crimes against humanity”.

Following unanimous acquittals on all charges by two lower courts in 2022 and 2023, the state prosecutor appealed again to the Finnish Supreme Court regarding the tweet and church booklet. 

The case was heard in October 2025, and in March 2026 the Supreme Court upheld the acquittal for the Bible verse tweet, but convicted Räsänen and the Bishop for the 2004 booklet. 

The radio show charge was not appealed to the Supreme Court, so that acquittal stands.

The Supreme Court convicted Räsänen under a law that was introduced years after the booklet was published, and did so despite the court’s admission that the booklet “did not contain incitement to violence or comparable threat-like fomenting of hatred”.

In an alarming display of censorship, the Supreme Court fined Räsänen, Bishop Pohjola, and the Luther Foundation Finland several thousand Euros, and ruled that the condemned statements within the booklet must be “removed from public access and destroyed”.  

“The Supreme Court’s decision to convict myself and the Luther Foundation for publishing a booklet for our church was extremely disappointing,” added Bishop Pohjola. 

“As a Bishop, I have a responsibility to guide those under my pastoral care, and I am deeply concerned by the state’s extensive efforts to censor our publications and decide what can and cannot be taught by religious leaders to members of their own group.

“It is our intention to join Päivi Räsänen in appealing to the European Court of Human Rights in defence of our free speech and religious freedom rights, and those of everyone in Finland.”

An appeal to the European Court of Human Rights is the final legal opportunity for the conviction to be overturned, and marks a seminal moment for the fundamental right to free speech to be upheld in Finland and throughout Europe.

“Hate speech” laws enabling state censorship

Räsänen’s case has garnered significant international interest, with the prosecution’s extensive criticism of Räsänen and Bishop Pohjola’s beliefs provoking high-profile responses, including from the US State Department.

Senior Finnish officials also questioned the ruling: Justice Minister Leena Meri argued that the legislation is “not sufficiently precise and especially not predictable as required by the principle of legality in the criminal code,” adding that “it is very difficult for people to know what is prohibited and what is permitted”.

The judgment has exacerbated existing concerns about the precarious state of free speech across Europe, where vaguely worded “hate speech” laws are increasingly wielded to silence dissenting views.

The appeal of Räsänen, who will be represented by ADF International, has significant global implications for freedom of speech.

“The retroactive censorship of a 20-year-old booklet produced by and for a church community is among the most chilling developments in the ongoing attack on freedom of speech across Europe,” said Lorcán Price, legal counsel with ADF International, serving on Räsänen’s legal team.

“As subjective ‘hate speech’ laws are increasingly being used to silence and criminalise peaceful expression of beliefs, the European Court of Human Rights has a responsibility to decisively protect the freedom of expression that is necessary in a truly democratic society.

“The ‘hate speech’ laws used to convict Päivi Räsänen and Bishop Pohjola clearly contradict international human rights law regarding freedom of speech and freedom of religion. If such laws can be interpreted so broadly as to include a decades-old church booklet, how can anyone in Finland be certain that anything they have said, or will say, will not be prosecuted? It is imperative that the European Court of Human Rights clarify and protect these fundamental freedoms definitively.”

Polish education minister hits back at church criticism of school health education classes

Poland’s education minister, Barbara Nowacka, has again clashed with the country’s Catholic church over the introduction of a new subject, health education, in Polish schools.

On Sunday, the head of the Polish episcopate, Archbishop Tadeusz Wojda, criticised plans to make the classes compulsory from the start of the school year in September. He said that the course contains “very problematic content” regarding issues such as marriage and family.

In response, Nowacka accused the church of “not understanding” the curriculum as well as of inconsistency, because it has continued to oppose the subject despite the government making sex education elements, which had previously been criticised by the church, optional.

After a more liberal government took power from the national-conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party at the end of 2023, it moved to introduce the new subject of health education, which replaced the former non-compulsory education for family life (WDŻ) classes.

Nowacka had hoped to make health education mandatory, saying it would help students “make informed health decisions” and would “promote a healthy lifestyle”. However, concerns from more conservative elements of the ruling coalition resulted in it being made optional. It is taught from grade four upwards.

Ahead of the subject’s introduction in September 2025, the Catholic church appealed to parents not to allow their children to attend the classes, which it said are “anti-family”, “gender destabilising”, and will “morally corrupt children”. In the end, around 70% of parents opted their children out of the subject.

Last month, Nowacka announced that, from the start of the new school year in September 2026, health education would become compulsory. But, in a nod to conservative critics, she said that elements relating to sex education would be separated and remain optional.

However, that did not satisfy the church, which quickly issued a statement saying that “removing the sexual education component does not solve the problem, as other thematic areas contain content that does not adequately respect the values ​​of marriage and family”.

It therefore expressed opposition to making the subject compulsory, saying that doing so violated parents’ constitutional right to raise children in accordance with their beliefs.

That criticism was reiterated on Saturday by Wojda, the president of the Polish Episcopal Conference (KEP), in a homily delivered at Jasna Góra Monastery, Poland’s holiest Catholic shrine.

He said that, even without sex education elements, the curriculum for health education “contains some very problematic content…that fails to adequately respect the values ​​of marriage and family, as defined and guaranteed by the constitution”.

However, neither Wojda nor the episcopate have specified in their statements which elements of the core curriculum they find problematic.

“The state should respect and support this right [of parents to decide on their child’s upbringing], rather than restrict it by imposing a uniform, mandatory educational vision in such a sensitive area,” said Wojda.

He appealed to state institutions to engage in “broad and substantive dialogue” with the Catholic church and other religious denominations about how health education should be taught.

Wojda also noted that, while only 30% of parents opted their children into health education classes this year, around 70% signed them up for optional Catholic catechism classes in public schools. Yet the former is being made mandatory while the latter remains optional, he pointed out.

Speaking to broadcaster Polsat on Monday, Nowacka hit back, saying that the church’s “criticism shows once again that they do not know what is in the core curriculum”. She noted that “yet another bishop does not specify what he means” when criticising the curriculum.

“Last year, [they] criticised the section on sexual health as inappropriate. They had no objections to the rest. They called it a necessary subject,” said Nowacka. But now, even with the sexual health elements removed, they remain opposed.

“It turns out that it was not about sexual health issues, but about [causing] a political row,” claimed the minister.

Since being appointed in December 2023, Nowacka has regularly clashed with the church hierarchy over changes she has made to the school programme, including halving the number of hours that Catholic catechism classes are taught and removing the subject from end-of-year grade averages.

Police appeal for survivors of disgraced former Bishop after more alleged offences come to light

Police are appealing for victims and survivors to come forward after the conviction of a former Bishop for multiple child sexual offences that took place during the 1980s.

South Wales Police confirmed on 7 May that three people have "taken the first step in coming forward" since 84-year-old Anthony Pierce was jailed.

Pierce pleaded guilty to five counts of indecent assault on a child under the age of 16 at Swansea Crown Court in February 2025.

The offences took place whilst he was working as a parish priest at Holy Cross Church in West Cross. Pierce christened his victim as a child, before going on to abuse him years later.

He was sentenced to four years and one month in prison and upon release will be subject to a Sexual Harm Prevention Order, and placed on the sex offenders register for life.

Since the sentencing, South Wales Police confirmed they received three further reports of offences dating back to the 1970s and 80s, which are currently under investigation.

In a statement, Detective Inspector Tom Richardson of Swansea CID said: "We know how difficult it must be for anyone to have suffered abuse in the past to come forward now. It was the bravery of the victim who reported Pierce’s actions which was instrumental in bringing him to justice.

"Since the conviction and sentencing of Pierce we have received reports from three people who have taken that first step in coming forward.

"We believe that there may be others who have been subject to Pierce’s crimes and we want to provide reassurance that any reports will be fully investigated and dealt with sensitively and with compassion.

"We recognise that coming forward can be daunting but would encourage victim-survivors to speak with us so they can get the support and help they deserve."

Church leaders appeal for calm after violence

Church leaders have appealed for calm after violence in Londonderry which police believe involved children as young as 10 and may have been orchestrated by paramilitaries.

Catholic Bishop Donal McKeown and the Church of Ireland Bishop of Derry and Raphoe Andrew Forster spoke out after visiting the mainly-Protestant Fountain estate on Wednesday night, where homes were attacked the previous night.

Two boys, aged 13 and 14, were arrested following the disorder in nearby Bishop Street, during which police were attacked with petrol bombs and other missiles.

A third boy, aged 11, has also been released on bail after being arrested on suspicion of riotous behaviour and having an offensive weapon.

"If there are people orchestrating it they really need to look at themselves and to the children who are involved," Forster said.

"We went up to where the interface is and spoke to some of the residents there and my heart went out to them because if you are living with projectiles, missiles coming over the fence landing in your garden it's incredibly dangerous and it's very intimidating," he told BBC Radio Foyle's North West Today programme.

'I do fear'

Police said they were attacked with petrol bombs and other missiles on Tuesday

Forster said the community had to speak "with one voice" against the violence.

"We need to put ourselves in the position of those who are feeling frightened and afraid and respond accordingly," he said.

"I do fear at times because, you know, community relations... I wouldn't say that it's a knife edge but it's a delicate balance, it's a delicate thing and it's easy for that balance to be tipped and incidents like this can tip a balance that moves us away from good community response."

His Catholic counterpart added: "Nobody wants to have young people scarred by the burden of their pasts. We have enough people like that in the city already.

"So I hope that together as a city united we can say 'look this is not good enough'."

'Criminal elements'

The two teenage boys who were arrested have been released on bail pending further police inquiries.

The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said the area remained calm on Wednesday night, with no repeat of the scenes of the previous evening.

The city's police commander, Ch Supt Gillian Kearney, said there were concerns that paramilitaries may be involved in organising the disorder on Tuesday.

She said there was a "combination of reasons" why the trouble was happening.

"There are a number of factors that are contributing to this, the longer nights and the fact that we are seeing a number of sectarian incidents happening across the district."

Paramilitary groupings are a line of enquiry, she said.

"We will see further arrests in relation to the disorder," Kearney added.

She said the community would continue to see a visible policing presence.

Bishop Denis Nulty: State needs to support marriage to help arrest negative trend

Bishop Denis Nulty said, “The latest CSO data, recording marriages in 2025, that was published today, shows fewer couples getting married in Ireland year-on-year. This worrying trend applies regardless of whether marriage was celebrated as a sacramental ceremony, or otherwise.

“Together, as people of faith and all citizens up to the level of policymaker in Government, we ought to be seriously concerned at our declining marriage rate. Marriage is positively correlated with stability in families and that of wider society in general. With over sixty years of operation, Accord is very well established as the only all-Ireland service that provides preparation to couples ahead of their married life, but help is needed. No doubt but that the decline in marriage numbers is a policy area meriting immediate State intervention, and investment, in the interest of the common good.”

Bishop Denis Nulty is Bishop of Kildare & Leighlin and chair of the Council for Marriage and the Family of the Irish Catholic Bishops’ Conference.

These ceremonies, led by bishops like Bishop Nulty, celebrate the upcoming sacramental marriage and highlight Accord’s marriage preparation programs.  

The blessings support couples in nurturing their relationship and spiritual connection.

Bishop Philip Boyce to celebrate Diamond Jubilee this Sunday

Bishop Emeritus of Raphoe Philip Boyce will mark the Diamond Jubilee of his priestly ordination with a special Mass in St Eunan’s Cathedral, Letterkenny, this Sunday 10th May.

The Mass will take place at 3pm, with parishioners warmly encouraged to attend and join in the celebration of his 60 years of ministry.

Born in Downings, Bishop Boyce served as Bishop of Raphoe from 1st October 1995 until his retirement on 6th August 2017.

Educated at Derryhassen school in Mevagh (Downings) parish and at Castlremartyr College, Co. Cork, Philip Boyce joined the noviciate of the Discalced Carmelites in Loughrea, Co. Galway, making his first profession in 1959.

Having completed philosophical studies in Dublin, he studied theology at the Teresianum in Rome, where he was ordained on the 17th April 1966.

He received a doctorate in theology (DD) in 1977 with a dissertation on the spirituality of Cardinal John Henry Newman.

During his twenty years on the teaching staff of the Pontifical Theological Faculty of the Carmelites in Rome, he taught spirituality and dogmatic theology, and for many years was engaged in the work of formation of students preparing for the priesthood or doing postgraduate studies.

This Sunday's Mass will offer an opportunity for the people of the Diocese to express their appreciation for Bishop Boyce’s long ministry and service. 

A reception will follow in Loreto Secondary School.

Pope Leo XIV appoints Jesuit priest as new bishop of Honolulu

Pope Leo XIV has appointed a Jesuit priest as the new bishop of Honolulu to succeed Bishop Clarence “Larry” Silva, who has led the Hawaii diocese for two decades.

The new bishop-designate, Father Michael T. Castori, S.J., 65, has served since 2025 as rector of Arrupe Jesuit Residence at Seattle University in Washington state and is a member of the Society of Jesus’ West United States Province. He will become the sixth bishop of Honolulu.

The Vatican announced both Father Castori’s appointment and the resignation of Bishop Silva on May 6.

Bishop Silva, 76, has served as bishop of Honolulu since 2005. He was the first Hawaii-born bishop of Honolulu and only the second of Portuguese-Azorean ancestry. 

Under Catholic Church canon law, bishops are required to submit their resignation to the pope upon turning 75.

Father Castori was born Oct. 21, 1960, in Sacramento, California. He holds a bachelor’s degree in classics from Harvard University, a master’s degree in philosophy from Fordham University, and a Master of Divinity from the Jesuit School of Theology in Berkeley. 

He was ordained a Jesuit priest on June 13, 1998, and earned a doctorate in Near Eastern Religions from the University of California, Berkeley, in 2008. He speaks English, Spanish, Hebrew, Greek, Latin and Tongan.

He served as a chaplain to Tongan communities in California from 1996 to 2024 and in prison ministry from 1997 to 2005. 

He also served as assistant professor and university ministry assistant at Santa Clara University, as parochial vicar at All Saints Catholic Church in Hayward, and as vicar for clergy in the Diocese of Oakland from 2021 to 2024 before moving to Seattle last year.

The Diocese of Honolulu covers the entire state of Hawaii and is a suffragan diocese in the ecclesiastical province of the Archdiocese of San Francisco. 

Its mother church is the Cathedral Basilica of Our Lady of Peace in Honolulu, and its patron is the Blessed Virgin Mary under the title of Our Lady Queen of Peace.

Nigeria: Call for prayers for priest and ten parishioners kidnapped in February

Bishop Julius Yakubu Kundi of Kafanchan, Kaduna State, has issued an to all priests, religious, and laity of the diocese to pray for the release of Father Nathaniel Asukawaye and ten parishioners who were kidnapped by armed men on February 7, 2026.

At least three people were killed in the attack on Holy Trinity Church in Karku, in the local government area of Kaura, Kaduna State.

In his message for the Marian month of May, Bishop Kundi asks for prayers "for the conversion of the kidnappers."

The diocese said in a statement: "Since Father Nathaniel is a chaplain of the Marian Society and coordinates the devotions in May and October, the bishop requests special prayers for his release and the conversion of his captors during this year's May devotions."

Prayers are also requested for the unconditional release of other kidnapping victims, "especially those from our diocese."

Priest's death was preventable, inquest finds

The death of a priest, who took his own life in March 2022, was "preventable", a coroner has concluded.

The coroner said the inquest into Fr Paddy O'Kane's death served to highlight the particular challenges that may arise for those in religious life.

Fr O'Kane, 73, was found dead in the garden of a hospital at Gransha Park in Londonderry on 28 March 2022. He was being treated for depression at the hospital at the time of his death.

The Western Health Trust said it "wholeheartedly accepts the findings from the Coroner's inquest and the failings regarding Fr O'Kane's care".

Warning: The following article contains details some readers may find distressing.

'Sincere condolences'

The Western Health Trust has previously apologised following Fr O'Kane's death.

On Thursday a spokesperson for the trust said it "would like to reiterate its sincere condolences" to Fr O'Kane's family.

"The Trust has already implemented remedial actions, in line with the Serious Adverse Incident recommendations, to help prevent a recurrence of such incidents."

John McGinley, who was assistant director of the Western Health and Social Care Trust at the time of Fr O'Kane's death, previously told the inquest that the garden area at the hospital had not been included in a health and safety assessment, which he described as a "serious and grave error".

He said that lessons had been learned from the tragedy and he was "very sorry for our failings".

On Thursday, the coroner, Maria Dougan, told the inquest that the absence of a comprehensive assessment in the hospital's garden area, along with the failure to remove risks, contributed to Fr O'Kane's death.

She added: "I'm satisfied that there were a number of missed opportunities in the care of the deceased."

Dougan said that Fr O'Kane had a long history of mental health problems and his condition was chronic in nature.

No dedicated risk assessment for garden

She said she was satisfied that his diagnosis and treatment at Waterside Hospital were adequate and the level of observation of him in place at the hospital - which was 'general observation' - was appropriate on the morning of his death, on 28 March 2022.

The coroner said there was insufficient evidence to indicate that one-to-one observations were needed.

But she told the inquest that the safety assessment should have been undertaken given his history.

Dougan said that at the time of Fr O'Kane's death, there was no dedicated risk assessment or action plan covering the hospital's garden area.

She said the processes in place applied only to the hospital's wards and did not extend to its garden, which she described as a serious and material failing.

Dougan added that the absence of a comprehensive ligature risk assessment and action plan resulted in the presence of ligature materials.

The absence of a systematic approach to risks was a matter of concern, she told the inquest.

She said Fr O'Kane acted intentionally at the time of his death but his thinking was profoundly affected by his illness.

'A man of warmth and talent'

Dougan said that drawing the matters together, there were identifiable and avoidable risks which were not adequately identified or managed, and in these circumstances, Fr O'Kane was able to take his own life.

She said that John McGinley had previously confirmed to the inquest that the risks identified following the late priest's death have now been addressed - and that the hospital's garden, which was not previously considered in the hospital's risk assessment, is now included in such assessments.

She told the court that Fr O'Kane - who was known to many as 'Fr Paddy' - had a long history of mental health illness which he had experienced for most of his life.

She said he had remained committed to the service of others, often assuming other people's burdens as his own, which became harder to sustain in later life.

The coroner described Fr O'Kane as a man of warmth and talent - and as a central and unifying figure within his family - and said his death was a profound and irreplaceable loss.

'Remembered with deep affection'

Dougan also said the inquest serves to highlight the particular challenges that may arise for those in religious life, individuals who dedicate themselves to the care and support of others may do so while quietly experiencing their own difficulties, including those relating to mental health.

In that context, the coroner said that consideration should be given by the relevant religious authorities to the support structures available to those in religious life following discharge from hospital for treatment of mental illness.

The coroner concluded by saying that Fr O'Kane's life was one characterised by "service generosity and human connection".

"He will be remembered with deep affection by those whose lives he touched."

Before the inquest closed, a representative for the Western Trust extended their condolences to the family and friends of Fr O'Kane

Father O'Kane's niece Catherine Duffy was present to hear the inquest findings.

‘People have been stranded here for decades’: Limerick priest helps undocumented Irish in New York

On East 9th Street, just a few doors down from Tompkins Square Park, in Manhattan, stands Bonitas House, an imposing yet otherwise nondescript brownstone building with a tattered Irish tricolour in the window.

The door creaks open, revealing a smiling priest draped in a dark cassock. 

A kalimavkion – the clerical headdress of the Eastern Catholic Church – sits atop his head. 

A heavy crucifix hangs from his neck.

“When I first came, it was like an Eastern European village,” he says. “Not a word of English was spoken.”

Fr Patrick Maloney, an Irish priest from Limerick who recently turned 94, offers legal assistance to fellow immigrants at Bonitas House. 

He cites the seal of Confession as the source of his confidentiality, maintaining that a lawyer can be subpoenaed but a priest cannot. 

Though not a legal practitioner, he has navigated the complexities of the immigration system for decades.

“My major expertise is knowing what to get for whoever needs it at any given time,” he says. “I always know where to refer somebody, and get them on the right track.”

Inside his office-cum-bedroom, vast stacks of crumpled documents line the walls, not a filing cabinet in sight. “Just piles upon piles of work from over the years,” he explains.

Post-it notes with immigration lawyers’ phone numbers form a paper tapestry above his headboard. 

The handwritten digits crudely enlarged to account for his diminishing eyesight. 

A mobile phone attached to a drawstring dangles precariously from his neck, bristling with each incoming call.

“My clients can ring me whenever they want,” he says. “Even if it’s just for some reassurance.”

New York’s Irish community faces ongoing uncertainty following president Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown, with deportations of Irish nationals having increased by 330 per cent between 2024 and 2025. 

Maloney works closely with just a handful of the estimated 10,000 undocumented Irish in the US. 

“Some have been here for 30 or 40 years,” he says. “They own their homes and pay their taxes.”

He works to secure their status so they can freely return to and from Ireland. “People have been stranded here for decades,” he says. “Imagine not being able to go back for your own mother’s funeral”.

Though Maloney has welcomed Trump’s anti-abortion measures, he has appealed for humanity amid mass deportations. 

“Immigrants are the whole foundation of America,” he asserts. “How can you turn around and then persecute those people?”

Trump’s recent spat with Pope Leo XIV – in which he described the pontiff as too liberal and “weak on crime” – indicates a widening rift with senior Catholic clergy. 

Vice-president JD Vance also stoked the flames when he suggested the pope should “be careful” when discussing theology.

“I thought it was very disrespectful,” says Maloney. “Let’s face it, they’re not the most scholarly bunch.”

Born in Limerick City in 1932, the priest spent his early years in a one-room tenement flat without electricity or running water. 

He grew up alongside Frank McCourt, who went on to document the destitution of his childhood in Angela’s Ashes. Though some of McCourt’s memories have been disputed, Maloney attests to their veracity.

“A lot of people didn’t like it because it told the truth,” he says. “People were ashamed to admit how poor we were.”

I thought there would be gold in the streets, and I was quickly disillusioned. People were as poor as we had been back in Ireland

Maloney’s entry into religious study began at Cistercian College Roscrea, where he secured a scholarship. 

After graduating from secondary school, he went on to pursue life as a hermetic monk with the Carmelite order. 

While studying at a monastery in Wales, Maloney decided to withdraw from the priesthood.

“I realised that I wanted to encounter life beyond the walls of the cloister,” he recalls. “Though I have never given up my contemplative feeling and commitment to prayer.”

Outside of the priesthood, 1950s Ireland offered few economic opportunities. “There was absolutely no work,” he recollects. “Anybody who could get out did.” He decided to emigrate, travelling by boat to New York in 1955.

Though amazed by his first sight of television screens and skyscrapers, Maloney soon came to recognise the sobering reality of New York’s inequality. 

“I thought there would be gold in the streets, and I was quickly disillusioned,” he remembers. “People were as poor as we had been back in Ireland.”

Inspired by the activism of Dorothy Day, whom he had met through the Catholic Worker movement, he launched Bonitas House in 1961. 

After purchasing the property with a $1,500 downpayment – a fraction of its current value – he established it as a refuge for the poor and hungry, taking in orphans off the street.

“I gave them shelter and help until they were able to get back on their feet,” he says. The house today still houses a number of lodgers. “They’re like my sons.”

Maloney waited until Bonitas House was fully up and running before making his official return to the priesthood. In 1977 he was ordained as a Melkite Catholic priest – a church of the Eastern Rite. 

The more communal and less hierarchical structure of the church greatly appealed to him. “I wanted a dialogue with my parishioners throughout,” he explains.

The height of his legal assistance came during Ronald Reagan’s immigration amnesty in the 1980s.

He helped secure status for many Irish and Polish immigrants who had come to New York illegally.

“All they had to do was prove they were here for a certain period of time,” he recalls. “It still took a lot to get them to come out of the woodwork.”

He also assists fellow priests in their applications for religious worker visas – one faction of his clients for whom a green card marriage is definitely off the cards. 

A self-styled “fixer”, he says he always knows how to operate within the bounds of the law.

Maloney’s experiences with the justice system, however, go well beyond immigration assistance. 

In 1995, a judge sentenced him to four years in prison for involvement in the theft of $7.4 million from a Brink’s truck in Upstate New York – the fifth largest robbery in US history at the time. 

The Manhattan safe house used to stash the cash belonged to his network of local rehabilitation centres.

The prosecution identified the robbery as part of a wider conspiracy to raise funds for the IRA. 

Maloney, well known in Irish republican circles in New York, had helped organise demonstrations outside the British consulate during the hunger strikes in 1981. 

“We used to carry a coffin outside the consulate, and I would say a mass for our boys.”

In New York, he emerged as a central figure in the Northern Irish Aid Committee (Noraid) which helped fundraise for the families of Irish republican prisoners.

In 1982, he and his brother John were arrested in Dublin for alleged involvement in gun smuggling. 

Charges against him were dropped, while his brother went on to serve two-and-a-half years in Portlaoise Prison. 

During the investigation, a Garda special branch officer identified the priest as the “underground general” of IRA gun running.

He admits to having housed fugitives from the IRA and other resistance movements at Bonitas House. “I have always been unapologetic in my support for the movement,” he insists. 

Nonetheless, he maintains his innocence, insisting his conviction was politically motivated. “I was not sent to prison for anything at all to do with the Brink’s robbery.”

Suspected paramilitary connections consigned him to maximum security, where a helicopter monitored his daily walks through the prison yard. “It gave me a certain level of clout among the mob bosses in my wing,” he admits.

Despite his old age, Maloney continues to work for his clients, taking calls and filling forms throughout the week.

He has one eye on the future – already considering clerical successors to take over his duties. With the slow progress of his immigration cases, he knows he may not live to see them all through.

Last month, Maloney threw a birthday party at Bonitas House. The livingroom came alive with a bustling cast of characters from across the world – many of them indebted to him for his help over the years. Bedecked in a shiny birthday sash, the priest ended the night with a rousing speech.

“Perhaps my best years are gone,” he surmised. “But I wouldn’t want them back, not with the fire in me now.”

Vox denies the snub to the bishops and leaves the door open to talk about the risks of mass regularization

The president of Vox, Santiago Abascal, has denied ignoring a meeting request from the Spanish Episcopal Conference (CEE) and has shown willingness to dialogue with the bishops on immigration, although reiterating his outright rejection of the massive regularization promoted by the Government and supported by various ecclesiastical sectors.

According to what the general secretary of the CEE, Francisco César García Magán, stated this Wednesday, the Spanish bishops proposed about a year ago to hold an informal meeting with Abascal “to have a coffee or a beer”, but they never received a response.

Abascal claims he never received the invitation

Hours later, the Vox leader responded publicly through a message on the social network X, where he denied having knowledge of that meeting proposal.

“I have no knowledge of that request. Not long ago I coincided with Mons. Argüello at the presentation of a book and he didn’t say anything to me,” he stated.

Abascal added that his party has no objection to meeting with the Episcopal Conference to explain their stance on immigration and the consequences that, in his opinion, the open borders policy is having.

“Delighted to talk with the Episcopal Conference to explain that massive regularization is a covert invasion,” he wrote.

Vox warns about the pull effect

From Vox, they consider that these measures incentivize the pull effect and worsen the migratory pressure on Spain. In his message, Abascal insisted on the figures of irregular immigrant entries recorded in recent years.

“Two and a half million people have entered in two years. And more will come in the next ones, if we don’t prevent it,” he pointed out.

The Vox leader also maintained that the institutions that support this type of policies “are responsible for the direct harm caused to Spaniards”.

The origin of the controversy

The tension between both parties increased after the Bishop of the Canary Islands, José Mazuelos, publicly defended the need to understand the situation of immigrants arriving on Spanish coasts in cayucos.

Subsequently, García Magán accused Abascal of “slander” for denouncing that some ecclesiastical entities “make business with illegal immigration,” and rejected the “national priority” proposal defended by Vox.

However, from Abascal’s party they insist that a significant part of Spanish Catholics share his concern about the social, economic, and cultural impact of mass immigration.

“There is a large majority of Spaniards, (many of them Catholics and quite a few bishops) who know that we need to change course,” Abascal concluded.

Marx in audience with the Pope after Rome's rejection of blessings for irregular and same-sex couples

Pope Leo XIV received Cardinal Reinhard Marx, Archbishop of Munich and Freising, in audience this Thursday, just a few days after the strong public correction issued from Rome against the controversial German project of ritualized blessings for homosexual couples.

The meeting was officially confirmed by the Holy See’s daily bulletin, which reported that the Pontiff received the German cardinal in audience, who is also coordinator of the Vatican Council for the Economy.

The Pope publicly corrected the ritualized blessings

At the end of April, Cardinal Marx announced the implementation in his diocese of a text that allows priests to bless homosexual couples and divorced remarried couples through structured formulas.

Read also: Cardinal Marx promotes blessings for irregular and same-sex couples in Munich

The decision sparked immediate international controversy, interpreted as a practical break with Catholic doctrine on marriage and sexual morality.

During the return flight from his apostolic trip to Africa, Leo XIV was directly asked about this issue and responded clearly.

“The Holy See has already spoken with the German bishops” and “has made it clear that we do not agree with the formalized blessing of homosexual couples,” affirmed the Pontiff.

The backing of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith

The Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith recently published a letter signed by Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández and dated November 2024, in which it explicitly rejected a German project to ritualize blessings for same-sex couples.

As explained by the prefect of the dicastery to Vatican News, the letter constitutes “the only and final response” from Rome also regarding the definitive text approved in April 2025 in Germany.

Fernández insisted that the new German Vademécum continues to contradict the declaration Fiducia supplicans, because it introduces liturgical or paraliturgical elements expressly excluded by the Vatican.

“The Church has the right and duty to avoid any kind of rite that could lead to confusion regarding marriage,” recalled the Argentine cardinal.

However, the Dicastery’s intervention maintains the line of Francis’s controversial document, limiting itself to distinguishing between “spontaneous” blessings and structured or paraliturgical celebrations.

Silence in Munich

Despite the papal correction, the Archdiocese of Munich has shown no signs of rectification.

Asked by Religión Confidencial about a possible suspension of these ritualized blessings, the German archdiocese chose not to comment.

“We will not comment on this,” was the only response offered by the diocese.

The audience between Leo XIV and Cardinal Marx thus acquires special ecclesial relevance and is interpreted as a new episode in the growing tensions between Rome and some sectors of the German Church regarding the so-called Synodal Way and its reform proposals.

The truth about Ireland’s Magdalene laundries: ‘Women are still dying there. As late as 2024, I found death notices for women whose addresses were given as former laundries’

The story of the Mag­dalene laun­dries has been told again and again but remains mired in the same old myths and mis­un­der­stand­ings. 

In her new book, aca­demic Louise Bran­gan explores what really happened in these insti­tu­tions – and the for­got­ten women who lived out their lives behind their walls

Noth­ing Brigid was 12 when she was removed from her west of Ireland home in the 1940s. She was told she was being taken away because she had been skipping school. 

In truth, her casual approach to class attendance was never the real reason she was cast out of society.

Brigid had been born outside of marriage – she was illegitimate. Illegitimacy is an ugly word, but it was a legal category assigned at birth until 1988 in Ireland. 

For much of the 20th century, the Government counted the number of illegitimate babies and tracked their year-on-year growth or decline.

They scrutinised these figures in comparison with other countries, particularly Britain, which was engaged in the same dismal demography. 

The size of Ireland’s illegitimate population was lamented by the Government like an ill-gotten underclass. 

By the time Brigid was born, illegitimacy was a permanent social anxiety.

Tens of thousands of children in similar positions found themselves detained and debased in one of Ireland’s 50 industrial schools. 

Brigid was spared this fate as her grandmother had taken her in. 

Then, their local priest heard of the truancy. He took it as evidence that Brigid was, like many illegitimate girls, “morally defective”. 

She was marked with the damming label: “pre-delinquent”. 

The priest persuaded her grandmother that he should immediately bring Brigid to St Mary’s, the local Magdalene convent in Limerick.

That evening, Brigid was received by the nuns. 

They took her clothes and cut her hair. 

They changed her name. 

She was no longer Brigid. 

From that moment on, she was known only as Peter.

Then she was put to work: she washed, she scrubbed, she spun, and she pressed. There in the laundry, priests and prisoners had their uniforms and vestments treated alike. 

The crisp linens of hotels, restaurants and family dining rooms passed through the hands of these women and girls. 

In this way, the laundry did not discriminate. Brigid worked from morning till evening, Monday to Saturday.

She was forced to maintain a strict rule of silence: no talking, no making friends. The only noise that would perforate the quiet was the relentless thrum of prayers. 

A nun was always with the women and girls, reading out litanies, rosaries, and stations of the cross like an incessant incantation, to which they would make only the required curt collective responses.

At the Limerick laundry, there were 180 other women and girls. Across Ireland, another 1,000 women were being held in one of nine other Magdalene laundries at this time. 

All of them, like Brigid, had lost their hair, their name, their voice. 

They had no time to think. But what most tortured those confined in Magdalene laundries was that this was potentially indefinite incarceration. 

There was a chance they would die there, anonymous, buried on the grounds, in an unmarked or mass grave.

For Brigid, having played fast and loose with school rules aged 12, this was a life sentence. Adult men found guilty of murder in the same period could expect to serve no more than seven years, and even that was a rarity. 

Somehow, by the 1940s, the mildest transgressions of Ireland’s girls and women caused more outrage than the taking of a life.

How could this happen? And why? I am certainly not the first to have been plagued by these questions and to have felt haunted by this history. 

The story of the Magdalene laundries has been told again and again. 

Yet here I was, traipsing around Ireland trying to write a book about them, because something felt unresolved.

As I continued researching, reading archives, meeting people who remembered and had experienced the laundries, what I came to discover was that, while we now know of the Magdalene laundries, it is often through fable and soundbite.

The laundries were always slightly enigmatic, not least because they didn’t have a single defining term or name. They were called homes, penitentiaries, asylums, refuges. 

And what went on there was spoken about in taut euphemisms – charity, redemption, salvation.

That the laundries have now become such a lively source for cultural output – podcasts, movies, books, YouTube sleuths, theatre shows, art installations,

TikTok historians, and novels – suggests that we have cleared the silence that once engulfed the laundries.

Yet, I found myself confronted by an emerging paradox. The more we spoke about the laundries, the more mired they became in the same old myths and misunderstandings. 

In reckoning with this, I found that while lives like Brigid’s were callously discarded in the past, they also risked being discounted in the present in the way we speak about the history of the laundries today.

In 2024, Small Things Like These was released in cinemas, adapted from Claire Keegan’s bestselling novella of the same name. 

The story follows one man living in New Ross who finds himself troubled by the affairs of the local laundry. 

The film, like the book, is set in 1985, though the New Ross Magdalene laundry had in fact closed almost 20 years prior, in 1967, and by the 1980s, the remaining laundries were no longer the busy places they had once been.

Across that decade, only 147 women and girls entered the laundries, mostly on remand from the courts. 

A small number compared to the staggering 7,039 women admitted to the laundries between the 1920s and 1940s.

Of course, we can justify this as artistic licence, until the film ends (which is where it departs from the book). The screen goes black. Now the audience is given the stark smack of historical reality. But we are given the wrong information. 

The film is “Dedicated to the more than 56,000 young women who were sent to the Magdalene laundries... And the children who were taken from them”.

The filmmakers didn’t make this figure up. This was the headline figure from an official state investigation into another dimension of 20-century Irish ignominy – but not the Magdalene laundries. 

That was the figure for mother and baby homes, which had held 56,000 women and girls across the 20th century.

Upon seeing that misplaced fact projected on a big screen in a packed cinema, hearing the soft cacophony of tuts and gasps as people read it, I felt my mind listing, as if I had vertigo. It was not the first time I had felt this.

In the process of researching and writing my book on the Magdalene laundries, when I told people of my undertaking, I was surprised to find that many I spoke to repeated the same vehement mantra: it was awful what the Church and State did to those women and their babies. 

My interlocutors wanted to state their allegiance to the common sense of the present and establish their revulsion at the perpetrators of this terrible history.

The conflation of mother and baby homes and Magdalene laundries is so widespread that it is now cited as historical fact. 

But no babies were born in Magdalene laundries. 

Pregnant women were not permitted in the Laundries either. 

I, too, began with this vague assumption, that this was a ghoulish prison for women and girls who had become pregnant outside of marriage. 

It quickly became clear that Mother and Baby Homes and Laundries were distinct institutions with very different functions.

Girls as young as nine, and women as old as 89, were admitted into the laundries. Some were children in need, as they were abused and abandoned daughters. 

Or their families were pulled apart for not fitting the mould of what a family should be. 

Many were considered unruly girls, whose incarceration was warranted, according to one priest in 1933, because they were “giddy” and “undisciplined”.

Having spent years reading thousands of pages of testimony from women who survived the Laundries, what left me the most unsettled was to see that the majority were just like Brigid. 

They very rarely did anything recognisably deviant, and they certainly did not need to do anything so egregious as become pregnant to be detained at a Magdalene Laundry.

The Laundries were more like a mausoleum. Places to bury all that might shame, or simply burden families, communities, and the country alike. 

So, social workers, the courts, priests, missionaries, mothers and father sent women and girls to the Laundries, and then they sent their washing in after them.

This line about pregnant women was certainly the gossip of the day, the scurrilous innuendo that swirled through Irish towns and communities about who was in the laundry and why. 

In reality, if they were indeed the fallen, it was only because, for much of the 20th century, the meaning of “fallen woman” had become capacious.

Yet this original derogatory rumour is still fully functioning today: that the laundries were for the most vilified cases of illegitimate pregnancies. 

Survivors of the laundries have said how upsetting it is to be persistently misrepresented. 

We seem to be as confused now as we were back then. 

But why? 

Especially when we are meant to be in a period of post-recovery, post-redress, when everything is out in the open.

This revealed the strange terrain that I was on. 

I was writing a history that was supposedly hidden, but apparently now known, though most predominantly through powerful misconception: Women and babies, pregnant girls, illegitimate births, untrammelled collusion between Church and State.

I was not writing to reveal a past, but writing in the wake of it being exposed, with everyone feeling quite settled that they knew what had happened, why it was wrong and, importantly, who was to blame.

I had arrived too late, some people told me. Several described the way the Irish now felt about the topic using the same dismaying term: They had “laundry fatigue”; people got it. Perhaps they had already had enough.

Even those with an explicit mandate to clear the murk from this history have only deepened the confusion. 

The Government published the McAleese Report in 2013. Across its 1,000-plus pages are statistics plotted on graphs and bar charts, intended to “establish the facts” of the Magdalene laundries: there were 14,607 admissions to 10 laundries; 879 women died there; the average length of stay was 27 weeks.

The findings of the report have been widely disputed because the figures seem to have been so

‘The conflation of mother and baby homes and Magdalene laundries is so widespread that it is now cited as historical fact. But no babies were born in the laundries’

cautiously calculated that they severely minimised the scale of what happened. As one newspaper marvelled of the McAleese Report, the laundries were “more benign… than may be popularly believed”.

It is possible to fight the bad mathematics of the report with more sophisticated arithmetic. Yet, to some degree, that repeats the problem, to think that the horrors of this history can be effectively enumerated, set out in neat categories and grids.

The issue with the McAleese Report was not simply the final calculations (though those are certainly a matter of considerable concern). 

It was that no one seemed to question if human suffering on a mass scale is reducible to something as flat, static, and final as metrics, especially, as I came to realise, when that history is still ongoing.

Because here is another problematic fact: 1996 is when Ireland closed the last of its Magdalene laundries. I have used that line many times when speaking about the laundries. 

It sucks all the oxygen out of the room when you say it, because what else is there to add? 

1996 was also when the Spice Girls were on MTV parading girl power, a woman was president of Ireland, the Berlin Wall had been toppled, a New World Order was in ascendance.

It’s tempting to redeploy that line here too. To reiterate that everything about the laundries, the washing, the erasure, the containment, had ended, finally, in 1996. 

But I have come to see it as a killer statistic, the big number that grabs attention and wins the argument. 

But at what cost? The convent laundry businesses had shuttered, that is correct. 

The problem with this fact is that it implies something that isn’t true: the Magdalene laundries completely ended.

In counting the average duration of stay at Magdalene laundries, that meagre 27 weeks, the committee followed the convention and employed 1996 as their end date. 

So, they did not include the women who were still there after 1996 – women like Brigid.

What had happened to Brigid was a mystery to me for a long time. 

But finally I found someone who knew her, who would be able to tell me at last, what was her route out. 

Like hundreds of other women, when the laundries closed, Brigid’s institutionalisation did not come to an end. She stayed living in the convent with the nuns

So, in 2012, when Martin McAleese and his team wanted to speak to women who were still, as the report described, “under the care of the Religious Orders”, Brigid was among them.

From what has been relayed to me about that meeting, the women felt cowed by the alien officiousness of the occasion. 

Having lived lives of silent isolation, they were assembled into a focus group and asked questions such as: had they “ever suffered physical or corporal punishment?”

Maybe they were so strictly bound to their survey questions that McAleese and his officials didn’t manage to hear the story of Brigid’s life: that she had been brought to the laundry as a 12-year-old girl. 

But they could see that she was still there and that she would likely die there.

Women are still dying there. As late as November 2024, I found death notices for women whose addresses were given as former Magdalene laundries. 

This was how I found Brigid’s death notice. Her address too was given as the former convent Laundry in Limerick. 

At least one in 10 of the women that were sent to the Laundries ended their days there, behind those convent walls. Brigid died in 2016, over 70 years after being sent to the Laundry.

The history of the laundry seems quantifiable. 

Laundries processed over 1,000 garments a week, between the hankies and the tablecloths. Sentences were served in days, weeks, months, years, lifetimes. 

Thousands of women and girls. But how do you calculate a life not lived? How do we begin to remember a history like that, when it has not yet come to a conclusive end?

I had been wondering about this at a work dinner. I was sitting beside an Irish legal academic who, upon hearing of my research, said that he was very impressed with the volume of public discussion about the laundries over recent years. 

He told our fellow diners just how well-covered and exposed the history now was.

What was it worth, I said, if the facts of the laundries remained obscured? 

And if it is largely the false rumour that we have recovered – that the laundries were for cases of pregnancy outside marriage? 

I worried that the successor of collective silence might be collective forgetting.

His reply was instant. “Who cares about the details as long as we know it was wrong?”

Dismissive as his response was intended to be, I was envious of the astute concision of this line. 

It struck me as a perfect distillation of the problem of Magdalene laundry history in general.

Facts, and sometimes truth itself, can be discarded when we are mired in the need to settle scores and to judge the wrongdoers.

My book, The Fallen, is not concerned with anything nearly as tidy and definitive as blame. I sense we have gotten as far as we can with that line of historical interrogation. 

Anyway, the generations that have followed are not to blame for the laundries. 

But we are entirely responsible for how they are remembered.

How to make amends for the laundries is contested, fraught and, necessarily, ongoing. 

But remembering is also a source of reparation. 

Writing history is, I hope, one way to remember. It makes us capable of seeing that which might otherwise have gone overlooked.

Nothing can undo the past or bring the dead back to life, but we can acknowledge that they lived. 

So, my book is the story of the Magdalene laundries, of what actually happened and why, told through the voices of the women who were there, the nuns who presided over these institutions, and the communities who lived alongside them.

It is an act of recovery, to save the truth from being lost.

‘The Fallen: Magdalene Laundries and Ireland’s Legacy of Silence’ by Dr Louise Brangan is published by Penguin Random House

Rubio’s Vatican talks discussed efforts to reach ‘durable peace’ in Middle East

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio discussed “efforts to achieve a durable peace in the Middle East” in talks at the Vatican on Thursday aimed at easing tensions following President Donald Trump’s criticisms of Pope Leo XIV.

Mr Rubio met Leo and afterwards Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin in a visit that lasted two-and-a-half hours.

US State Department spokesman Tommy Pigott said Mr Rubio and Leo discussed the situation in the Middle East “and topics of mutual interest in the Western Hemisphere”.

“The meeting underscored the strong relationship between the United States and the Holy See and their shared commitment to promoting peace and human dignity,” he said.

In a separate statement about the Parolin meeting, Mr Pigott said the two diplomats discussed “ongoing humanitarian efforts in the Western Hemisphere and efforts to achieve a durable peace in the Middle East. 

The discussion reflected the enduring partnership between the United States and the Holy See in advancing religious freedom,” the statement said.

The Vatican did not immediately comment on the audiences.

Mr Rubio also has meetings on Friday with Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni and Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani.

Mr Rubio opened the fence-mending visit to the Vatican on Thursday after Mr Trump’s broadsides against the Pope, and the US-Israeli war in Iran angered the Holy See and sparked ongoing sparring between the two American leaders.

Mr Rubio’s meeting was complicated at the last minute by Mr Trump’s latest criticism of the Chicago-born pope.

Leo criticised Mr Trump’s misrepresentations of his views on Iran and nuclear weapons and said that he was merely preaching the biblical message of peace.

Cardinal Parolin on the eve of the visit had strongly defended Leo and criticised Mr Trump’s attacks in understated diplomatic terms.

“Attacking him like that or criticising what he does seems a bit strange to me, to say the least,” Cardinal Parolin said on Wednesday.

The tensions began when Mr Trump criticised Leo on social media last month, saying the Pope was soft on crime and terrorism for comments about the administration’s immigration policies and deportations as well as the Iran war.

Leo then said God does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war.

Later, Mr Trump posted a social media image appearing to liken himself to Jesus Christ, which was deleted after a backlash.

He has refused to apologise to Leo and has sought to explain away the post by saying he thought the image was of him as a doctor.

Mr Rubio said Mr Trump’s recent criticisms of Leo were rooted in his opposition to Iran potentially obtaining a nuclear weapon, which he said could be used against millions of Catholics and other Christians.

Mr Trump “doesn’t understand why anybody, leave aside the Pope, the president and I, for that matter, I think most people, I cannot understand why anyone would think that it’s a good idea for Iran to ever have a nuclear weapon”, Mr Rubio told said on Tuesday at the White House.

Leo has never said Iran should obtain nuclear weapons and that the Catholic Church “for years has spoken out against all nuclear weapons, so there is no doubt there”.

“The mission of the church is to preach the Gospel, to preach peace. If someone wants to criticise me for announcing the Gospel, let him do it with the truth,” Leo said on Tuesday, after Mr Trump again accused him of being “OK” with Iran having a nuclear weapon.