Friday, April 17, 2026

Launch of website marks major milestone for Cardinal Ó Fiaich Heritage Centre

The Cardinal Ó Fiaich Heritage Centre has officially launched its new website creating a dynamic digital platform to celebrate and promote the rich heritage, culture and history of South Armagh.

The new website serves as a hub for The Heritage Centre and The Rural Heritage of South Armagh project. 

It showcases the centre’s newly refurbished exhibition, local archaeological heritage, walking and cycling trails, educational resources, and a wide range of cultural activities. 

Designed to be accessible to all, the platform enables users to engage with the area’s heritage anytime, anywhere, breaking down physical and geographical barriers.

The development of the website was made possible through the generous support of Newry, Mourne and Down District Council’s Arts and Culture Fund. 

The Rural Heritage of South Armagh project has also benefitted from funding from The National Lottery Heritage Fund, which supported both the earlier Living History Project and the refurbishment of the centre’s exhibition space.

Séamus Murray, Chairperson of the Cardinal Ó Fiaich Heritage Centre Management Committee, welcomed the launch: “We are absolutely delighted with our new website for the Heritage Centre. It provides a wonderful shop window for our fabulous newly refurbished exhibition and really brings it to life.

“The website beautifully captures the importance of the Heritage Centre and the great work taking place within it and throughout the surrounding area. It tells the story of Cardinal Tomás Ó Fiaich — his love of the Irish language, Irish culture and history, and above all his deep love for people. He truly was ‘a man of the people’, and that spirit runs right through both the Centre and the website.

“While showcasing the wide range of activities happening in the Centre, it also highlights the rich heritage, archaeology, and culture we have on our doorstep. We are delighted to see it launched and look forward to welcoming many new visitors.”

Mrs Teresa Nugent, CEO of the Rural Health Partnership, also highlighted the significance of the milestone: “The Rural Health Partnership is delighted to be associated with another momentous milestone in the development of the Cardinal Ó Fiaich Heritage Centre. The creation of this website would not have been possible without the generous funding support of Newry, Mourne and Down District Council’s Arts and Culture Fund, and we sincerely thank them for their assistance.

“The website plays an important role in bringing the rich heritage and culture of South Armagh to a global audience, and we are thrilled to see it up and running. It is also a key element of our Rural Heritage of South Armagh project, as well as our earlier Living History Project, both of which were kindly supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund. Without whose support, the newly refurbished exhibition would not have been possible.

“We know the website will be a valuable source of information, helping to connect people to place and showcasing the true beauty, rich heritage, and character of South Armagh to audiences locally, nationally, and internationally.”

Beyond promoting tourism and cultural engagement, the website is designed with accessibility at its core. By offering engaging and inclusive digital content, it aims to reconnect individuals, ensuring that the heritage of South Armagh is accessible to everyone.

For more information, visit www.cofheritage.com.

From Silence to Scrutiny: Polish Catholic Church Confronts Abuse – and the Cover-up

Pressure on the Catholic Church is no longer just external, and is being brought to bear not only on the individual perpetrators, but also now on those who protected them.

Commission of Clarification and Repair

Over a year later, the commission, named “Wyjasnienie i Naprawa” (Clarification and Repair), prepared a report that was presented by Wazny at the February press conference in Dabrowa Gornicza. 

It was the first effort of its kind in Poland: a broad, independent attempt to examine abuse within a single diocese. It was also one of the first initiatives to come not only in response to external pressure, but from within the Catholic Church itself.

“We had to work everything out ourselves,” Professor Monika Przybysz, a crisis communications specialist and member of the commission, tells BIRN. “The rules, the procedures, how the commission would function – because there was no model to rely on.”

The commission reviewed thousands of pages of diocesan files and cross-checked them against witness testimonies and state archives. 

What they found was often fragmentary: records were missing, files unpaginated and, in some cases, entire correspondence logs had disappeared. 

The chaos, Przybysz notes, was not incidental but structural – a reflection of how these cases had been handled for years, without consistent procedures or proper documentation.

The first part of the report identified at least 50 minors abused by individuals linked to Catholic institutions, in cases stretching back decades, and listed 29 alleged perpetrators, including 23 diocesan priests. 

In 19 cases involving clergy, the allegations were considered credible enough to warrant further examination, and six priests were ultimately punished.

The commission stressed that these figures represent only what can be documented. Many cases surfaced decades after the abuse; others may never have been reported at all. In one instance, a victim came forward nearly half a century after the event.

The first part of the report focused above all on victims whose cases were nearing the statute of limitations in the hope, as Przybysz put it, that it would “prompt them, or those who knew, to come forward”.

The harder questions – including episcopal responsibility – were left for the second part of the report.

One case in particular illustrates what that delay could mean. In 2001, a mother wrote to Bishop Adam Smigielski (who oversaw the Sosnowiec diocese from 1992 to 2008) to report that her 16-year-old disabled son had been sexually abused by a priest known as D.

She was not alone: a hospital chaplain – a doctor by training – forwarded her account, enclosing drawings made by the boy that he considered credible evidence of abuse.

The bishop did not contact the chaplain. Instead, he ordered another priest to look into the case; following a brief investigation, the woman was found to be unreliable. 

Her letter was later discovered in the bishop’s personal archive with a single word written on it: “slander”. 

The parish closed ranks: letters arrived defending the priest, urging that he remain. The case did not move forward.

When it resurfaced in 2016, the boy was already dead. 

The woman testified that the priest had raped him three times. Church investigators met her, but gave her only days to produce decades-old records, again failed to contact the chaplain, and closed the case within weeks, citing a lack of evidence.

It was only much later that the Sosnowiec commission reconstructed the sequence from scattered documents and overlooked testimony, finally interviewing the hospital chaplain, and reaching a conclusion that from the moment the first letters arrived, the Church should have acted. 

By then, those who had decided otherwise were no longer alive to answer for it. 

Priest D., meanwhile, had been convicted of abusing another minor, who was only eight when the crimes began.

Responsibility moves upward

“Paradoxically, the Sosnowiec report is more damaging for bishops than for priests,” Tomasz Terlikowski, a journalist and author of over 50 books on the Catholic Church and religion, tells BIRN. “It suggests that a little over 3 per cent of clergy committed sexual abuse against minors – but that a hundred per cent of bishops protected them.”

Terlikowski is careful to place the Church’s record in context. The scale of abuse, he argues, is “probably comparable, or only slightly higher” than in other institutions with broad access to young people – schools, sports clubs, choral societies. What sets the Church apart is not the prevalence of crimes but the structure of responsibility above them.

“The level of control a bishop has over a priest is simply not comparable to that of a school principal over a teacher,” he says. “A bishop can appoint and remove a priest at any moment – no secular institution grants that kind of authority. In secular life, taking up a position does not involve a feudal gesture of submission or an oath of obedience and reverence.”

Commission members, too, have noted that the proportion of clergy implicated falls within ranges observed in international studies. The difference, they suggested, lies less in how often abuse occurred than in how institutions responded to it.

That question of responsibility is now being tested in court.

On February 18, Bishop Andrzej Jez of the Tarnow diocese became the first Catholic bishop in Poland to stand trial over the handling of abuse cases. 

Bishop in the dock

Less than a week after the Sosnowiec report was published, Poland entered further uncharted territory. 

On February 18, Bishop Andrzej Jez of the Tarnow diocese became the first Catholic bishop in Poland to stand trial over the handling of abuse cases – not for committing abuse himself, but for failing to report it promptly.

The charges relate to two priests under his supervision – Stanislaw P. and Tomasz K. The case of Stanislaw P. alone had shaken Polish public opinion. 

Prosecutors accuse the now-retired 67-year-old of abusing 95 people – 77 of them minors – in cases stretching back to the 1980s. 

Although the first complaints emerged in the 2000s, the Church’s response was to grant the priest leave, move him between parishes and eventually send him to Ukraine, where he is also accused of abusing minors.

The complaints kept coming. 

In 2010, a man known only as Andrzej wrote to the head of the Catholic Church in Poland, Archbishop Wojciech Polak, to report abuse by Stanislaw P. 

“For as long as I can remember, I have thought about this man constantly,” he said. “The memories bound up with him are so deeply etched that I cannot forget them.” 

His letter had no effect.

Bishop Jez, who has led the Tarnow diocese since 2012, did not report Stanislaw P. to prosecutors until 2020 – shortly after another priest made the case public on his blog. 

According to prosecutors, had the report been filed even a year earlier, as many as 23 more survivors might still have been able to seek justice. 

Instead, the case against Stanislaw P. was discontinued in 2022, with most of the alleged offences deemed time-barred.

On April 15, testifying as a witness in the trial of Bishop Jez, Stanislaw P. dismissed the allegations against him as “some kind of denunciations”.

Prosecutors argue that the diocese had credible information about both priests and was obligated under Article 240 of the criminal code – which, since 2017, requires the immediate reporting of such crimes – to notify law enforcement without delay. It did not, or not quickly enough.

“For the first time, a case may end not with a Church ruling but with a secular court verdict,” Terlikowski says. “That is a shift – not within the institution, but in the state: a recognition that being a bishop does not shield you from criminal liability.”

In court, Bishop Jez did not contest the underlying facts of the abuse. Instead, he and his defence lawyer, former justice minister Zbigniew Cwiakalski, shifted the focus from timing to intent: he had not ignored the allegations, they argued, but followed canonical procedure, verified them internally and ultimately reported the case to state authorities – acting, in their telling, responsibly. 

The legal framework, Cwiakalski stressed, was genuinely unclear at the time: bishops operated under both canon and civil law simultaneously, with a pontifical secret in force until 2019 that restricted sharing information with external authorities.

“In a way, Bishop Jez is paying the price for the fact that he decided to report the crime,” Cwiakalski tells BIRN. “He believed that if he reported the abuse, the law enforcement authorities would focus on prosecuting the perpetrator.”

He fears the trial risks becoming something broader than its own evidence – a verdict on the institution rather than the man. 

“I would not want him to be punished as an example, as a warning to others, rather than on the basis of the evidence in the case,” he tells BIRN.

Terlikowski rejects that logic. “Under canon law, responsibility ultimately rests with the bishop,” he says. “He holds full authority in the diocese – he benefits from it, so he also bears the consequences.”

But he acknowledges the other side of the coin – that the Church in Poland has become, in public debate, something of a byword for sexual crime. 

“Politicians and commentators are far more willing to talk about abuse in the Church than elsewhere,” he says. “In part, that is because the Church has positioned itself as a moral authority, while not always living up to those standards.”

A church divided

If there is movement, it is uneven – and sometimes the distance between progress and impunity is a single diocese.

In September 2025, Jan Szkodon, the former auxiliary bishop of Krakow, was buried with full honours, despite years of abuse allegations in which several women independently accused him of sexual harassment, as reported by Gazeta Wyborcza. His case was never formally investigated.

Among those who have spoken out is Zofia Schacht-Petersen, a trauma therapist and a former nun, who says Szkodon had been her confessor while she was preparing for religious life. 

When she returned to him in 1991 for guidance about a potential posting to Ukraine, she says he moved to sit beside her and put her on his lap. 

“He hugged me and ran his hands over my body, especially my breasts,” she recalled.

Her account is one of several; none led to a formal reckoning.

“The Church in Poland is facing a serious crisis,” says Przybysz. “Unless real action is taken now, it will only deepen. The bishops are aware of this, but some still lack the courage to act.”

Terlikowski divides the episcopate into three camps: those opposed to any real reckoning; a smaller group pushing for accountability; and a large, undecided middle.

The thinking of the first group is captured in an internal legal opinion drafted by advisory body to the Polish Bishops’ Conference, which Terlikowski publicly disclosed in 2025, stirring a nationwide debate. 

The document cautioned against establishing an independent commission to investigate abuse – despite an earlier commitment by the episcopate to set one up – warning that it could expose bishops to scrutiny and the Church to legal and financial consequences.

“In essence, it said: do nothing – the public will soon forget, and it will cost too much,” Terlikowski recalls.

At the other end are bishops calling for real accountability – acknowledgment of wrongdoing, admissions of guilt – among them Bishop Wazny and Cardinal Grzegorz Rys. But the decisive group, Terlikowski argues, lies in between: those who will follow whoever persuades them. That is where the real struggle is now.

For Przybysz, the hesitation to reckon with the history of abuse in the Church reflects something more fundamental than politics.

“I have worked in crisis communication for 25 years, including within the Church, and this process is being stretched out,” she says. “The repeated debates among bishops show the scale of fear. But we know from experience that confronting a crisis quickly can actually strengthen an institution – you simply have to act.”

Whether that happens depends on what comes next. A single diocese, Terlikowski argues, is not enough.

“A real breakthrough will not come from commissions or trials alone,” he says. “It will come when the Church moves from reacting to pressure to a genuine internal conversion – once it understands that serving Christ means serving the person who was harmed, not protecting the institution.”

There is still a long way to go, he adds, “but the first step will be when a diocese decides, on its own, to compensate victims – without waiting for a court judgment.”

Bishop William Barber says Trump has a 'God complex'

Civil Rights Activist Bishop William Barber has accused President Donald Trump of having a God complex following recent statements and pictures the president has posted on social media.

Barber’s comments come after Trump said he would send Iranians to hell, publicly sparred with the Pope, and posted a now-deleted AI-generated photo of himself depicted as Jesus.

"Why is the pope’s teaching getting under his skin? Why is what Jesus teaches bothering the president so much?” Barber asked during a press conference the day after Trump deleted the photo following pressure and backlash from his Christian base, according to Baptist News.

“It raises the question, are you trying to compete with God?” Barber added.

He continued: “What we are watching is a war on divinity, an attempt by a human being to shift the moral compass and for us to engage in a kind of moral deregulation where nothing is sacred anymore except what he says and an AI image of him as Jesus.”

On Easter Sunday, Trump posted an expletive-laden threat to the Iranians on Truth Social, ending the message with "Praise be to Allah." 

“It is a war on divinity when you think because of a political office you get to decide who lives, who dies, what civilization gets to be and what civilization doesn’t get to be, who gets citizenship and who doesn’t, which parts of the Constitution will matter, which rights will be respected and which rights will not be respected,” Barber said.

Barber accused the president’s statements and recent behaviour of being blasphemous and sinful.

He’s not the only religious leader who has criticised Trump’s behaviour.

American-born Pope Leo XIV has also been vocal in rebuking the Trump administration.

Trump responded to the pontiff in a Truth Social post, stating that he is “Weak on Crime, Weak on Nuclear Weapons” and meets with “Obama Sympathizers".

The president continued: “Leo should get his act together as Pope, use Common Sense, stop catering to the Radical Left, and focus on being a Great Pope, not a Politician. It’s hurting him very badly and, more importantly, it’s hurting the Catholic Church!”

The Pope responded that he doesn’t fear the Trump administration and will "continue on what I believe is the mission of the church in the world today". 

Pope warns in Cameroon against mixing Catholic faith with esoteric and Gnostic beliefs

Pope Leo XIV has clearly warned about the risk of deforming the Catholic faith by mixing it with foreign beliefs, in a context marked by cultural and religious challenges in Africa.

During a homily delivered at Bamenda airport in Cameroon, the Pontiff emphasized the need to remain faithful to God in the face of external pressures and internal deviations.

Direct warning against religious syncretism

In the most significant passage of his intervention, Leo XIV called on the faithful to be vigilant even in their own religious practices:

“This calls us to be attentive, even regarding our own religious practices, so as not to fall into the trap of mixing the Catholic faith with other beliefs and traditions of an esoteric or gnostic nature”.

The Pope warned that this type of mixture is not innocuous, but rather “in reality, often serves political and economic purposes”, thus pointing to the background of manipulation that can hide behind certain seemingly religious practices.

Inculturation yes, confusion no

The Pontiff framed this warning within the necessary process of inculturating the Gospel, especially in contexts where diverse religious traditions coexist.

However, he made it clear that this adaptation cannot imply a dilution of the faith: inculturation is not syncretism, nor does it justify the incorporation of elements incompatible with Catholic doctrine.

Fidelity to God in the face of human pressures

Leo XIV also recalled the exhortation of Saint Peter: “obey God rather than men”, emphasizing that true freedom does not come from accommodating to cultural or social currents, but from fidelity to revealed truth.

“Only God makes us free; only his word opens paths of freedom”, he affirmed, insisting that personal and social transformation passes through full adherence to the Gospel.

Although delivered in Cameroon, the Pope’s words transcend the African context and point to a broader phenomenon: the tendency, also present in the West, to dilute the faith in a mixture of spiritualities, ideologies, and practices foreign to Christianity.

Cardinal Koch defines the pontificate of Leo XIV almost a year after his election

With little time left to mark one year since the election of Leo XIV, the underlying lines of his pontificate are beginning to take shape with greater clarity. 

It is not yet a closed balance, but rather a clear orientation. 

This is what Cardinal Kurt Koch, one of the Pope’s main collaborators, explains in an interview granted to France Catholique.

Far from offering a superficial analysis, the prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Christian Unity synthesizes the current moment of the Church in three axes that, in his judgment, define the direction set by Leo XIV: Christ at the center, ecclesial unity, and the search for peace.

Christ at the Center of the Church

The first feature highlighted by Koch is the deeply Christocentric character of the pontificate. Leo XIV - he affirms - “is absolutely convinced that it is necessary to place Christ at the center of the Church,” not as a spiritual slogan, but as a condition for everything else.

Only from that centrality is it possible to address the second great challenge: unity. 

At a time when the Church is experiencing internal tensions and a plurality of currents, the Pope insists that communion cannot be built on human balances, but on a common reference: Christ.

Unity as an Internal Challenge

Koch does not evade reality. 

He recognizes that there are “many tendencies” in the Church and also “tensions,” which makes unity an urgent task. The issue is not only internal: a fragmented Church loses credibility when proposing reconciliation in the world.

“If the Church is a divided community, how could it help recover unity among Christians? How could it help recover peace in the world?”, the cardinal asks.

The model that inspires the Pope is not uniformity, but unity in diversity, in the image of the Trinity: distinct persons, but deeply united.

A Pontificate with Augustinian Roots

Another distinctive feature is the influence of St. Augustine, constant in Leo XIV’s speeches and homilies. 

Koch especially emphasizes the bond between Church and Eucharist, reprising a classic idea: “The Church makes the Eucharist and the Eucharist makes the Church”.

Also in this line is understood the Pope’s episcopal motto, In illo uno unum (“In Him who is One, let us be one”), which summarizes his vision: a diverse Church, but united in Christ.

Europe, a Background Concern

Within this general framework, a concrete concern emerges: Europe. 

Koch reveals that Leo XIV follows the spiritual situation of the continent with concern, where faith no longer holds a central place.

The cardinal expresses it with prudence, but without hiding the gravity of the diagnosis: faith in Europe “is in great danger of being forgotten”.

This loss is not only religious. 

It affects the very identity of the continent, which - he warns - runs the risk of emptying itself of content if it limits itself to sharing material interests without a common spiritual base.

A Shift in the Foundations of Society

The crisis manifests itself with special clarity in the area of human life. 

Koch points out a profound change in the conception of rights: “Before, the foundation of human rights was the right to life. But now it is said that it is the right to give death. It is the complete opposite”.

The reference points to current debates such as euthanasia, which the cardinal considers a symptom of the loss of fundamental references.

A Pontificate Under Construction

Almost one year after his election, Leo XIV thus appears, according to Cardinal Koch, as a pontiff with a defined profile: centered on Christ, oriented toward unity, and attentive to the challenges that threaten faith, especially in Europe. 

In a context of internal tensions and loss of references in the West, the Vatican prefect hints that the priority is none other than to recover that which sustains everything else: faith itself, without which - as emerges from his diagnosis - the Church loses its capacity to be a sign and Europe runs the risk of emptying itself of its own identity.

Church in Sweden reminds Catholics that they cannot vote for parties that support abortion and euthanasia

The Catholic Church in Sweden has published a document in which it clearly states that the faithful cannot support with their vote parties that promote abortion or euthanasia, as these are issues that affect fundamental moral principles.

The text, disseminated by the commission Justitia et Pax of the diocese of Stockholm on the occasion of the elections scheduled for September 2026, distinguishes between absolute values - which bind in conscience - and debatable political issues, where diversity of opinion is possible.

The right to life, a non-negotiable principle

The document recalls that “a fundamental and absolute value is the right of every person to life from conception until natural death”, emphasizing that this principle constitutes the basis of the Church’s entire social doctrine.

In this sense, it states that both abortion and euthanasia are “grave violations of human dignity in themselves”, regardless of the circumstances or motivations.

The text also warns that these practices particularly affect “the weakest, who cannot defend their right to life for themselves”, insisting that this right is the foundation upon which all others rest.

Clear guidance for the Catholic vote

Based on these principles, the document establishes a direct consequence: Catholics have the obligation to orient their vote in a way that protects these fundamental values in legislation.

“It is a duty for Catholics to seek parties and candidates to vote for in such a way that one of the absolute values can be defended in specific legislation”, the text states.

This implies, in practice, that it is not morally acceptable to support political options that promote or facilitate laws contrary to the right to life.

Freedom in political issues, not in moral principles

The document introduces, however, a key distinction: in matters such as the economy, security, immigration, or social policies, Catholics may legitimately hold different opinions.

These issues belong to the realm of “political prudence”, where “different Christians can, with good conscience, reach different conclusions”, as long as they respect the general principles of the Church’s social doctrine.

A countercurrent message in today’s Europe

The clarity of the document contrasts with the dominant political climate in much of Europe, where abortion is considered a consolidated right and euthanasia is progressively advancing in various countries.

In this context, the Church in Sweden reminds that not all political issues carry the same moral weight and that there are limits that cannot be crossed without compromising the Christian conscience.

A reminder that, far from entering into partisan debates, sets a clear line: there are principles - such as the defense of life - that admit no exceptions or political balances.

Leo XIV acknowledges in an unpublished letter the firmness of Benedict XVI in the face of abuses

An until-now unknown letter from the current Pope Leo XIV, written after Benedict XVI’s resignation in 2013, reveals the explicit recognition by the then superior of the Augustinians of the German pontiff’s actions regarding sexual abuses in the Church, an issue on which persistent criticisms have been poured for years and, in not a few cases, unfounded.

Pope Leo XIV praised the “determination” of Benedict XVI

The document, published by Il Giornale, records how Robert Prevost expressed “gratitude, loyalty, admiration, and support” to Benedict XVI after announcing his resignation. Beyond the usual formulas, the text delves into specific issues of the pontificate, including the management of the abuse crisis.

Prevost thanks for the “constant guidance on the tragic and painful issue of sexual abuses” and underscores the “determination in addressing it,” describing this work as one of the most relevant contributions of the German Pope.

Likewise, he highlights his “exemplary pastoral sense” and the humility shown in asking forgiveness from the victims, noting that his actions “have done good to the members of the Church” and also to those observing from outside the ecclesial response to this crisis.

In the face of years of accusations and distorted narratives

The content of the letter contrasts with the dominant narrative during much of Benedict XVI’s pontificate and in the years that followed, where serious accusations were not lacking, including that of having covered up abuse cases in Germany.

Some of these imputations, reiterated even in the last months of his life, caused profound suffering to the Pope Emeritus. 

However, the recognition from the one who today occupies the See of Peter points in the opposite direction: that of a pontiff who faced a structural crisis with determination and who promoted concrete measures to combat it.

A deeper harmony than the personal

Prevost praises the “clear teaching” of Benedict XVI and his commitment to the search for truth, as well as his efforts to strengthen ecclesial unity.

This bond is explained in part by a common root: the influence of St. Augustine, a constant reference in Ratzinger’s thought and also in the spirituality of the current Pope.

Trump cuts funding to a Catholic NGO in Miami

The Donald Trump Administration has abruptly canceled an 11 million dollar contract with Catholic Charities in Miami for the reception of unaccompanied migrant minors, putting an end to a collaboration with the Church that dated back more than six decades.

The decision, communicated at the end of March, will force the closure of the program within a three-month period, as confirmed by the Archdiocese of Miami, which managed a network of reception and guardianship for these minors entirely financed with federal funds.

End of a model sustained with public money

For years, Catholic Charities has operated in practice as a reception system subsidized by the US Government, housing migrant minors without family under the supervision of the Department of Health and Human Services.

The Archbishop of Miami, Thomas Wenski, regretted the decision and defended the program’s track record, assuring that its services “have been recognized for their excellence” and that its model “has served as a reference for other agencies”.

However, the cancellation exposes the fragility of a system heavily dependent on state funding, whose continuity was not guaranteed outside of political decisions.

Fewer migrant minors, less funding

The US Government has justified the measure by pointing to the significant drop in the number of migrant minors in federal custody, which has gone from a maximum of 22,000 during the Biden Administration to about 1,900 currently.

The Trump Administration defends the closure and consolidation of centers as responding to a stricter policy to curb illegal immigration and child trafficking.

Nevertheless, the decision directly affects programs managed by entities like Catholic Charities, which will now have to cease their activities or reconfigure themselves without state economic support.

Direct impact on minors

Experts cited by the Miami Herald warn of the consequences of transferring minors to other centers or foster families, emphasizing the psychological impact they may suffer after new displacements.

The program included housing in specialized centers, foster care, and accompaniment services for minors who, in many cases, had gone through traumatic situations before arriving in the United States.

A precedent with parallels in Spain

The situation is not unfamiliar in the European context. In Spain, organizations like Accem or Manos Unidas have developed much of their activity in the field of immigrant reception thanks to public funding.

In both cases, a fundamental issue emerges: the risk that charitable action, when dependent on state funding or specific political frameworks, becomes conditioned in its orientation and loses critical capacity in the face of the agendas that sustain it.

Underlying political and ecclesial tensions

The contract cancellation also occurs in the context of tension between Trump and sectors of the Church in the United States, especially after the leader’s criticisms of Pope Leo XIV regarding the war.

APOSTOLIC JOURNEY OF POPE LEO XIV TO ALGERIA, CAMEROON, ANGOLA AND EQUATORIAL GUINEA (13–23 April 2026) - HOLY MASS

HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS POPE LEO XIV

“Japoma Stadium” (Douala)

Friday, 17 April 2026

_____________________________


Dear Brothers and Sisters,

The Gospel we have heard (Jn 6:1-15) is the word of salvation for all humanity.  This Good News is proclaimed today throughout the world; for the Church in Cameroon, it resounds as a providential proclamation of God’s love and of our communion.

The Apostle John describes a large crowd (cf. vv. 2-5), just as we are here now.  For all those people, however, there is very little food: only “five barley loaves and two fish” (v. 9). Observing this disproportion, Jesus asks us today, just as he asked his disciples then:  how will you solve this problem? Look at all these hungry people, weighed down by fatigue.  

What will you do?

This question is posed to each one of us. It is posed to the fathers and mothers who care for their families. It is directed to the shepherds of the Church, who watch over the Lord’s flock, and also to those who bear social and political responsibility for the people and seek their well-being.  

Christ asks this question to the powerful and the weak, to the rich and the poor, to the young and the elderly, because we all hunger in the same way.  

Our necessity reminds us that we are creatures. We need to eat in order to live.  We are not God: but where is God in the face of people’s hunger?

While awaiting our answers, Jesus gives his own:  “Jesus took the loaves, and when he had given thanks, he distributed them to those who were seated; so also the fish, as much as they wanted” (v. 11).  

A serious problem was solved by blessing the little food that was present and sharing it with all who were hungry. The multiplication of the loaves and the fish happened while sharing: that is the miracle! There is bread for everyone if it is given to everyone. There is bread for everyone if it is taken, not with a hand that snatches away, but with a hand that gives. Let us observe Jesus’ gesture closely:  when the Son of God took the bread and the fish, he first gave thanks. He was grateful to the Father for that which would become a gift and a blessing for all the people.

In this way, the food was abundant.  It was not rationed out of necessity. It was not stolen in strife.  It was not wasted by those who gorge themselves in the presence of those who have nothing to eat.  

Passing from the hands of Christ to those of his disciples, the food increased for everyone; indeed, it was superabundant (cf. vv. 12-13).  

Amazed by what Jesus had done, the people exclaimed: “This is indeed the prophet!” (v. 14), that is, the one who speaks in God’s name, the Word of the Almighty. It was true!  However, Jesus did not use those words for personal gain. He did not want to become king (cf. v. 15), because he had come to serve with love, not to dominate.

The miracle he performed is a sign of this love. It shows us not only how God provides humanity with the bread of life, but how we can share this sustenance with all men and women who, like ourselves, hunger for peace, freedom and justice.  

Each act of solidarity and forgiveness, every good effort, becomes a morsel of bread for humanity in need of care. Yet this alone is not enough: the food that sustains the body must be accompanied, with equal charity, by nourishment for the soul — a nourishment that sustains our conscience and steadies us in dark hours of fear and amid the shadows of suffering. This food is Christ himself, who always gives his Church abundant sustenance and strengthens us on our journey by giving us his Eucharistic Body.

Sisters and brothers, the Eucharist that we are celebrating is the source of renewed faith, because Jesus becomes present among us. The Sacrament does not merely revive a distant memory; it brings about a “companionship” that transforms us because it sanctifies us. Blessed are those invited to the Supper of the Lord! This very altar, around which we gather for the Eucharist, becomes a proclamation of hope amid the trials of history and the injustices we see around us. It is a sign of God’s love; in Christ, the Father invites us to share what we have, so that it may be multiplied in ecclesial fellowship.

The Lord embraces heaven and earth.  He knows our hearts and all the situations — joyful or sorrowful — that we experience. By becoming man to save us, he chose to share in the simplest and most everyday needs of humanity. Hunger thus speaks to us not only of our poverty but, above all, of his love. Let us remember this every time we see in their eyes a brother or sister who lacks life’s necessities. Through their eyes, the question that Jesus posed to his disciples is repeated: “What are you going to do for all these people?”  

Being witnesses of Christ and imitating his acts of love certainly involves difficulties and obstacles, from without and from within us, where pride can corrupt the heart.  

In those circumstances, however, let us repeat with the psalmist: “The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear?” (Ps 27:1).  Even if we sometimes falter, God always encourages us. “Wait for the Lord; be strong, and let your heart take courage; wait for the Lord” (v. 14).

Dear young people, I would like to extend this invitation especially to you, as you are the beloved children of the African continent! As brothers and sisters of Jesus, multiply your talents through the faith, perseverance, and friendship that inspire you. Be the first faces and hands that bring the bread of life to your neighbors, providing them with the food of wisdom and deliverance from all that does not nourish them, but rather obscures good desires and robs them of their dignity.

Despite the richness of the land in Cameroon, many experience both material and spiritual poverty. Do not give in to distrust and discouragement. Reject every form of abuse or violence, which deceives by promising easy gains but hardens the heart and makes it insensitive. Do not forget that your people are even richer than this land, for your treasure lies in your values:  faith, family, hospitality and work. Be, therefore, protagonists of the future, following the vocation that God gives to each of you. Do not let yourselves be corrupted by temptations that waste your energies and do not serve the progress of society.

In order to make your noble spirit the prophetic voice of a new world, learn from the example that we have just heard in the Acts of the Apostles. The first Christians gave courageous witness to the Lord Jesus in the face of difficulties and threats, and persevered even amid persecution (cf. Acts 5:40-41).  

The disciples “every day in the temple and at home… did not cease to teach and proclaim Jesus as the Messiah” (v. 42), that is, the Christ, the Liberator of the world.  Yes, the Lord frees us from sin and death.  

Proclaiming this Gospel unceasingly is the mission of every Christian, and it is a mission that I entrust especially to you, dear young people, and to the entire Church in Cameroon.  

Become Good News for your country, just like Blessed Floribert Bwana Chui is for the Congolese people.

Brothers and sisters, teaching leaves a sign, like the mark of the farmer’s plow in the field, which enables what is sown to bear fruit.  In a similar way, Christian proclamation changes our lives, transforming minds and hearts.  

Proclaiming the risen Jesus means leaving signs of justice in a suffering and oppressed land, signs of peace amid rivalry and corruption, signs of faith that free us from superstition and indifference.  

With this Gospel message in our hearts, we will shortly share the Eucharistic Bread that sustains us for eternity.  With joyful faith, let us ask the Lord to multiply his gift among us for the good of all.

Thursday, April 16, 2026

MESSAGGIO DEL SANTO PADRE LEONE XIV A FIRMA DEL CARDINALE SEGRETARIO DI STATO, PIETRO PAROLIN, IN OCCASIONE DEL II INCONTRO NAZIONALE DEI REFERENTI TERRITORIALI PER LA TUTELA DEI MINORI E DEGLI ADULTI VULNERABILI

A Sua Eminenza Reverendissima

Sig. Card. Matteo Zuppi

Presidente della Conferenza Episcopale Italiana

Dal Vaticano, 10 aprile 2026

Eminenza Reverendissima,

invio il cordiale saluto del Santo Padre Leone XIV a Vostra Eminenza e ai partecipanti al II Incontro nazionale dei referenti territoriali per la tutela dei minori e degli adulti vulnerabili, convocato dal Servizio nazionale della Conferenza Episcopale Italiana.

Il tema “Generare relazioni autentiche” orienta verso un compito essenziale delle comunità cristiane. Infatti, quando ogni persona viene riconosciuta nella sua dignità e custodita nella sua libertà, le parrocchie, le associazioni, i movimenti sono affidabili, capaci di accompagnare, educare e proteggere; dove invece il rispetto viene meno, la relazione si impoverisce, si deforma e può causare gravi ferite.

Nella visione cristiana, il rispetto non è soltanto correttezza: è una forma esigente della carità, che si esprime nel custodire l’altro senza appropriarsene, nell’accompagnarlo senza dominarlo, nel servirlo senza umiliarlo. Da questa radice cresce la possibilità di relazioni limpide, mature e sicure. Per questo, la tutela non può essere intesa solo come un insieme di norme da applicare o di procedure da osservare: essa chiede una sapienza che investe lo stile delle comunità, il modo di esercitare l’autorità, la formazione degli educatori, la vigilanza sui contesti, la trasparenza dei comportamenti.

La presenza dei più piccoli e dei più vulnerabili interpella la coscienza della Chiesa e misura la sua capacità di esprimere una cura autentica, cioè di proteggere, di ascoltare, di prevenire, di non lasciare nessuno solo. Anche per questo l’opera di chi promuove formazione, discernimento, coordinamento e buone prassi rappresenta un contributo prezioso alla maturazione di comunità più accoglienti e consapevoli.

Un’attenzione speciale va riservata alle persone che hanno subito abusi: le loro ferite domandano prossimità sincera, ascolto umile, perseveranza nel cercare ciò che è giusto e possibile per riparare. Una comunità cristiana vive la conversione evangelica quando non si difende dal dolore di chi ha sofferto, ma se ne lascia interrogare; quando non minimizza il male, ma lo riconosce; quando non si chiude nella paura dello scandalo, ma accetta di percorrere strade esigenti di verità, di giustizia e di guarigione.

Pertanto il vostro incontro assume un significato che supera il piano operativo, richiamando la Chiesa a crescere in una cultura della prevenzione che sia, prima ancora, cultura della custodia evangelica. A questo contribuirà anche lo spettacolo che sarà presentato in anteprima nel vostro convegno: “Ed io avrò cura di te”.

Eminenza, carissimi, Papa Leone XIV vi incoraggia a proseguire con fiducia nel vostro lavoro, affinché nelle Diocesi italiane crescano comunità dove i più fragili siano accolti, protetti e amati. Egli affida ciascuno di voi, insieme al vostro servizio, all’intercessione della Beata Vergine Maria, Madre della Chiesa, e di cuore vi imparte la Benedizione Apostolica.

Anch’io auguro la migliore riuscita della presente iniziativa ed ogni bene per il vostro servizio alla Chiesa e alla società.

Mi valgo della circostanza per confermarmi con sensi di distinto ossequio

dell’Eminenza Vostra Reverendissima

dev.mo nel Signore

Pietro Card. Parolin

Segretario di Stato

Bätzing insists on synodality: "The Church of the people, as we know it, no longer exists"

The Bishop of Limburg and former president of the German Episcopal Conference, Georg Bätzing, once again defended the synodal model as a path for the future of the Church, amid an increasingly evident crisis in Germany, marked by the loss of faithful and the weakening of its public presence.

According to Katholisch.de, Bätzing assured that “without real participation from the faithful, the Catholic Church has no future”, emphasizing a vision of synodality that includes transparency, accountability, and shared decision-making.

The prelate went further by stating that “what affects everyone must be decided by everyone”, a formulation that summarizes the approach promoted in the so-called German synodal way and which has raised reservations within the universal Church.

Although he acknowledged that ultimate responsibility lies with the bishops, Bätzing downplayed this principle by pointing out that in his diocese he has never rejected decisions arising from the common process, insisting that he himself is part of those deliberations.

Beyond the synodal debate, the bishop himself recognized the scope of the crisis. “The people’s Church, as we know it, no longer exists”, he stated without nuances.

Far from being a one-off phenomenon, Bätzing admitted that the structural change will continue to accelerate. 

As evidence, he mentioned the reduction of nearly 30% in the budget of his diocese, reflecting a trend that affects the entire German Church.

In the face of this scenario, the bishop defended the need to focus on the core of the ecclesial mission and make the Christian message understandable in an increasingly secularized society.

The Augustine that Leo XIV has not quoted in Hippo

From the plane, even before landing in Algiers, Leo XIV dropped the phrase that was to structure the entire narrative of his trip: «Saint Augustine offers a very important bridge for interreligious dialogue because he is greatly loved in his land.» 

The image was perfect for immediate consumption: the first Augustinian pope in history, returning to the land of the Bishop of Hippo, building bridges between Christianity and Islam, between the West and Africa, between the turbulent present and a noble and venerable antiquity. 

The progressive Catholic press received it with enthusiasm. 

International analysts spoke of a strategic gesture, a historical milestone, a «new epicenter of Catholicism.» All very clean, very photogenic, very much in line with what is expected of a pontiff in 2026.

The only problem is Augustine.

Because the real Augustine, the one who lived in that land, the one who wrote in that land, the one who died in that land while the Vandals besieged Hippo, was not a builder of interreligious bridges. 

He was the most formidable polemicist that the history of the Latin Church has ever produced. 

A man who devoted decades of his episcopate not to soft dialogue, but to the systematic and uncompromising refutation of everything he considered error. 

He confronted Manicheans, Donatists, Arians, Pelagians, Priscillianists, and skeptical Academics. 

He presided over councils, wrote tirelessly, and polemicized with whoever was necessary in defense of orthodoxy. 

There is not a single text in his work that can reasonably be interpreted as an invitation to theological coexistence between Christianity and Islam, among other reasons because Islam did not yet exist when Augustine died, in the year 430.

This needs to be emphasized because there is a tendency, when it comes to retroactively appropriating great saints, to project onto them the sensibilities of the present. Augustine lends himself poorly to that operation. 

Philip Schaff, one of the most rigorous historians of Christian dogma, wrote that Augustine «is the Doctor of the Church par excellence,» whose activity extended over ecclesiology, sacramental theology, and the doctrine of grace with a precision that no one before or immediately after achieved. 

That Doctor left no room for ambiguity about revealed truth. He sought it for years, with authentic anguish, and when he found it, he defended it with all the instruments available: reason, scripture, conciliar authority, and when necessary, imperial coercion.

This last point deserves pause because it is uncomfortable. 

In Letter 93, written in the year 408, Augustine openly confesses that he changed his mind about the method to employ with the Donatists, moving from intellectual persuasion to approval of the state’s coercive laws, precisely because «the ineffectiveness of dialogue» had convinced him that something else was needed. His argument was that fear had made many Donatists reflect and had made them «docile.» 

The same man whom Leo XIV turns into a symbol of interreligious dialogue was the principal doctrinal architect of what historians call the first Christian theorization of legitimate religious coercion. 

He cannot be reproached with anachronism: it was the fifth century, the context was a violent schism, the Donatist Circumcellions had attacked and mutilated several Catholic bishops. But neither can he be cited as a model of amicable encounter between diverse faiths without falsifying his figure.

The paradox is deeper when examining what Augustine was actually doing in Hippo. He confronted skepticism as a philosopher, Manichaeism and Pelagianism as a theologian, and Donatism as a bishop. 

Three different fronts, three different ways of combating error. In all cases, the underlying attitude was the same: truth exists, it is knowable, and the one who possesses it has the obligation to defend it. 

Theological relativism, the peaceful coexistence of contradictory truths, the idea that every spiritual search leads to the same place, would have seemed to Augustine not an act of openness but a betrayal of Christ. 

The *Confessions* are the autobiography of someone who did not find peace in eclecticism, but in unconditional surrender to a specific and irreducible truth. «You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you»: not in a truth among others, but in you.

Donatism, the heresy that occupied the best years of Augustine’s episcopate, was the last episode in the controversies of Montanus and Novatus that had agitated the Church since the second century, and its core was the question of the holiness of the Church and the validity of sacraments administered by unworthy ministers. 

Augustine responded by constructing a complete and coherent ecclesiology: the visible Church contains wheat and tares, grace does not depend on the purity of the minister but on Christ, unity is an irrevocable good that justifies drastic measures against schism. That is not a bridge. It is a doctrinal wall built with the precision of an architect. That this wall is today the heritage of the entire Church, that it inspired the Fathers of Vatican II and the great medieval theologians, is exactly the reason why Augustine matters. 

Not because he is a comfortable interlocutor, but because he is a rigorous thinker.

Augustine distinguished 88 heresies in his treatise *Heresies*, and the four with which he had to deal mainly were Manichaeism, Donatism, Pelagianism, and Arianism. Each of those battles cost him years of writing, public controversy, and personal wear and tear. Each ended with a doctrinal victory that fixed forever the limits of what the Church can believe. 

Pelagianism, which held that man can achieve salvation through his own efforts without the need for grace, was condemned by the council of African bishops in the year 418 and by Pope Zosimus, thanks in large part to Augustine’s tenacity. It was not a process of mutual listening or reciprocal enrichment: it was a condemnation.

None of this means that Leo XIV is wrong to pilgrimage to Hippo. The visit has genuine spiritual sense: an Augustinian returning to the land of his foundational father, who prays over the ruins where that father preached, who recognizes the debt of his entire life to that thought. That is legitimate and has its own dignity. The problem is not the trip. 

The problem is the discursive operation that turns Augustine into the patron of interreligious dialogue with Islam, when the only Islam Augustine would have known was the one that arrived decades after his death, and when his entire intellectual life revolved around the affirmation that there is one truth, one Church, one baptism, one grace, and that everything that deviates from it deserves refutation, not diplomatic courtesy.

Analysts have pointed out that the Basilica of Saint Augustine in Annaba attracts thousands of visitors every year, including Muslims who feel a devotion of their own toward the saint. 

That fact is real and beautiful. Augustine belongs in some way to that land in a manner that transcends confessional boundaries, and the fact that there are Muslims who venerate him says something about the quality of his human figure. 

But popular veneration of a saint is not the same as his theology. One can admire Augustine without reading Augustine. One can go on pilgrimage to his ruins without assuming what he defended. 

Leo XIV can do both things at the same time, and probably does. The question is whether the Church he leads can afford to continue citing Augustine as a symbol of openness without explaining what Augustine really thought needed to be opened, and before what one had to remain closed.

There is a phrase in the *Confessions* that defines better than any other what Augustine was and what he sought: *»You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.»* Not in dialogue. Not in encounter. Not in indefinite search. 

In the rest that comes only from the encounter with Christ. That restless heart that found peace not in the plurality of paths but in one alone is the same heart that then spent decades telling others they were wrong, with all the charity in the world, but telling them so.

Leo XIV is right about one thing: Augustine is greatly loved in his land. 

What is not certain is that this love implies agreement with what Augustine taught.

Santarsiero illegally exposes his victims to all the priests of Huacho and demands signatures of support

The Bishop of Huacho, under investigation for sexual abuses following the complaint published by Infovaticana, convened all his clergy last Tuesday in a parish hall, where he publicly identified his own victims in front of them and promoted the signing of a document of support regarding his innocence. 

The described facts not only contravene current canon law, but may also fit into criminal types provided for in the Peruvian legal system.

Antonio Santarsiero, Bishop of Huacho and until last Friday secretary general of the Peruvian Episcopal Conference, is under investigation for complaints of sexual abuses supported by consistent testimonies that appear solid. 

In that context, last Tuesday the prelate convened the entire diocesan presbytery to an in-person meeting. 

During the meeting, according to several witnesses, he illegally revealed the identity of the victims in front of the gathered priests and promoted the subscription of a document of adhesion to his person.

Revelation of secrets: possible criminal liability

The explicit identification of the victims before the entire presbytery constitutes the most serious element that transcends canon law.

The Peruvian Penal Code typifies the violation of professional secrecy, and the procedural system establishes the obligation to preserve the identity of victims in proceedings for sexual offenses.

The public protection of identity is an essential mechanism to avoid reprisals, preserve the integrity of the complainants, and ensure the viability of the investigation. 

Its violation, especially in a hierarchical institutional environment, may constitute a crime. 

A meeting that gathers the entire clergy of a diocese, presided over by its bishop, has sufficient institutional character to consider the revelation made as public.

The exposure of the victims before dozens of priests cannot be framed as a pastoral act. It is a conduct susceptible to criminal reproach, regardless of the ecclesiastical status of the person who carries it out. 

It is up to the competent prosecutor’s office to assess this aspect.

Interference in the ongoing procedure

The convening of the presbytery under these circumstances introduces a second legal problem: direct interference in an ongoing procedure. 

The priests of the diocese are not neutral observers. 

They may be witnesses, sources of information, or even complainants.

Gathering them under the authority of the investigated person himself, to address the content of the accusations, alters the conditions of independence necessary for the development of the investigation. 

No explicit threat is necessary for pressure to exist. In a hierarchical structure, the mere convening and the direct exposure by the bishop generate an objective deterrent effect on any possible testimony.

The result is a contamination of the evidentiary environment that compromises the integrity of the process.

The adhesion document: appearance of consensus under pressure

The support document promoted during the meeting lacks probative value favorable to the investigated party. 

No judicial, civil, or canonical instance can grant credibility to an adhesion obtained in a context of direct hierarchical dependence and linked to the object of the investigation.

On the contrary, its existence evidences the use of institutional authority to build an appearance of support. 

The signing of a document under these conditions does not reflect a free position, but an act conditioned by the context. 

Its eventual public or procedural use would aggravate the situation already created.

Violation of canon law

The normative framework of the Church is clear. 

The motu proprio Vos estis lux mundi and the protocols of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith impose the protection of the identity of victims, prohibit any form of pressure or reprisal, and oblige the investigated party not to interfere in the procedure.

Santarsiero’s conduct directly and simultaneously infringes these three mandates. 

This is not a matter of debatable interpretations, but of verifiable facts that immediately fit into express prohibitions of current law.

The necessary institutional response

In the canonical sphere, the Apostolic Nunciature in Peru and the competent dicasteries, particularly the Dicastery for Bishops and the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, must assess the adoption of very urgent precautionary measures. 

The provisional removal of the bishop from the exercise of his office does not constitute an anticipated sanction, but an essential measure to guarantee the integrity of the procedure given the abuse of power he is exercising and the irreparable damage to the victims he is causing with this erratic and delusional behavior.

In the civil sphere, it is up to the Peruvian prosecutor’s office to analyze whether the described facts, especially the revelation of the victims’ identity, fit into the applicable criminal types and whether there has been relevant interference in an ongoing investigation.

What occurred cannot be interpreted as the exercise of the right to defense. It involves the use of a position of authority to influence the process itself. That difference is legally determinative.

The absence of a swift institutional response weakens the investigation, increases the exposure of the victims, and favors scenarios of impunity.

Human Rights Watch criticizes the Vatican-China agreement amid the increase in repression against Catholics

The agreement between the Holy See and China signed in 2018 is once again called into question following a new report from Human Rights Watch, which denounces an increase in pressure on Catholics in the country, especially those who remain outside the official state-controlled church.

Far from having improved the situation, the organization maintains that in these years a context of greater surveillance, ideological control, and restrictions on religious freedom has been consolidated, affecting the nearly 12 million faithful in China.

An Agreement Under Suspicion

At the center of the criticisms is the agreement itself on the appointment of bishops, whose content has still not been made public. 

According to Human Rights Watch, this framework has in practice facilitated the forced integration of underground communities into the Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association, dependent on the Communist Party.

Since its signing, there have been successive arbitrary detentions, disappearances, and house arrests of bishops and priests who resist submitting to state control, in a dynamic that questions the real effects of the pact.

The appointment mechanism has also not managed to contain the tensions. Although the Pope formally retains the possibility of veto, it has not been exercised, and the current Pontiff, Leo XIV, has approved candidates proposed by Beijing even after previous breaches by the regime.

The Underground Church, Increasingly Cornered

On the ground, the consequences are visible. The report collects testimonies that describe a progressive weakening of the underground communities, historically faithful to Rome and reluctant to integrate into the official structure.

In several cases, the pressure has translated into the demolition of temples, the removal of religious symbols, or the detention of faithful, to the point of leaving these communities without real margin for resistance. 

Some testimonies point out that the agreement has in fact served as an instrument to accelerate this process.

It is not only a matter of external control. Among part of the Catholics, a feeling of helplessness is also spreading, at a time when their fidelity faces growing difficulties.

The “Sinicization” and Total Control of Ecclesial Life

This hardening is inscribed in the “Sinicization” policy promoted by Xi Jinping, which seeks to subordinate religious life to the ideology of the Communist Party.

The control is not limited to underground communities. Official churches are also subjected to strict supervision: mandatory ideological training for the clergy, censorship of content, restrictions on pastoral activity, and limitations on religious education, especially for minors.

Even the movements of the clergy are subject to state authorization, in a system that extends political control to all areas of ecclesial life.

A Tension That Does Not Disappear

In this context, the situation of Catholics in China once again highlights an underlying tension that remains unresolved: the coexistence between a diplomatic agreement with the regime and the effective defense of religious freedom.

On April 7th, the organization forwarded the results of the report to both the Chinese government and the Holy See. To date, neither has responded to the request for comments.

Imam presents Islam in an Italian church with the bishop's support

The parish of San Lorenzo da Brindisi, in southern Italy, hosted this Wednesday an event that has raised concern in various ecclesiastical circles: an imam from the local Islamic community spoke inside the temple to present Islam to Catholic faithful.

According to La Nuova Bussola Quotidiana, the meeting, titled “Do You Know Islam?”, featured the intervention of Imam Khaled Bouchelaghem and the presence of the bishop of the Diocese of Brindisi-Ostuni, Monsignor Giovanni Intini, who also closed the event, thus endorsing the initiative.

An event inside the church that raises questions

The event took place entirely inside the parish temple, as part of the interreligious dialogue activities promoted by the diocese. The imam’s intervention, addressed to the present faithful, consisted of an exposition of Islam from his own perspective.

The fact that this presentation took place in a church - a space dedicated to the celebration and transmission of the Catholic faith - introduces an element that many consider particularly significant: the shift of the center of discourse toward a different religion within a realm traditionally reserved for the Christian proclamation.

It is also noteworthy that the event was held in a parish dedicated to St. Lawrence of Brindisi, a Capuchin friar famous for his role in the defense of Europe against the expansion of the Ottoman Empire (Muslims) in the late 16th and early 17th centuries, who spiritually led the Christian troops in the Battle of Alba Real (Hungary) in 1601.

A format that blurs the concept of dialogue

According to Tribune Chrétienne, it was not an exchange between interlocutors, but a unilateral intervention in which the imam expounded his faith without an equivalent presentation of Catholic doctrine.

The title of the event itself, formulated as an invitation to “know Islam”, reflects an approach in which the initiative starts from the premise that it is the Catholic faithful who must receive an explanation, without it being clear what place the presentation of one’s own faith occupies in that framework.

From occasional openness to a consolidating line

What happened in Brindisi is not an isolated incident. Last year, another parish in the diocese hosted inside a church a dinner on the occasion of the end of Ramadan, which was already then interpreted as a significant gesture of openness.

The repetition of this type of initiatives points to a broader evolution in certain Italian ecclesiastical contexts. 

At the end of February, Cardinal Zuppi participated in an iftar in Bologna, emphasizing the importance of dialogue between religions in the current international scenario, gestures that coexist with other data such as the concern expressed in various dioceses about the weakness of catechesis and the scarce transmission of faith among new generations.

European Parliament invites León XIV to intervene in a plenary session

The President of the European Parliament, Roberta Metsola, announced this Wednesday, April 15, that the institution has renewed its invitation to Pope Leo XIV to intervene in an upcoming plenary session.

Through a message published on the social network X, Metsola highlighted the figure of the Pontiff not only as the leader of the Catholic Church, but as a moral reference in the current context.

As explained by the President of the European Parliament, the contact with the Holy See has been made on behalf of the institution to reiterate the formal invitation to the Pope.

Metsola emphasized that the voice of Leo XIV is heard and respected “by Europeans of all confessions—and also by those who profess none—”, at a time she described as needing “moral courage and clarity”.

The objective, she added, is to be able to welcome the Pontiff in the near future and listen to his message addressed to Europe.

An institutional relationship already underway

The invitation is framed within an institutional relationship already consolidated in recent months. According to Vatican News reported a few months ago, Metsola was received by Pope Leo XIV in January at the Apostolic Palace in the Vatican, in an audience in which both parties addressed the need to promote peace through dialogue.

After the meeting, the President of the European Parliament thanked the Pontiff for his “clarity of intentions” and highlighted the shared reflections on Europe’s role in building peace, in a context marked by multiple international conflicts.

In recent weeks, the Pontiff has reiterated his rejection of war and expressed his concern for the situation in Gaza, describing the humanitarian conditions as “unacceptable”, while calling for a peaceful solution to the escalation around Iran, a fact that has transcended the statements of Donald Trump and the responses of various European leaders.

Police investigate bomb threat at Chicago-area home of Pope Leo's brother

Police on Thursday were investigating a bomb threat made to the Chicago-area home of Pope Leo's brother John Prevost after a search found no explosives or hazardous materials.

A bomb threat was reported Wednesday evening at the home of John Prevost in New Lenox, Illinois, according to media outlets that cited police. Prevost lives on the same street cited as the location of the attack by police. New Lenox police did not return a call for comment on the report.

The threat comes after President Donald Trump on Sunday attacked Pope Leo XIV, the first U.S. pope, over his criticism of the war in Iran. Leo is originally from Chicago.

Police in New Lenox received the report of a bomb threat at a private residence on Wednesday evening and evacuated nearby homes as they searched the area.

"After careful examination, investigators determined that the threat was unsubstantiated and that no explosive devices or hazardous materials were present," police said in a statement.

The investigation was continuing in order to find the origin of the false report, they said.

Leo leads the 1.4 billion-member Church and has emerged as an outspoken critic of the war.

In unusually forceful remarks in Cameroon on Thursday, Leo blasted leaders who spend billions on wars and said the world was "being ravaged by a handful of tyrants."

While he criticized Leo as being too liberal and "weak on crime," Trump praised his brother Louis, of Florida, for his support for Trump's MAGA movement. John Prevost is another of the pope's older brothers.

APOSTOLIC JOURNEY OF POPE LEO XIV TO ALGERIA, CAMEROON, ANGOLA AND EQUATORIAL GUINEA - HOLY MASS

HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS POPE LEO XIV

Bamenda International Airport

Thursday, 16 April 2026

_____________________________


Dear brothers and sisters in Christ,

As a pilgrim of peace and unity, it is a joy for me to visit your region and, above all, to share in your journey, your struggles and your hopes.

The festive celebrations that accompany your liturgies and the joy that flows from the prayers you raise are signs of your trusting surrender to God, of your unshakeable hope and of your clinging, with all your strength, to the love of the Father who draws near and looks with compassion upon the sufferings of his children.  

In the Psalm, we sung together of our trust in the Lord, which we are called to renew today: “The Lord is near to the brokenhearted, and saves the crushed in spirit” (Ps 34:18).

Brothers and sisters, there are many situations in life that break our hearts and plunge us into sorrow.  Our hope for a future of peace and reconciliation, in which the dignity of every human person is respected and their fundamental rights guaranteed, is continually disappointed by the many problems afflicting this beautiful land.  

These include the numerous forms of poverty, which even recently have affected so many people amidst an ongoing food crisis. There is moral, social and political corruption, seen above all in the management of wealth, which hinders the development of institutions and infrastructure. 

We see also the serious problems affecting the education and healthcare systems, as well as large-scale migration to foreign countries, particularly of young people. 

Added to these internal problems, which are often fueled by hatred and violence, is the damage caused from outside, by those who, in the name of profit, continue to lay their hands on the African continent to exploit and plunder it.

All of this can make us feel powerless and diminish our confidence. Yet this is the moment to change, to transform the story of this country. The time has come, today and not tomorrow, now and not in the future, to restore the mosaic of unity by bringing together the diversity and riches of the country and the continent. In this way, it will be possible to create a society in which peace and reconciliation reign.

It is true that when a situation remains the same for some time, there is a risk of giving in to resignation and helplessness, because we expect nothing new.  

Yet the word of the Lord opens up new possibilities and brings about transformation and healing. It is capable of stirring our hearts, of challenging the normal course of events to which we so easily risk becoming accustomed, and of making us active agents of change. Let us remember this: God is newness, God creates new things, God makes us courageous people who, by confronting evil, build up the good.

We see this in the witness of the Apostles, as we heard in the first reading. While the authorities of the Sanhedrin interrogate the Apostles, rebuking and threatening them because they are publicly proclaiming Christ, they reply: “We must obey God rather than any human authority.  The God of our ancestors raised up Jesus, whom you had killed by hanging him on a tree” (Acts 5:29–30).

The courage of the Apostles becomes a voice of conscience, a prophecy, a denunciation of evil, and this is the first step toward changing things.  In fact, obeying God is not an act of submission that oppresses us or nullifies our freedom; on the contrary, obedience to God sets us free, because it means entrusting our lives to him and allowing his word to inspire our way of thinking and acting.  

Thus, as we heard in the Gospel, which recounts the final part of the dialogue between Jesus and Nicodemus, “the one who is of the earth belongs to the earth and speaks about earthly things.  The one who comes from heaven is above all” (Jn 3:31).  

Those who obey God rather than human beings and earthly ways of thinking rediscover their inner freedom, succeed in discovering the value of goodness and do not resign themselves to evil. They find anew their way in life and become builders of peace and fraternity.

Brothers and sisters, consolation for broken hearts and hope for change in society are possible if we entrust ourselves to God and God’s word. We must, however, always keep the Apostle Peter’s exhortation in our hearts and bring it to mind: obey God, not human beings. To obey him, because he alone is God. This calls us to foster inculturation of the Gospel.  

It also calls us to be vigilant, even regarding our own religious practices, so as not to fall into the trap of mixing the Catholic faith with other beliefs and traditions of an esoteric or Gnostic nature, which in reality often serve political and economic ends.  Only God sets us free; only his word opens paths to freedom; only his Spirit makes us new people capable of changing this country.

I accompany you with my constant prayer and I bless in particular the Church gathered here: the many priests, missionaries, religious and lay people who all work to be a source of consolation and hope.  

I encourage you to continue along this path and I entrust you to the intercession of Mary Most Holy, Queen of the Apostles and Mother of the Church.

APOSTOLIC JOURNEY OF POPE LEO XIV TO ALGERIA, CAMEROON, ANGOLA AND EQUATORIAL GUINEA

MEETING FOR PEACE WITH THE COMMUNITY OF BAMENDA

Cathedral of Saint Joseph (Bamenda)

Thursday, 16 April 2026

_____________________________


Dear sisters and brothers,

It is a joy for me to be with you in this region that has suffered so greatly. As your testimonies have just demonstrated, the lived experience of suffering by your community has only made stronger your conviction that God has never abandoned us! In God, in his peace, we can always begin anew!

His Excellency the Archbishop mentioned the prophecy that exclaims: “How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of the messenger who announces peace!” (Is 52:7). He welcomed me with these words, and now I would like to respond: how beautiful are your feet as well, dusty from this bloodstained yet fertile land that has been mistreated, yet is rich in vegetation and fruit. Your feet have brought you this far, and despite the difficulties and obstacles, they have remained on the path of goodness. May we all continue on the path of goodness which leads to peace. I am grateful for your words of welcome, because it is true: I am here to proclaim peace. Yet I find it is you who are proclaiming peace to me, and to the entire world. As one of you observed, the crisis impacting these regions of Cameroon has brought Christian and Muslim communities closer than ever before. Indeed, your religious leaders have come together to establish a Movement for Peace, through which they seek to mediate between the opposing sides.

I wish this would happen in so many other places of the world. Your witness, your work for peace can be a model for the whole world! Jesus told us: Blessed are the peacemakers! But woe to those who manipulate religion and the very name of God for their own military, economic or political gain, dragging that which is sacred into darkness and filth. Yes, my dear sisters and brothers, you who hunger and thirst for justice, who are poor, merciful, meek, and pure of heart, you who have wept — you are the light of the world! (cf. Mt 5:3-14). Bamenda, today you are the city on the hill, resplendent in the eyes of all! Sisters and brothers, be the salt that continuously gives flavor to this land. Do not lose your flavor, even in the years to come! Cherish all the shared moments that have brought you together in these times of sorrow. Let us all cherish this day when we have come together to work for peace! Be like oil poured out upon the wounds of your brothers and sisters.

In this regard, I would like to express gratitude to all those, particularly the lay and religious women, who care for individuals traumatized by violence. It is an enormous task that goes unseen day by day, and as Sister Carine reminded us, it is also dangerous. The masters of war pretend not to know that it takes only a moment to destroy, yet a lifetime is often not enough to rebuild. They turn a blind eye to the fact that billions of dollars are spent on killing and devastation, yet the resources needed for healing, education and restoration are nowhere to be found. 

Those who rob your land of its resources generally invest much of the profit in weapons, thus perpetuating an endless cycle of destabilization and death. It is a world turned upside down, an exploitation of God’s creation that must be denounced and rejected by every honest conscience. We must make a decisive change of course — a true conversion — that will lead us in the opposite direction, onto a sustainable path rich in human fraternity. 

The world is being ravaged by a handful of tyrants, yet it is held together by a multitude of supportive brothers and sisters! They are the descendants of Abraham, as numerous as the stars in the sky and the grains of sand on the seashore. Let us look into each other’s eyes: we are this immense people! Peace is not something we must invent: it is something we must embrace by accepting our neighbor as our brother and as our sister. We do not choose our brothers and sisters: we simply must accept one another! We are one family, inhabiting the same home: this wonderful planet that ancient cultures have cared for across millennia.

Pope Francis’ insight in the Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium came to mind as I listened to your words. He wrote, “My mission of being in the heart of the people is not just a part of my life or a badge I can take off; it is not something ‘extra’ or just another moment in life. Instead, it is something I cannot uproot from my being without destroying my very self. I am a mission on this earth; that is the reason why I am here in this world” (no. 273).

Dear brothers and sisters of Bamenda, it is with these sentiments that I am here today among you! Let us serve peace together! “We have to regard ourselves as sealed, even branded, by this mission of bringing light, blessing, enlivening, raising up, healing and freeing. All around us we begin to see nurses with soul, teachers with soul, politicians with soul, people who have chosen deep down to be with others and for others” (ibid.). Thus, my beloved predecessor exhorted us to walk together, each of us according to our own vocation, stretching the boundaries of our communities, beginning with concrete efforts on the local level, in order to love our neighbor, whomever and wherever he or she may be. You are witnesses to this silent revolution! As the Imam said, let us thank God that this crisis has not degenerated into a religious war, and that we are all still trying to love one another! Let us move forward courageously, without losing heart, and above all, together, always together!

Let us walk together, in love, searching always for peace.

[Outside the Cathedral]

My dear brothers and sisters, today the Lord has chosen all of us to be workers who bring peace to this land! Let us all say a prayer to the Lord, that peace will truly reign among us, that as we release these white doves — a symbol of peace — that God’s peace will be upon all of us, upon this land, and keep us all united in his peace. Praise the Lord!

AI videos depicting Jesus Christ attacking Trump are 'disgusting and detached from reality' - Hegseth

US DEFENCE SECRETARY Pete Hegseth has said that AI-generated videos depicting Jesus Christ gorily attacking US president Donald Trump are “disgusting and detached from reality”.

The Iranian Embassy in Tajikistan shared one such video this week which altered Trump’s now deleted AI post depicting himself as Jesus, and added Jesus Christ attacking the president and throwing him into hell.

Trump continues to face backlash over the AI post depicting himself as Jesus Christ, which generated an outcry from a series of prominent conservative Christians who are among Trump’s biggest backers.

Asked about the post, Trump denied that he was trying to look like Jesus Christ. “I did post it, and I thought it was me as a doctor and had to do Red Cross,” he told journalists. 

During a rambling press conference today with chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Air Force General Dan Caine, Hegseth was asked by a journalist about the AI video shared by the Iranian embassy.

“As far as a video like that, of course, that’s disgusting and detached from reality. Iran says a lot of things in the propaganda speech based on complete lies, and their actions have been lies,” he said.

Another AI-generated video shared by the Iranian Embassy in Tajikistan appears to depict convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein attached to Trump’s head.

“Don’t fight it Donie, we’ve been bonded since the 90s. We don’t want those tapes to come out now, do we?” the Epstein-like creature asked.

During the conference, Hegseth also announced that the US will maintain their naval blockade on Iranian ports “for as long as it takes”, after Iran’s military warned it would block trade through the Red Sea, along with the Gulf and Sea of Oman if it continued.

The Defence Secretary also claimed the US army is carrying out miracles and quoted extensively from the bible while making an analogy which seemed to compare the US media to the Pharisees, and the US army to Jesus Christ. 

He said the Pharisees, a Jewish religious and social movement, had ‘hardened hearts’ and wanted to explain away religious miracles “in pursuit of their agenda”.

“Our press are just like these Pharisees, not all of you, not all of you, but the legacy Trump-hating press, your politically motivated animus for President Trump, nearly completely blinds you from the brilliance of our American warriors,” he said.

He also described rescue missions carried out during the US and Israel’s war against Iran as ” incredible rescue missions, miracles, you might say”.