The Great Unveiling
"It is the fear of radical forms of Islam that appears to be driving the movement to ban Muslim face veils in Europe and even countries of the Middle East." Read More
Bishops, Other Faith Leaders Commend Ruling on Arizona Immigration Law
Bishop Thomas Olmsted of Phoenix was among the many religious leaders who praised the July 28 ruling that blocked enforcement of the most controversial sections of the state's immigration law a day before it took effect. Read More
Study: Fewer Spaniards Say They are Catholic
According to a survey released Thursday by the CIS research center,the proportion of Spaniards who say they are Roman Catholic has fallen to 73 percent from around 80 percent eight years ago. Read More
Mexican Troops Kill Top Sinaloa Cartel Figure
In a significant blow against the powerful Sinaloa drug cartel, Mexican troops on Thursday killed one of the group's top figures during an arrest raid. The raid came as troops in Tijuana rounded up dozens of police officers in a separate operation targeting organized crime. Read More
House to Take up Offshore Drilling Reform Bill
The U.S. House of Representatives is expected to pass the legislation that could have a far-reaching impact on deep-water drilling in the Gulf, a major supplier of domestic energy. Read More
Haiti: And a Little Child Will Lead Them
So often, when natural disasters and human tragedy hit on the scale we are currently witnessing in Haiti, we feel helpless. How could this happen to people who are already suffering so much?
As the images first hit my television screen, a deep sense of sadness came over me. Though I prayed, the sadness and helplessness did not go away. I wanted to do something more than sit in my warm kitchen and write a check. But what can I do? I have five young children, no medical skills to offer and I’m more than six months pregnant to boot. At this moment in my life, I couldn’t be more unqualified to be an international aid worker.
All I can do is pray. And I have. Especially when I happen to remember one of the hundreds of little comforts I take for granted on a daily basis (a warm cup of coffee, a shower, the luxury of knowing I can make my kids breakfast today).
But it is my conversations and prayers with my children that have helped most. As it would happen, they know a bit about Haiti because our family donates to a charitable organization that has always had a special focus on this desperately poor country. The letters and brochures sent by “Food for the Poor” often depict the squalor that is everyday life for more than 80% of this country’s population. Over the years, these pictures have had a profound impact on my kids and periodically, they pool their allowance and gift money to make a joint donation for which my husband and I agree to match the funds. This past summer, they ran a lemonade stand at the end of our driveway for “the poor chil’ren” (as my five-year-old calls them) and used the money to purchase chickens, one of the many livestock and projects offered in the charity’s brochure.
Last year, my then first grade son chose Haiti as his country project for school, and we all worked together on gathering the research and making the poster. So when I told the kids about the terrible earthquake that shook Haiti to its core this week, they felt a special connection to their Haitians brothers and sisters.
I have been touched by the genuine concern they have expressed for a country they have never seen and a poverty they have never experienced. Their certainty that their piggy bank money can and will make a difference has brought me hope for the prospects of my own humble donation. Their complete trust that their prayers for the children and the injured are making a difference has reinforced my faith in my own prayers.
I still feel very small in the face of human suffering on this scale. However, I am grateful for my children, who are comforting, teaching and ministering to their mom in profound ways.
And a little child will lead them … Isaiah 11:6.
Food for the Poor
Catholic Relief Services
(The views expressed in this column are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the positions of Headline Bistro or the Knights of Columbus.)

For many parishioners on a Sunday morning, once the closing hymn hits the second refrain, the race is on to get out the door and out the parking lot before a log jam of cars blocks the exits. For Father Phil DeRea's flock, the close of Mass brings a whole other type of race entirely: one that accelerates up to 200 miles per hour.
(read more)
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Recent discussion has ensued among prominent Catholic theologians over the proper interpretation and presentation of Pope John Paul II's teachings on theology of the body. Follow the developments and exclusive coverage on Headline Bistro.
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