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Pope Francis meets priest abducted in West Africa – Vatican News

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Pope Francis meets priest abducted in West Africa - Vatican News

By Benedetta Capelli and Gabriella Ceraso

Father Pierluigi Maccalli appeared visibly moved after Monday’s meeting with Pope Francis, who had prayed for him along with the Church.  “Thank you” were the only words that the 59-year-old missionary from the periphery managed to utter, overwhelmed by the Pope’s gesture.  

A member of the Society of African Missions, originally from the northern Italian town of Madignano, Father Maccalli relived his ordeal as he recounted it to Pope Francis, and offered it for his beloved African community in Niger where he worked.

“I was moved, I told the Pope what I went through and entrusted to his prayers especially the communities I visited and that have been without a priest or a missionary for over 2 years,” he told Vatican News.  “I asked the Pope to remember the Church of Niger in his prayers,” he said during the interview that took place soon after the papal audience. 

The Pope, he said, listened keenly.

A missionary from the periphery

Father Maccalli recalled the applause the Holy Father asked for from those in St. Peter’s Square, when he announced the good news of the missionary’s release at the end of his midday “Angelus” prayer on Mission Sunday, 18 October.

The priest thanked the Pope who replied: “We supported you but you supported the Church.” “At this,” Father Maccalli said, “I had no words: I, a little missionary, and he who said this to me … I really have no words.”

Father Maccalli described the Pope’s embrace like that of a father, whom he carries in his prayers every day.  “To find myself in front of him was truly an emotion and a feeling of great gratitude,” he told Vatican News. “I never thought that a missionary who goes to the peripheries of the world could one day find himself before the Pope himself, the leader of the universal Church.”

More than the Pope’s words, it is his gesture that the missionary said he will treasure in his heart forever.  “When we said goodbye, I shook his hand and he kissed my hands. I didn’t expect it…!” Father Maccalli said.

Prayers of tears

Thinking back to his captivity, he said, “Tears were my bread for many days and were my prayer when I didn’t know what to say.”  One day, he recalled a rabbi’s words who said that God counts the number of women’s tears.  Father Maccalli said he then prayed: “Lord, who knows whether you also count men’s tears… I offer them to you in prayer to water that arid mission land but also the arid of hearts of those who hate and cause war and violence.”

Speaking about the basic needs to survive in the desert, the Missionary of Africa said it is essential to have water to drink, to have something to eat, even if it is the same food every day, such as onions, lentils and sardines.  It is not the sought-after dishes that matter, he added: “It is the same in spiritual life.” 

“What matters is shalom [peace], forgiveness and brotherhood, and as a missionary,” Father Maccalli concluded, “I now feel an even greater urge to be a witness of peace, brotherhood and forgiveness, today and always.”

Press Conference by the EP’s negotiating team on the MFF and Own Resources | News | European Parliament

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Press Conference by the EP’s negotiating team on the MFF and Own Resources | News | European Parliament

, https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/press-room/20201109IPR91143/

WESSANEN BECOMES ECOTONE AND COMMITS TO FOOD FOR BIODIVERSITY

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WESSANEN BECOMES ECOTONE  AND COMMITS TO FOOD FOR BIODIVERSITY


WESSANEN BECOMES ECOTONE AND COMMITS TO FOOD FOR BIODIVERSITY – Organic Food News Today – EIN Presswire




















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Irish people are drawn to spiritualism – but not as a religion

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Irish people are drawn to spiritualism - but not as a religion

Can the dead communicate with the living? There is nothing like war or pestilence, such as our current pandemic, to bring such questions to the fore. Some people are hearing strange sounds while in lockdown and believe they are quarantining with a ghost. Others are experiencing lucid dreams in which the spirits of the deceased appear to offer comfort.

                                                    <p class="no_name">Across the State there has been an increase in the number of bereaved seeking out mediums for reassurance of their loved one’s continued and peaceful existence.</p>
                                                    <p class="no_name">Throughout history people have sought out mediums and healers like Biddy Early and the Witch of <a class="search" href="/topics/topics-7.1213540?article=true&tag_location=Youghal" rel="nofollow">Youghal</a>, who claimed to heal with the help of the Sidhe.</p>
                                                    <p class="no_name">For the Celt the Neolithic marvel of Newgrange became the home of gods and a passage between worlds. And let’s not forget the <a class="search" href="/topics/topics-7.1213540?article=true&tag_organisation=Celtic" rel="nofollow">Celtic</a> Samhain, the night on which a portal is opened between worlds.</p>
                                                    <p class="no_name">Thin is the veil between the living and the dead on the island, which makes it all the more surprising that spiritualism has been slow to take root here.</p>
                                                    <p class="no_name">Spiritualism – the religion born in upstate New York in 1848 after a murdered cobbler communicated with three sisters – holds the central tenet that the dead continue to exist and communicate with the living either directly or through mediums.</p>
                                                    <p class="no_name">In the late 19th century it filled scientists, artists and the literati – WB Yeats among them – with metaphysical excitement. In the US and Britain spiritualism was organised into a hierarchy of churches with established principles, among them the central tenet that the so-called dead continue to exist and advance through higher heavenly spheres.</p>
                                                                                                        <aside class="related-articles--instream has-3">

                </aside>
                                                                                                                    <h4 class="crosshead">Clandestine meetings</h4><p class="no_name">However, fearful of falling foul to the Witchcraft Act of 1735 or angering the <a class="search" href="/topics/topics-7.1213540?article=true&tag_organisation=Catholic+Church" rel="nofollow">Catholic Church</a>, Irish mediums and spiritualists opted for clandestine meetings. By the 1970s medium Brendan O’Callaghan found even priests and nuns were coming in disguise for readings. Everyone loved a medium’s message as long as it was shared in secret.</p>

                                                    <p class="no_name">With repeal of the Witchcraft Act in 2008, the loosening of the Catholic Church’s grasp and the increased secularisation of the island (the <a class="search" href="/topics/topics-7.1213540?article=true&tag_organisation=Central+Statistics+Office" rel="nofollow">Central Statistics Office</a> shows a sevenfold increase in those reporting “no religion” since 1991) spiritualist centres popped up to offer interdimensional reunifications and the spiritualist doctrine that continues to attract scientific study of the concept that consciousness does not die.</p>
                                                    <p class="no_name">In the last decade gatherings at the Irish Centre for Shamanic Studies, a place rooted in ancient spiritual traditions only a stone’s throw from Newgrange in Co Meath, have increased tenfold, suggesting a renewed interest in pre-Christian spirituality.</p>
                                                    <blockquote class="inline__content inline__content--pullquote">

Paradoxically, the island’s pre-Christian beliefs in spirits and its connection to the land intrinsically lends itself to spiritualist philosophy

Some 40km down the road Julie Coyle founded Oldcastle Spiritualists, optimistic that this interest in ancestral spirits may indicate a new openness towards natural communication with the more recently departed. The result has been unexpected.

                                                    <p class="no_name">Unlike the rules, regulations and organised churches of the US and Britain, the Irish interest largely lies in holistic healing, dabbling in the mystical and receiving messages from the beyond.</p>
                                                    <p class="no_name">An appetite for natural spirituality and mediumship exists, but add in the doctrine and ethical oversight of a religious organisation and people head for the door.</p>
                                                    <p class="no_name">Paradoxically, the island’s pre-Christian beliefs in spirits and its connection to the land intrinsically lends itself to spiritualist philosophy, but the current religious hangover, the distaste for hierarchies and rule-makers, has muted attempts to gain general acceptance even among those who are open to the survival of consciousness.</p>
                                                    <h4 class="crosshead">Discussion</h4><p class="no_name">Undeterred, spiritualist mediums Miriam and <a class="search" href="/topics/topics-7.1213540?article=true&tag_person=John+Fitzgerald" rel="nofollow">John Fitzgerald</a> have established Nlightening Events, a forum for a more sophisticated discussion of these ideas so that people can make informed decisions about the veracity of life after death and its ontological implications.</p>
                                                    <p class="no_name">In turn the World Congress of Spiritualists will meet here in 2026, offering the State an opportunity to discuss these issues from an Irish perspective.</p>

                                                    <p class="no_name">Certainly the imagination and natural spirituality of the Celt offers spiritualism something distinctive and enriching. Whether spiritualism can accommodate the Irish free spirit remains to be seen.</p>
                                                    <p class="no_name">Karen Frances McCarthy is a spiritualist medium and author of Till Death Don’t Us Part (White Crow Books 2020).</p>