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At 76 and wheelchair-bound, acolyte serves God ‘with all I can do’
Posted on 08/12/2025 21:38 PM (CNA Daily News)

ACI Prensa Staff, Aug 12, 2025 / 17:38 pm (CNA).
At 76 years of age, and despite being wheelchair-bound, Reynaldo José Osorio Muñoz doesn’t let these factors interfere with his desire to serve God at the altar of his parish in Colombia. With love and dedication, he participates as an altar server at Mass, dedicating his service to God, the Church, and his fellow parishioners.
Osorio lives at the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary Senior Citizen Wellness Center, a Christian-inspired institution dedicated to the comprehensive care of vulnerable seniors.
According to its website, the center offers meals, medical care, recreational activities, and cultural and spiritual formation, “allowing them to meet their basic needs and improve their quality of life in a safe and harmonious environment, through medical and human care, with love and respect.”
For a year, Osorio has been serving as an acolyte at Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary Parish in the Diocese of Santa Marta, capital of the Colombian district of Magdalena, located in the Caribbean region.
As he shared in an interview with ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner, his initial involvement began with ringing the bell to announce the start of Mass to his fellow residents at the center. Over time, and thanks to the trust of a priest, that small action transformed into a deeper commitment to the altar.
“For me, it’s a very beautiful thing that I never expected because of my age. But thank God he placed me in this position. I appreciate it very much and I love [what I do] at the altar,” he said.
According to the Colombian Bishops’ Conference, the acolyte is called to “attend to service of the altar, assist the priest and deacon, and serve in the various processions” as well as assist with the incense, the liturgical book, the preparation of the altar, and the purification of the sacred vessels. He may also assist at the offertory, distribute Communion as an extraordinary minister, and expose and reserve the Blessed Sacrament, although without imparting the blessing.
Beyond these visible tasks, the ministry requires, as the same document points out, a “love of the sacraments, of Eucharistic worship, the offering of oneself, and the care of others, especially the most needy and the sick.”
A service for the love of God
“I am very devout and I believe deeply in God, and I always ask him to enlighten me,” Osorio said. In this regard, he said that even for this task, God “has enlightened me so that I may do it. That’s why I do it with all the love and appreciation.”
Since taking on this service, he said he feels “satisfied because I serve God, the Church, and all of us,” referring to his fellow residents at the center. And although he acknowledges his physical limitations, he said that he carries out his ministry “with all the love, with all the enjoyment, with everything I can manage to do.”
For the church’s parish priest, Father Mario Rafael González García, Osorio is not defined by his physical “limitations.”
In an interview with ACI Prensa, he said he is a person “with a very good sense of humor, cheerful, dynamic, talkative, and with faith.”
On the occasion of the World Day of Grandparents and the Elderly, celebrated on July 27, Pope Leo XIV called on every ecclesial community to be protagonists of a “revolution of gratitude and care” for the elderly.
The pope explained that this must be done “by regular visits to the elderly, the creation of networks of support and prayer for them and with them, and the forging of relationships that can restore hope and dignity to those who feel forgotten.”
Osorio’s testimony, according to González, is an example of this, and “we owe him gratitude for his witness of faith and care in his old age.”
This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.
Catholic University Press to publish Pope Leo XIV’s doctoral dissertation
Posted on 08/12/2025 21:07 PM (CNA Daily News)

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 12, 2025 / 17:07 pm (CNA).
Here’s a roundup of some of the latest Catholic education news:
Catholic University Press will exclusively publish Pope Leo XIV’s doctoral dissertation
The Catholic University of America has secured exclusive English-language editorial rights to Pope Leo XIV’s doctoral dissertation, “The Office and Authority of the Local Prior in the Order of St. Augustine.”
The book will be available in print and Kindle editions in October, according to an Aug. 11 press release, with a foreword by Dominican Father Thomas Joseph White, rector of the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas in Rome, also known as the Angelicum, where the Holy Father defended his dissertation in 1987.
“While the future pontiff’s dissertation focuses on the role of the prior as the local superior in the Augustinians, his insights as a young priest in areas such as Church authority, the spiritual life following the way of St. Augustine, and the mission of the priesthood are of interest as they relate to contemporary Church leadership and Church life,” the press release states.
Catholic high school in St. Louis playing ‘the long game’ to help rebuild city
Administrators at St. Mary’s South Side Catholic High School are playing “the long game” to help revitalize St. Louis, and their neighborhood of Dutchtown, with the launch of a new HVAC and plumbing internship program for seniors.
“We believe in what our neighborhood and city can be, and we are all in on doing the work,” the school’s president, Mike England, said at an Aug. 12 press conference, according to the St. Louis Review. “There are no quick fixes. This is the long game, but each day, we will work to move the needle in a positive way to better support our young men, our families, and our community through our Catholic values and teaching.” This comes after the school bought its Dutchtown campus from the Archdiocese of St. Louis last month.
Bishop Conley announces rollout of new theology curriculum for high school freshmen
In a video posted to social media on Wednesday, Bishop James Conley of Lincoln, Nebraska, announced a new theology curriculum for high school freshmen that will be implemented across the diocese’s six high schools.
I am proud of our Catholic schools, which have always been a top priority in the Diocese of Lincoln, even before my time as bishop. This year, we are introducing a new integrated theology curriculum for our high school freshmen, helping them see the Catholic Faith in every… pic.twitter.com/82rvnTTBFk
— James D Conley (@bishop_conley) August 12, 2025
The new curriculum, which he said the diocese has been working on for the past four years, will be rolled out this upcoming school year and will eventually be built out for sophomores, juniors, and seniors over the next four years.
“We hope to be able to put together a beautiful curriculum that integrates all of our subjects and is historically aligned and gives us this coherent and integrated view of the world and how everything fits together and is connected in a beautiful whole education,” Conley said.
Gonzaga teams up with Catholic Charities to launch small local business program
Gonzaga University has partnered with Catholic Charities Eastern Washington to launch a new entrepreneurship program for low-income families to help grow their own small businesses, according to a local report.
The Spokane Entrepreneurship and Empowerment Network “will offer hands-on training, mentorship, and consulting to aspiring entrepreneurs, with a focus on small-scale businesses like housekeeping, pet care, skilled trades, and landscaping,” according to the report.
Baltimore, Milwaukee Catholic colleges band together to address teacher shortage
Notre Dame of Maryland University in Baltimore and Mount Mary University in Milwaukee are partnering to counteract staffing shortages by working to boost the number of students obtaining advanced degrees, according to the Catholic Review.
The partnership will allow Mount Mary master’s students to transfer to one of Notre Dame of Maryland’s two online doctorate in education programs, allowing students to transfer up to 12 credits from their master’s programs, saving both time and money. The university’s presidents celebrated the partnership in a signing ceremony on Aug. 1.
Book on the thought of Pope Francis to be distributed in Buenos Aires province schools
Posted on 08/12/2025 20:22 PM (CNA Daily News)

Buenos Aires, Argentina, Aug 12, 2025 / 16:22 pm (CNA).
The government of Buenos Aires province in Argentina will distribute the 168-page book “The Teacher: The Humanism of Pope Francis” in public and private schools, an initiative that seeks to keep his legacy alive and transmit his thought to new generations.
Gov. Axel Kicillof and the archbishop of La Plata (the provincial capital), Gustavo Carrara, were present at the presentation of the book, produced by the province’s General Directorate of Culture and Education.
The book seeks to keep alive the legacy of the Argentine pontiff, who died on April 21. With this initiative, the governor stated, the pope’s thought will be present in all schools in Buenos Aires province.
The director general of culture and education, Alberto Sileoni, remembered Francis as an “educator who conveyed his teaching through ideas and actions, promoting the pedagogy of inclusion and encounter throughout his life,” according to the Argentine newspaper La Nación.
He also described him as “an Argentine concerned about the life of his peoples and a school that embraces, teaches, and leaves no one out.”
Religious figures such as Carrara and Father José María Di Paola as well as educator Adriana Puiggrós, who offered her reflective perspective on Jorge Bergoglio’s papacy, participated in the development of the book.
The book includes various messages addressed to different sectors of society as well as excerpts from the Global Compact on Education.
The archbishop of La Plata stated that the book “perfectly captures the essence of Francis’ thought and is a very valuable tool for conveying the richness of his ideas.”
This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.
Vatican allows New Zealand ban on Scottish congregation after alleged illicit exorcisms
Posted on 08/12/2025 19:52 PM (CNA Daily News)

CNA Staff, Aug 12, 2025 / 15:52 pm (CNA).
A religious institute in New Zealand has lost its appeal to the Vatican to continue public ministry in the Diocese of Christchurch after the local bishop ordered the ban amid allegations of unauthorized exorcisms and other abuses.
Christchurch Bishop Michael Gielen said in an Aug. 10 letter to his diocese that the Vatican “rejected in its entirety” the appeal of the Sons of the Most Holy Redeemer after Gielen forbade the community from ministering in Christchurch last year.
The bishop said in July 2024 that the community had been subject to an apostolic visitation by Australian Bishop Robert McGuckin. Gielen removed the ministry faculties of the members after the Vatican’s recommendation and also asked the group “to leave the Christchurch Diocese.”
Gielen in both letters did not clarify why the community was being investigated and sanctioned, but the Christchurch Press reported that the subject of the inquiry was “alleged abuse and unauthorized exorcisms.” The New Zealand Herald reported on those allegations in 2023.
In his Aug. 10 letter, Gielen noted that the institute continued its ministry in the diocese during the appeal.
The Vatican’s rejection of the appeal, the bishop noted, means the Sons of the Most Holy Redeemer remains under the ban, which also applies to “priests who arrived after the decrees were announced.”
“My foremost concern remains the spiritual health and unity” of the Christchurch Diocese, the bishop said.
The Sons of the Most Holy Redeemer own the island of Papa Stronsay in the North Sea off the Scottish coast, where they operate a monastery and farm.
The community, formed in 1988 following a monastic rule based on that of St. Alphonsus Ligouri, was formally erected as a religious institute in 2012. They describe themselves as a “congregation of missionary monks” who regularly “leave their contemplative life and set out on voyages” to “preach the eternal truths in the form of missions wherever they are invited.”
Baltimore to receive statue by Timothy Schmalz depicting Christ mourning a murder victim
Posted on 08/12/2025 18:54 PM (CNA Daily News)

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 12, 2025 / 14:54 pm (CNA).
As advocates in Baltimore work to end violent crime in the area, officials with the Archdiocese of Baltimore are bringing to the city a sculpture of Jesus mourning a homicide victim.
The statue, made by Catholic artist Timothy Schmalz, is titled “Thou Shall Not Kill.”
On Aug. 9 the archdiocese held its third annual gun buyback program, inviting citizens to surrender their guns for cash to help lessen violence in the city. The Baltimore City Police Department, St. Joseph’s Monastery Parish, and the Health by Southwest coalition helped the archdiocese sponsor the event.
Following the success of the buybacks, St. Joseph’s Monastery parish priest Father Mike Murphy, the archdiocese, and community leaders are working to bring Schmalz’s work of Christian public art to the city.
The life-sized statue by Schmalz portrays Jesus weeping over a murder victim who has multiple gunshot wounds.
The original piece was created in 2024 and is at the Father Augustus Tolton Peace Center, a hub for violence prevention programs in Chicago. The statue that will be placed in Baltimore is awaiting final approval of its designated location.

Schmalz is an internationally acclaimed Canadian sculptor known for his Christian works of art, including statues of saints, angels, and his well-known depictions of Jesus portrayed as a homeless man.
More than 50 bronze works of “Homeless Jesus” are installed in locations around the world including Capernaum in Israel and Vatican City.
In April, a new Vatican-commissioned sculpture by the artist titled “Be Welcoming” was placed in St. Peter’s Square to inspire people to open their hearts to the poor. The bronze statue depicts a man seated on a bench who appears to be homeless, carrying a backpack on his shoulder and a stick in one hand.
In Baltimore, the goal for this year’s gun buyback program was to receive around 300 guns after buying nearly 160 in 2023 and 300 in 2024. By July the organizers had raised about $60,000 to fund the purchases of guns brought in. The 2025 buyback ultimately collected 410 firearms.
The latest buyback occurred as crime, including gun violence, has been dropping in Baltimore, though the city has long struggled with high levels of violent crime.
From 2015–2022 the city recorded more than 300 homicides annually, including 348 in 2019, which almost equaled the record of 353 in 1993.
French bishops ask that priest who served time for rape of a minor not be promoted
Posted on 08/12/2025 18:24 PM (CNA Daily News)

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 12, 2025 / 14:24 pm (CNA).
The French bishops’ conference has issued a statement addressed to the archbishop of Toulouse, Guy de Kerimel, asking him to rescind the promotion of a priest who served time in prison for the rape of a minor boy.
In an Aug. 10 press release from the presidency of the Bishops’ Conference of France, the French bishops revealed they had “engaged in constructive dialogue” with Kerimel, “inviting him to reconsider the decision he made regarding the appointment of the chancellor of his diocese.”
“Such an appointment to such an important position, both canonically and symbolically, can only reopen wounds, reawaken suspicions, and disconcert the people of God,” they wrote.
The French bishops further recalled the Church’s efforts in the past several years to approach “the painful question of abuses committed within it.”
“It is very important to continue this work in all sectors of ecclesial life,” they said, emphasizing the need to reorient the Church’s approach by listening more attentively to the experiences of abuse victims, a process they described as “a long and demanding work of conversion, which we are resolute to continue.”
The statement comes after Kerimel announced in June that Father Dominique Spina would be promoted to the position of chancellor and episcopal delegate for marriages, effective Sept. 1, for the Archdiocese of Toulouse.
Spina was convicted in 2006 by the Tarbes Court of Appeals for raping a 16-year-old student in 1993 while serving as the boy’s spiritual director at Notre-Dame de Bétharram school. The court sentenced him to five years’ imprisonment, with four years to be served and one year suspended.
The decree announcing Spina’s appointment was published on June 2 but did not become public knowledge until July 7, when the regional newspaper La Dépêche du Midi broke the story.
De Kerimel defended his controversial choice in a statement to Agence France-Presse, saying he had “taken the side of mercy” in promoting Spina, who had worked in diocesan archives for five years.
“It is true that Father Spina served a five-year prison sentence, including one year suspended, for very serious acts that took place nearly 30 years ago,” the archbishop said, according to Le Monde.
He justified the appointment by arguing that Church officials “have nothing to reproach this priest for in the last 30 years.”
The archbishop added that Spina “no longer exercises pastoral responsibility, other than celebrating the Eucharist, alone or exceptionally for the faithful.”
Proposed solar farm plan threatens English Camino, UK bishop says
Posted on 08/12/2025 17:52 PM (CNA Daily News)

London, England, Aug 12, 2025 / 13:52 pm (CNA).
A bishop in the United Kingdom has expressed concern about a proposal to build a huge solar farm on the English stretch of the Camino de Santiago in the south of England.
The English leg of the highly popular and historic pilgrimage runs 68 miles from the city of Reading to the port of Southampton, which falls within the Diocese of Portsmouth and has been frequented by pilgrims for more than a thousand years.
The Camino de Santiago is made up of many different ancient routes across Europe that all lead to the tomb of St. James in Santiago de Compostela in northwest Spain.
English pilgrims would traditionally take a boat from Portsmouth and sail to Spain before continuing their pilgrimage.
In an email exchange with CNA, Bishop Philip Egan of Portsmouth expressed his worries about the proposal.
“The proposal to build a large solar farm seems unfortunate and I can understand any villager, farmer, or lover of the South Downs feeling saddened at the loss of land and the potential blight on the landscape, even if there are several other areas of the South Downs given over to solar farms.”
The South Downs is a highly popular national park through which the historic route runs.
“Since I became bishop of Portsmouth in 2012, I have been very aware of this venerable Camino route from Reading to Southampton,” he said. “Our parish in Reading, dedicated to St. James and standing in the ruins of the pre-Reformation abbey, is the official starting point of the Camino.”
“Indeed, only last year, I went out to greet four American bishops hiking the trail and who were staying in a farmhouse near Alton, Hampshire,” he continued. “Much of the central part of the route through Hampshire is idyllic; it is very rural, and you feel far away from the hectivity of modern life. As you walk along, it is easy to feel part of a spiritual exercise that goes back to medieval times.”
Egan said he hoped the ancient route would still be marked out in some way, adding: “I wonder too if they might install paneling and other measures to hide the solar cells and safeguard the most attractive views?”
According to a report in the Daily Telegraph, the proposed Stokes Lane Solar Farm will supply energy to 9,390 homes every year for 40 years.
A spokesperson for Solar2, the renewable energy company driving the proposal, said the plans were “necessary and urgent” in the context of the “the climate emergency, energy security, environmental degradation, and growing risks to U.K. food production,” the Telegraph reported.
But Professor Joseph Shaw, head of the U.K. Latin Mass Society — which organizes an annual pilgrimage to the Marian shrine of Walsingham, England — said: “Solar farms already encroach on many areas of our countryside, including areas near where I walk regularly in Oxfordshire. It is no exaggeration to say that they have the power to turn an ancient pathway to a holy place into a track through an alien industrial wasteland. I hope that planners are mindful of this site’s status as a World Heritage Site and preserve it for future generations.”
The U.K. stretch of the Camino became the first pilgrimage route to be awarded UNESCO World Heritage Site status in 1993.
The area also boasts other gems of historic interest including the Grade-I-listed, 12th-century building of All Saints Church, located about a half a mile away. George Austen, brother to the author Jane Austen, is also buried there, adding further historic weight.
The proposal has proved so controversial that the consultation period hosted by the local council has been extended by 20 days and will now close on Aug. 25.
Archdiocese of Port-au-Prince denounces the ‘collapse of humanity’ in Haitian society
Posted on 08/12/2025 10:00 AM (CNA Daily News)

ACI Prensa Staff, Aug 12, 2025 / 06:00 am (CNA).
The Archdiocese of Port-au-Prince denounced the “collapse of humanity” in Haitian society, “where the unthinkable has become commonplace,” in response to the kidnapping of nine people from an orphanage on the outskirts of the capital on Aug. 3.
In a statement, the archdiocese said it received the news of the kidnappings, which included an Irish lay missionary and a disabled 3-year-old boy, with “deep sadness and profound indignation” and expressed “its fraternal solidarity and spiritual closeness” with the orphanage, a “tireless sower of hope for the most vulnerable.”
The archdiocese also expressed its solidarity with the residents of Kenscoff, who have been affected “by the brutal violence that has taken hold in this town over the past few months.”
“Once again, crimes committed with chilling cynicism bear witness to the collapse of humanity in our society, where the unthinkable has become a daily occurrence. Crime knows no bounds. And places of care, education, refuge, and hope are now being targeted,” the Aug. 6 statement lamented.
“This kidnapping constitutes an attack on what is most noble in a society: service free of charge to others, the innocence of the defenseless child, the faith embodied in works of mercy,” the archdiocese stated, condemning this new act of barbarism, calling it “a sign, among many others, of moral collapse, state failure, and a society that is losing its sense of life and human dignity.”
If competing interests are allowed, the archdiocese noted, to make society insensitive to the suffering of the victims of the violence prevailing in Haiti, “we will become accomplices in the slow but sure destruction of this country.”
“Because silence in the face of the unacceptable is a form of renunciation of our human and Christian vocation,” the statement emphasized.
“The Archdiocese of Port-au-Prince urges all the faithful, all men and women of goodwill, to raise their voices, unite in prayer, and take concrete measures to reject this climate of dehumanization,” the statement added.
Furthermore, the archdiocese urged the civil, military, and police authorities “to assume their responsibilities to guarantee the safety of all and obtain the immediate release of the kidnapped persons,” emphasizing that “Haiti’s future cannot be built on blood, impunity, and fear.”
“The time has come together to say enough. And to act. In these dark days, may the light of the risen Christ illuminate our decisions, our words, and our actions. May Our Lady of Perpetual Help intercede for our beloved Haiti and especially for all those who are suffering,” the statement concluded.
This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.
Pope Leo XIV approves measures benefiting families of Vatican employees
Posted on 08/11/2025 21:20 PM (CNA Daily News)

ACI Prensa Staff, Aug 11, 2025 / 17:20 pm (CNA).
Pope Leo XIV has approved a series of measures that benefit Vatican employees, expanding paternity leave, the rights of parents with disabled children, and granting family subsidies.
A document published Aug. 11 and signed by Maximino Caballero, prefect of the secretariat for financial affairs of the Holy See, lists the “Provisions for the Family” approved by the Holy Father following an audience on July 28.
These resolutions were previously unanimously accepted by the council of the Labor Office of the Holy See (ULSA, by its Italian acronym), a body composed of representatives from various entities of the Holy See and the Vatican Governorate as well as their respective employees.
Regarding paternity leave, the pontiff established that a father is entitled to five days of 100% paid leave after the birth of a child.
The text specifies that the days off are “understood as working days and may be taken sequentially or one at a time in full days and not by hours, and not beyond 30 days from the birth of the child, under penalty of forfeiture of the right.”
In January, Pope Francis extended paternity leave from three to five days, a measure already modified in 2022, when it was increased from one to three days.
Parents of children with proven severe disabilities will be entitled to three days of paid leave per month, which may be taken in a row as long as the child is not hospitalized full time.
In addition, a monthly subsidy was introduced for families with severely disabled or incapacitated members as well as for pensioners in the same situation.
The document also redefines the concepts of disability and incapacity, specifying that the assessment will be carried out by a Vatican Medical Association, whose decision will be “without appeal.”
Finally, to facilitate assistance to family members with disabilities, it is stipulated that the time off granted for this purpose cannot be used to work another job.
Regarding the family subsidy, Pope Leo XIV has expanded the right for adult children who are students. They may receive this aid until the age of 20 for secondary school studies and until the age of 26 for university studies or equivalent studies recognized by the Holy See.
The provisions, approved by the pope, will go into effect upon their official publication in the Acta Apostolicae Sedis (Acts of the Apostolic See).
This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.
Westminster archbishop issues statement condemning Israel’s plan to take over Gaza City
Posted on 08/11/2025 20:32 PM (CNA Daily News)

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 11, 2025 / 16:32 pm (CNA).
Archbishop of Westminster in England and Wales Cardinal Vincent Nichols has issued a statement condemning Israel’s plans to take over Gaza City.
The statement came after Israel’s security cabinet approved a plan on Aug. 8 to take control of Gaza City and expand military operations.
Israel’s five-step plan includes disarming Hamas, releasing all remaining living and deceased hostages, demilitarizing the Gaza Strip, establishing temporary Israeli control over the enclave, and eventually replacing Hamas with a friendly Arab civil administration.
“Today, and in these days, I weep for the people of Gaza as they face not just a continuation of their immense suffering but an escalation in their hardship and desperation,” Nichols said in the Aug. 8 statement.
“To increase the destruction of Gaza City and then the rest of its territory, in order to defeat a terrorist organization and movement, is a development that is rightly being condemned around the world,” he added.
“There must be a better way,” said Nichols, the president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales, calling for an alternative strategy “that does not heap yet further suffering and misery on so many people who are not combatants but defenseless in face of the perpetrators of violence in their midst.”
“Already too much innocent blood has been shed; too many lives destroyed; too much hunger and starvation,” he continued. “This war must be ended not increased.”
Nichols expressed solidarity with the faithful in Gaza as well as the Latin patriarch of Jerusalem, Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, whose “consistent appeals for peace,” aid delivery, and support of Holy Family Parish in Gaza City, he said, should “evoke from us all our practical help and our prayers.”
The archbishop of Westminster further invoked the prayers of Our Lady of Gaza and St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross, a Jewish convert to the Catholic faith whose feast day was Aug. 9.
The latest developments come just under a month after an Israeli strike “mistakenly” hit Gaza’s only Catholic Church in Gaza City, resulting in three deaths and 15 injuries.
Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), called for peace and an “immediate ceasefire” following the strike, stating: “With the Holy Father, the Catholic bishops of the United States are deeply saddened to learn about the deaths and injuries at Holy Family Church in Gaza caused by a military strike.”
USCCB Chairman of the Committee on International Justice and Peace, Bishop Abdallah Elias Zaidan, has also called for an end to the war and the “immediate expansion of humanitarian assistance through all channels in Gaza.”
On Monday, five Al Jazeera journalists and a freelance journalist were targeted and killed by Israel Defense Forces in a press tent outside Al Shifa Hospital in eastern Gaza City, according to Reuters. Israel claimed one of the journalists, Anas al-Sharif, was a Hamas operative, though Al Jazeera denied this. The airstrike was widely condemned by journalists, human rights groups, and the U.N.