The Catholic Register - Guest Columns Thu, 23 Jan 2025 02:03:15 -0500 Website design by Concerto Designs concertodesigns.ca en-gb A regrettable conflict, again /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10085-a-regrettable-conflict-again /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10085-a-regrettable-conflict-again {mosimage}Once more Congo is burning and the world is watching. After five years of civil war (1998-2003) in which more than five million people were killed and another million dislocated, the war-weary people of Congo are facing the prospect of another preventable war.

The Congo conflict is the longest and most devastating conflict in Africa. It is also central to resolving the horrors in Darfur because these conflicts have led to the weaponization of this African sub-region and the surrounding countries extending to Sudan and Chad. The vast and ungoverned territories in this area provide the route for the transportation of all kinds of weapons to the African hot spots in Uganda, Somalia, Congo and Sudan. They are also fertile grounds for very angry and disinherited Africans who are tools for burgeoning terrorist cells and rogue groups and militias.
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Guest Columns Fri, 21 Nov 2008 02:16:29 -0500
Virtues demand the highest of us /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10084-virtues-demand-the-highest-of-us /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10084-virtues-demand-the-highest-of-us {mosimage}In the Oct. 18 Register appears a picture of some high school students holding up giant letters spelling out DIVERSITY. Now “diversity” is one of those weasel words, so beloved of multiculturalists, that frequently conceal animus towards religion generally, and hostility to Catholicism in particular. 

The accompanying article, by Sheila Dabu, raised concern about a $2-million Ontario Education Ministry initiative called “Character Development.” There is reason for concern.
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Guest Columns Fri, 21 Nov 2008 01:25:13 -0500
Leaders like Merton embody the struggle into holiness /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10087-leaders-like-merton-embody-the-struggle-into-holiness /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10087-leaders-like-merton-embody-the-struggle-into-holiness {mosimage}This Dec. 10 marks the 40th anniversary of the death of the celebrated monk-poet Thomas Merton (1915-1968).

By the time of his death, Merton, born in Prades, France, a citizen of the United States and a monk for 27 years in the Trappist Abbey of Our Lady of Gethsemani in Kentucky, had an international following of enviable proportions, a publication record of staggering range and an influence by no means limited to the Catholic world. Merton was, and remains, a phenomenon, an utterly engaging figure, controversial, iconic, the paradigmatic monk for our century.
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crstaff@catholicregister.org (Catholic Register Staff) Guest Columns Thu, 13 Nov 2008 00:39:49 -0500
Sober reflections on a night of change /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10086-sober-reflections-on-a-night-of-change /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10086-sober-reflections-on-a-night-of-change {mosimage}It was just after 10:15 p.m. on Nov. 4 when I began walking with my wife and brother-in-law along Michigan Avenue toward Grant Park in downtown Chicago. For much of the evening, we had been at the Hyatt Regency waiting for U.S. election results to come in. We passed the time watching members of the media position themselves for a possible interview with Sen. Barack Obama, who was reportedly in a suite with his family waiting for a concession phone call from Sen. John McCain.

When we left the hotel, which was shortly after Sen. McCain had begun his concession speech, only the staked-out reporters, who missed their scoop, seemed to be unhappy by the news that Sen. Obama had been declared the next president of the United States and that he was already on his way to Grant Park to address a jubilant crowd of some 250,000 people.
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Guest Columns Thu, 13 Nov 2008 00:36:04 -0500
Faith shines through disaster /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10088-faith-shines-through-disaster /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10088-faith-shines-through-disaster {mosimage}They came in flashbacks — snapshots of memories from an unexpected tragedy. Before I went to the Middle East to pursue an internship there, I was told that Jordan was the safest country in the region. It was, until three years ago when Jordan had itƵapp own 9/11.

Just before 9 p.m. on Nov. 9, 2005, triple suicide bombings rocked Amman, JordanƵapp capital, including a wedding party at the Radisson SAS hotel. The attacks were blamed on al Qaeda and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian national who became a top al Qaeda leader based in Iraq. Ƶapp 57 people were killed and 100 injured in those attacks.
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sheilad@catholicregister.org (Sheila Dabu Nonato, The Catholic Register) Guest Columns Sun, 09 Nov 2008 22:50:54 -0500
Guillaume Couture: my Canadian hero /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10089-guillaume-couture-my-canadian-hero /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10089-guillaume-couture-my-canadian-hero {mosimage}When I set out to in search of my roots, one person reached across 10 generations to touch me deeply. This is what prompted me to find out more about Guillaume Couture, a man of faith, courage, a friend of Canadian martyrs Isaac Jogues and René Goupil and one of my great grandfathers.  

On Sept. 26,  the morning Mass was offered in remembrance of Fr. Jean de Brébeuf, Fr. Isaac Jogues and their Jesuit companions. Guillaume Couture was one of the companions.  
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Guest Columns Thu, 30 Oct 2008 04:37:02 -0400
Gratitude is a lifestyle choice /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10092-gratitude-is-a-lifestyle-choice /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10092-gratitude-is-a-lifestyle-choice {mosimage}“Give thanks in all circumstances, for this is GodƵapp will for you in Christ Jesus.” I Thessalonians 5:18

Thanksgiving has come and gone once again, but I’m still in a thankful frame of mind, for a couple of reasons. First, my American friends and relatives are gearing up for their Thanksgiving celebration this month. Second, I like the warm, fuzzy feelings of gratitude and its by-product, generosity, that Thanksgiving inspires, and I’ve been contemplating how to perpetuate them.
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Guest Columns Thu, 23 Oct 2008 03:53:00 -0400
A tale of two elections /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10091-a-tale-of-two-elections /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10091-a-tale-of-two-elections {mosimage}If there is such a thing as election envy, and the degree of fascination Canadians have with Sen. Barack Obama suggests there may be an element of wistfulness if not outright envy, the difference between this fallƵapp Canadian election and the U.S. presidential race would surely provoke it.  

ItƵapp not just that the stakes are higher; being prime minister is a somewhat less exalted and demanding role than U.S. president. It is as if the response to higher stakes seems to be an elevated discourse, an appreciation that politicians shouldn’t just be about tactical considerations but should also be concerned with fundamental values. It also encompasses a notion that political decisions might actually touch on issues of who we are as well as what we might do this fiscal quarter.
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Guest Columns Thu, 23 Oct 2008 01:11:28 -0400
We are all exiles /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10090-we-are-all-exiles /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10090-we-are-all-exiles {mosimage}The appearance of a new Ron Hansen novel is always the occasion for careful scrutiny and delicious pleasure. He is the finest contemporary Catholic fiction writer in the United States, in my view (sorry Anne Rice), and his latest — — is one of his finest.

The author of several novels of inventive power and historical elasticity (HitlerƵapp Niece, Mariette in Ecstasy and The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford), Hansen delights in mixing historical fact with possibility, religious feeling with erotic need, saintly endeavour with the cold winds of reason.
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Guest Columns Mon, 20 Oct 2008 02:06:49 -0400
Blinded by science /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10093-blinded-by-science /opinion/guest-columnists/item/10093-blinded-by-science {mosimage}The cheapest shot against scientists, who rail loudly and at length against religious believers, is that they are scientific fundamentalists. ItƵapp a cheap shot simply because science is supposed to be open, inquiring, rational and devoted to truth wherever it is to be found.

So when scientists set out to act like fundamentalists and do so in the manner of the Inquisition, the first reaction has to be disbelief. The second has to be a sober look at the growing phenomenon of scientific fundamentalism.
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Guest Columns Fri, 10 Oct 2008 05:35:29 -0400