Archive for September 2011

Mercy Home for Boys and Girls Receives Award

Mercy Home for Boys & Girls was honored by the readers of Catholic Digest, a nationally-distributed magazine that explores the work of faith and God in our everyday lives.

Each year, Catholic Digest readers choose a Catholic charitable organization to receive the annual “Love Your Neighbor Award.” This award recognizes the invaluable work of Catholic charities around the world and is accompanied by a $5,000 cash gift. We are so grateful that readers chose Mercy Home for this year’s honor.

The magazine’s monthly “Love Your Neighbor” section spotlights charities that are making a difference those in need, told often through the personal stories of those who have been impacted. In 2006, “Love Your Neighbor” shared the story of Mercy Home alumna, Kristina. Last August, Catholic Digest revisited her story for an update. Kristina continues to flourish and is preparing to serve her adopted country in the United States Army.

The magazine also featured another youth in 2008. Many thanks to Catholic Digest, to its faithful readers, and to editor Julie Rattey, who has been so kind in sharing the challenges and triumphs of our young people. We are also very grateful to Kristina for bravely sharing her story in order to give back and help us raise more friends and supporters of this life-saving mission.


http://www.mercyhome.org/blog/2011/09/28/catholic-digest-reader-vote-love-mercy-home/

Wangari Maathai dies at 71; Kenyan environmentalist

Wangari Maathai, a Kenyan environmentalist who made it her mission to teach her countrywomen to plant trees and became Africa's first female Nobel Peace Prize winner, has died. She was 71.

One of Kenya's most beloved figures, Maathai died Sunday after a yearlong battle with cancer. Her illness was not widely known until after her death in a Nairobi hospital.

Maathai won the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize for her work on sustainable development, democracy and peace. She believed that environmental degradation and unbridled development were among the roots of poverty.

"You cannot protect the environment unless you empower people, you inform them, and you help them understand that these resources are their own, that they must protect them," Maathai said on the website of the environmental movement she founded, the Green Belt Movement.

She started the group in 1977, encouraging poor women to collect native tree seeds in the wild, cultivate them and set up tree nurseries for a livelihood, paying them a small sum for any trees they planted. One aim was to ensure that poor families had access to sustainable firewood for cooking and water for drinking.

"I came to understand that when the environment is destroyed, plundered or mismanaged, we undermine our quality of life and that of future generations," she said in a speech accepting the Nobel Peace Prize."  Tree planting became a natural choice to address some of the initial basic needs identified by women.

Also, tree planting is simple, attainable and guarantees quick, successful results within a reasonable amount of time."

She soon realized it was useless to struggle for environmental improvements without having democratic, accountable government, and her movement embraced human rights and democratic issues.

All her life, she battled government corruption and corporations that put profits and development ahead of the interests of the population.

She was a thorn in the side of the government of Daniel arap Moi in the 1980s and '90s, and was arrested for treason, harassed and beaten several times.

She also exasperated her husband, who divorced Maathai in 1979, reportedly complaining that she was "too educated, too strong, too successful, too stubborn and too hard to control."

Maathai issued scathing remarks about the Western consumer culture, which she said was unsustainable because it was based on the rich few consuming more and more at the expense of the poorest people in developing countries.

When she accepted the Nobel Peace Prize, Maathai said she drew her inspiration from her childhood in a rural Kenyan village in the central highlands.

"As I was growing up, I witnessed forests being cleared and replaced by commercial plantations, which destroyed local biodiversity and the capacity of the forests to conserve water," she said.

"My fellow Africans, as we embrace this recognition, let us use it to intensify our commitment to our people, to reduce conflicts and poverty, and thereby improve their quality of life. Let us embrace democratic governance, protect human rights and protect our environment," she said, adding that Africa must solve its own problems.

Born April 1, 1940, Maathai grew up in rural Kenya and received a scholarship to study at Mount St. Scholastica College in Atchison, Kan., where she majored in biology, graduating in 1964.

She went on to study for her master's degree at the University of Pittsburgh. She was inspired by a group of environmental activists pushing for clean-air regulations, her first view of environmental activism. She also studied in Germany, returning to the University of Nairobi in 1969 to complete her doctorate, the first Kenyan woman to earn such a degree.

Under Moi's increasingly autocratic government, with corruption rampant, Maathai angered the government from the president down, with protests against unbridled development.
Moi called her "a madwoman" and said she threatened Kenya's security.

In 1989, she successfully led protests against the construction of a 60-story building in Nairobi's Uhuru Park. In 1992, she and other members of a pro-democracy group were arrested and charged with treason.

The charges were dropped after intense international pressure.

The same year, she was arrested during a hunger strike demanding the release of political prisoners. She lost consciousness when police beat her on the head, sparking international condemnation. Early the next year, the political prisoners were freed.

In 2002 she was elected to parliament as part of the opposition Rainbow Coalition that defeated the ruling Kenya African National Union party. She served as deputy minister for the environment and natural resources but was defeated in 2007, after one term.

But she continued to press for improvements in democracy, accountability and human rights across Africa.

"Time and again, post-independence African governments have been unprincipled or blatantly corrupt, beholden to only a small set of cronies or elites," she wrote in a commentary for The Times in 2009.

"Too many in leadership positions have plundered national resources, persecuted political rivals and citizens who dared to question their actions, and even stoked violence within and across national borders, all the while crushing the hopes of ordinary citizens to make an honest living. Few have consented to share power freely or supported development of a vibrant civil society."

When Kenya's 2010 constitution was being drafted, she and the Green Belt Movement successfully pressed for the inclusion of a clause guaranteeing Kenyans the right to a clean and healthy environment.

She campaigned on climate change and often expressed anger that decades after she began her environmental movement, activities that threatened the environment and the planet's future went on unabated.

"In the course of history, there comes a time when humanity is called to shift to a new level of consciousness, to reach a higher moral ground. A time when we have to shed our fear and give hope to each other," she said in her speech accepting the Nobel Prize.

Survivors include three children and a grandchild.

robyn.dixon@latimes.com

The Execution of Troy Davis

We pray for all involved - for Mark MacPhail and his family, for Troy Davis and his family, and we pray for an end to the death penalty.

“Even when people deny the dignity of others, we must still recognize that their dignity is a gift from God and is not something that is earned or lost through their behavior. Respect for life applies to all, even the perpetrators of terrible acts. Punishment should be consistent with the demands of justice and with respect for human life and dignity.” - United States Conference of Catholic Bishops


---

Troy was found guilty of murdering a police officer 19 years ago, based upon the testimony of 9 witnesses. Today, 7 of those 9 have recanted their testimony entirely, and there are enormous problems with the testimony of the remaining 2 witness accounts. There is NO OTHER EVIDENCE. The murder weapon was never found. There is no DNA to test. Troy is scheduled to die by lethal injection on September 21, 2011.  (Below is a message from Troy Davis.)



To All:

I want to thank all of you for your efforts and dedication to Human Rights and Human Kindness, in the past year I have experienced such emotion, joy, sadness and never ending faith. It is because of all of you that I am alive today, as I look at my sister Martina I am marveled by the love she has for me and of course I worry about her and her health, but as she tells me she is the eldest and she will not back down from this fight to save my life and prove to the world that I am innocent of this terrible crime.

As I look at my mail from across the globe, from places I have never ever dreamed I would know about and people speaking languages and expressing cultures and religions I could only hope to one day see first hand. I am humbled by the emotion that fills my heart with overwhelming, overflowing Joy. I can’t even explain the insurgence of emotion I feel when I try to express the strength I draw from you all, it compounds my faith and it shows me yet again that this is not a case about the death penalty, this is not a case about Troy Davis, this is a case about Justice and the Human Spirit to see Justice prevail.

I cannot answer all of your letters but I do read them all, I cannot see you all but I can imagine your faces, I cannot hear you speak but your letters take me to the far reaches of the world, I cannot touch you physically but I feel your warmth everyday I exist.

So Thank you and remember I am in a place where execution can only destroy your physical form but because of my faith in God, my family and all of you I have been spiritually free for some time and no matter what happens in the days, weeks to come, this Movement to end the death penalty, to seek true justice, to expose a system that fails to protect the innocent must be accelerated. There are so many more Troy Davis’. This fight to end the death penalty is not won or lost through me but through our strength to move forward and save every innocent person in captivity around the globe. We need to dismantle this Unjust system city by city, state by state and country by country.

I can’t wait to Stand with you, no matter if that is in physical or spiritual form, I will one day be announcing,

“I AM TROY DAVIS, and I AM FREE!”

Never Stop Fighting for Justice and We will Win!


http://road2justice.wordpress.com/2011/09/20/a-message-from-troy-davis/

Seeds of Service - Volunteer Reflections Needed

Who We Are

My name is Christina Gebel. I did two years of volunteer service with the Amate House program in Chicago working at a small, all-female Catholic high school on Chicago's southwest side. A fellow volunteer, Esther Pomranky, and I had a conversation which led to an idea for a collection of stories from other volunteers. We've contacted you in hopes that you will help us make contact with volunteers from your organization who may be interested in contributing.
 
 
Our Search

Our goal is to publish a collective memoir of volunteers who have participated in faith-based service programs in the last twenty years. This project began with a poignant conversation about the value and impact of service programs here in the United States. We love, respect and value those volunteers who commit themselves to international service and have been excited to read stories of those volunteers’ experiences. When it comes to domestic service, however, it seems that few firsthand accounts of service here in the United States have been published. Our own rewarding experiences in a faith based service program prompted us to want to have a print space for sharing these stories.


We have chosen to center our publication around the theme of growth. It is our hope that images of seeds and growth in urban and rural settings will mirror the growth volunteers experienced throughout their time of service.
 
 
More Information

We've created a blog with further information, including submission requirements and deadlines. Would you be willing to pass this website along to current and former volunteers in your organization?


http://seeds-of-service.blogspot.com


I'd love to have a conversation with you and provide you with more information if you'd like. My contact information is listed below.


Thanks!
Christina Gebel
Email: seedsofservice@gmail.com

Jesuit Volunteer Corps is Hiring

General Summary: The Development Assistant will be responsible for the coordination of specific fundraising initiatives and for carrying out clerical and support functions within the department. S/he will ensure that all data is transcribed according to procedures established by the Department, provide effective organization within the office regarding scheduling, filing, copying, collecting data, running reports, and gathering information.


Accountability: Reports to Associate Director of Development


Principal Duties and Responsibilities

Data entry
• Follow established procedures in processing all gifts and checks and inputting required information into database

• Process all letters and correspondence pertaining to donor acknowledgement (schedule revisions for acknowledgments at times throughout the year, varying our language as is appropriate).  Keep an online donation log in Excel to be given to the Director of Finance on a monthly basis

• Scan all donation related mail and attach it to the relevant records in the fundraising database


Fundraising
• Coordinate all aspects of the parish mission appeals, including communication with identified parishes, scheduling appeals with church pastors and with FJVs or others who will speak at the masses Coordinate all aspects of the combined federal campaign and state campaigns and take the necessary actions to ensure all paperwork is completed in a timely manner

• Assist with the logistics for events, such as handling RSVPs, fielding inquiries regarding the event and working with vendors


Departmental tasks
• Serve as departmental contact for general development inquiries and routing them to the appropriate person for effective response

• Assist donors in a pleasant and professional manner with questions related to events and donations

• Update the organization-wide calendar with Advancement meetings and events

• Prepare reports for management as required

• Participate as team member in offering suggestions for improvement of department functions; performing other duties as assigned or as seen to be necessary.


Requirements

Education
• High school diploma, some college preferred

Experience
• 2-3 years of work experience in a professional, administrative setting

• Experience working with a database preferred

Knowledge, Skills, Abilities
• Highly organized, efficient, mature and a team player

• Ability to work under pressure and manage multiple ongoing deadlines

• Strong customer service skills

• Attention to detail

• Knowledge of Microsoft office required.


Working Conditions

• Typical work day of 9am to 5pm

• Large amounts of office work; must have the physical ability to sit and stand for long periods of time and perform daily activities from a desk and must be able to operate a computer and other office equipment

• Given office layout, the ability to climb two flights of stairs several times a day

A Time for Remembrance, Resolve and Renewal: Statement on the Tenth Anniversary of 9/11

Archbishop Timothy Dolan President, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops

September 8, 2011

As we commemorate the tenth anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks in New York, Shanksville, Pennsylvania, and at the Pentagon, it is a time for remembrance, resolve and renewal.

We reverently recall those who were most directly affected by this tragedy—those who died, were injured or lost loved ones.  In a special way we recall the selfless first responders—firefighters, police, chaplains, emergency workers, and other brave persons—who risked, and many times lost, their lives in their courageous efforts to save others.

We also remember how our nation responded to the terrifying events of that day—we turned to prayer, and then turned to one another to offer help and support.  Hands were folded in prayer and opened in service to those who had lost so much.

We resolve today and always to reject hatred and resist terrorism.  The greatest resource we have in these struggles is faith.  Ten years ago our Conference of Bishops issued a Pastoral Message, Living with Faith and Hope after September 11, which drew on the rich resources of our Catholic faith to minister to our nation and world.  The truth of that Pastoral Message still resonates today.

A decade later we remain resolved to reject extreme ideologies that perversely misuse religion to justify indefensible attacks on innocent civilians, to embrace persons of all religions, including our Muslim neighbors, and to welcome refugees seeking safety.  We steadfastly refrain from blaming the many for the actions of a few and insist that security needs can be reconciled with our immigrant heritage without compromising either one.  Gratefully mindful of the continuing sacrifices of the men and women in our armed forces, and their families, we also resolve to bring a responsible end to the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq.

This tenth anniversary of 9/11 can be a time of renewal.  Ten years ago we came together across religious, political, social and ethnic lines to stand as one people to heal wounds and defend against terrorism.  As we face today's challenges of people out of work, families struggling, and the continuing dangers of wars and terrorism, let us summon the 9/11 spirit of unity to confront our challenges.  Let us pray that the lasting legacy of 9/11 is not fear, but rather hope for a world renewed.

In remembering the fateful events of September 11, 2001, may we resolve to put aside our differences and join together in the task of renewing our nation and world.  Let us make our own the prayer of Pope Benedict XVI when he visited Ground Zero in New York in 2008:


O God of love, compassion, and healing,
look on us, people of many different faiths and traditions,
who gather today at this site,
the scene of incredible violence and pain.

God of understanding,
overwhelmed by the magnitude of this tragedy,
we seek your light and guidance
as we confront such terrible events.

Grant that those whose lives were spared
may live so that the lives lost here
may not have been lost in vain.

Comfort and console us,
strengthen us in hope,
and give us the wisdom and courage
to work tirelessly for a world
where true peace and love reign
among nations and in the hearts of all.
 
 
http://www.usccb.org/issues-and-action/human-life-and-dignity/september-11/9-11-tenth-anniversary-statement.cfm

Serve on September 11

United We Serve - September 11th National Day of Service and Remembrance

For most Americans, September 11th is a day of complicated emotions. It may recall painful memories and heart-breaking images. But it should also remind us of the patriotic pride and resilient American spirit that shined that day.


September 11th National Day of Service and Remembrance is a way to pay tribute to those who were lost and to honor the heroes who answered the call to serve on that day and in the weeks and months that followed.

As the September 11th National Day of Service and Remembrance approaches, we want to share this new public service announcement by First Lady Michelle Obama.

In it, she calls on Americans to remember the spirit of unity and compassion that bound all of us together and asks Americans to visit Serve.gov to find ways to pay tribute to the heroes of September 11.
 
 




Watch the PSA and share with your friends, family and networks to encourage them to honor the victims and heroes of September 11th through not only words, but deeds as well.

Interested in Service?

Responding to the Call of Service

What you need to know about full-time volunteering

There are a lot of factors to consider when choosing a full-time service program. The good news is that Catholic Volunteer Network is here to help you through that process! During these interactive, web-based workshops we will cover the most commonly asked questions about full-time service and you will be able to hear from recent volunteers about their own service experience. We will also provide ample time for Q&A at the end of each session.

Our first session will be an overview of faith-based service for those that are beginning to discern if full-time volunteering is right for them. The second session will focus on international service programs.

Each session will last approximately 30 minutes. Pre-registration is required.


What You Need to Know About Full-Time Volunteering
September 6, 2011
5:30 – 6:00pm EDT
To register for this session, visit:
https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/788116184


What You Need to Know About International Service
September 22, 2011
5:30 – 6:00pm EDT
To register for this session, visit:
https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/742254664

Guadalupe Radio Network Happy Hour!

If you're in the Washington, DC area, support our friends at...

Guadalupe Radio Network

Invites you to a Happy Hour with
WMET 1160 AM
 
Thursday, September 8, 2011
6:00 – 8:00
Fire Station One

8131 Georgia Ave
Silver Spring, MD 20910

Join us for a great evening. Tickets are $20.00 for advance purchase or $25.00 at the door.
Purchase tickets online at www.grnonline.com or call 877-636-1160.