EVERY KNEE SHALL BOW AND EVERY TONGUE CONFESS … (Ph 2:10-11)

EVERY KNEE SHALL BOW AND EVERY TONGUE CONFESS … (Ph 2:10-11)

Martin Luther King’s speeches gave release to the yearnings of a people for freedom from a tortuous history of oppression in the United States. The martyrdom of the poor and their church leaders in Latin America helped to bring down structures that kept the rich, rich and the poor, poor.

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From Ireland to Paraguay, and back

From Ireland to Paraguay, and back

My arrival in Paraguay in 1986, shortly after my ordination in Dublin, coincided with the release of ‘The Mission’, a film about the Jesuit Reductions, in which Robert De Niro and Jeremy Irons heroically confront the injustices inflicted on the indigenous Guaraní people.

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Reconciliation: The Missing Link in Healing Africa

Reconciliation: The Missing Link in Healing Africa

I am deeply concerned about the way the International Criminal Court (ICC) has so far handled the Kenya case in which the President, Uhuru Kenyatta, and his Deputy, William Ruto, together with a journalist Joseph Sang, stand accused of bearing the greatest responsibility for the Kenya 2007-08 post-election violence.

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Sharing the road with refugees

Sharing the road with refugees

My work with refugees has led me back to a personal experience of loss. When I was a child, my family had a farm in Saguenay region (East Quebec), and later on we had to move to the city.

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A Migrant Accompanying Migrants

A Migrant Accompanying Migrants

From the moment I was assigned to study theology in Brazil, I knew that it was going to be a challenge: a new culture, a new language, a new way of being Jesuit. And I wasn’t wrong. The first months were difficult and unsettling.

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Synergy : Educating Migrant Children, Caring for Mother Earth

Synergy : Educating Migrant Children, Caring for Mother Earth

As an earnest young scholastic, and later, as a young priest in Gujarat Province, India, I was reflecting on how to make my commitment more meaningful, in keeping with the magis, 'the fire' of a Jesuit. Finding meaning in my call and articulating it in my own way has been a long struggle.

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MANAGING A SOCIAL INITIATIVE – MY REFLECTIONS

MANAGING A SOCIAL INITIATIVE – MY REFLECTIONS

I have been involved in the broadly defined social apostolate from the time I studied philosophy during formation. I worked in a shelter for homeless women in Krakow, and later did my regency at the Jesuit Refugee Service in Berlin.

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Encountering God at Angola Prison

Encountering God at Angola Prison

In April, as part of a three-week seminar on Catholic social teaching, my Jesuit novitiate visited the Louisiana State Penitentiary, better known as Angola Prison. Though in the past I worked for a program that assists recently released prisoners, until this day, I had not interacted with the permanently incarcerated.

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Hanging in with the exiled

Hanging in with the exiled

In the social justice nest I am a cuckoo that leaves its egg and flies away. My ministry has been to teach theology, and more lately to write for Jesuit publications and for Jesuit Social Services.

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Learning from Our Companions

Learning from Our Companions

Bonfim is a small city in the state of Roraima, Brazil, near the border with Guyana. A group of Jesuits has been living there five years now, learning to work with the poor. Of the city's 15,000 inhabitants half are indigenous, mostly Wapixana and to a lesser extent Macuxi.

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