Showing posts with label Chicago. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicago. Show all posts

Friday, April 17, 2015

Chicago Cardinal Francis George, the ‘American Ratzinger,’ dies | Crux

 

During an era under Popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI, when Catholicism was trying to swim against an increasingly secular tide in the Western world, Cardinal Francis George of Chicago was the American prelate trusted by those two popes, almost above all others, to spearhead that project in the United States.

George, who stepped down in November 2014, died at 10:45 a.m. Friday at his residence in Chicago of a cancer that originated in his bladder but spread to other parts of his body, rendering treatment ineffective. He was 78.

He had been on home care since April 3 after being hospitalized for hydration and pain management issues, according to the Chicago Tribune.

Widely acknowledged as the most intellectually gifted senior US prelate of his generation, George was once dubbed the “American Ratzinger.”

Like German Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who became Pope Benedict XVI, George’s clear and strongly stated positions on issues such as abortion, contraception, and the Catholic liturgy could be either celebrated or reviled — and he drew both reactions, repeatedly — but they could never be ignored.

George’s abiding passion was the relationship between faith and culture, and especially the urgency of a “New Evangelization,” meaning a new missionary zeal in Catholicism

Chicago Cardinal Francis George, the ‘American Ratzinger,’ dies | Crux

Boiler backstory on Chicago nuns left without heat | abc7chicago.com

Note the Marengo connection.

Wednesday, March 04, 2015

CHICAGO (WLS) --

In an exclusive report, the ABC7 I-Team looked into a small religious order in Chicago that has been all over the news lately after some nuns received public donations for a new heating system at their West Side church.
Nuns from a French religious order called Fraternite of Notre Dame last month were on Chicago TV - including ABC7 - describing how their heat broke down. The public has now contributed about a quarter of a million dollars to fix their boilers.
But since then, the I-Team has received questions about the order's standing in the Catholic Church and why it needs donations when it owns millions of dollars of property in McHenry County.
When word got out that these nuns who feed the poor were shivering through Chicago's record-cold February, they were invited onto TV and two internet funds were set up for contributions, now totaling more than $232,000. As the donations soared, the I-Team received viewer questions about 90-acres owned by the order behind an iron gate in Marengo.
"When they have millions of dollars in property here and now they are expanding and wanting to add a brewery and a winery and gift shop and school and all of those things and I couldn't understand why they couldn't afford to fix their church and why other people had to be responsible for that," said Judy Link, a Marengo resident.
A week before the boilers quit at the nuns' "motherhouse" on Chicago's West Side, the order filed this zoning permit request in McHenry County.
According to the request filed February 11, the order wants to build and operate a school with an attached dormitory; a nursing home with hospice, a commercial kitchen with facilities to brew beer and process grapes for wine; a gift shop and tasting area.
"When regular people want to build something they wait until they have a million dollars in the checking account, us we are different, by people see what we do," Sister Marie Valerie said with a heavy French accent during an interview with the I-Team. "We have some blue print people, an architect, doing their times, that gentleman wants to stay anonymous, he does a lot of work for us. This is how we start," said Sister Marie Valerie, who is the treasurer for Fraternite of Notre Dame.
It is the start of an ambitious construction project in rural Marengo on these 65 acres bought for about $2.5 million in 2003, and another 30 acres bought since then.
According to public records, the order has purchased land and homes worth more than $3 million in nearby Huntley, Harvard, southern Wisconsin and New York. An unknown amount was already spent on these grounds adorned by statues and a chapel that features an ornate altar.
"It took us two years and a half to build it. Most of the equipment and material was donated," Sister Marie Valerie said. "We built with our own hands."
Much of the work is documented in numerous videos on the order's website.
"A benefactor help us with down payment but every month we have to pay for our own mortgage so it's not easy," Sister Marie Valerie said.
The nuns - who say they receive no salary - insist that any new McHenry County project would be funded by donations, but not the money donated for the boilers in Chicago.
"All the money we got for the boiler, all the money we got from GoFundMe, all that money stay here to our feeding program in Chicago," Sister Marie Valerie said.
Residents who opposed the order's first expansion 10 years ago say they are mobilizing again to stop the new project.
"They're very secretive. We kept asking them where they got their money from because that was an expensive piece of property, it was $2 million I think, and they just said 'investments'," Link said.
The nuns call themselves a "traditional Catholic religious order" and some donors may believe that the organization is approved by the Vatican, but it isn't.
According to a spokesperson for the Chicago Archdiocese, the order's founder Bishop Jean Marie Roger Kozik "is not a legitimately ordained bishop in the Roman Catholic Church," and, Kozik says, is not a priest in good standing with the church. Because of that, the archdiocese says "Catholics should not attend mass" at the order's West Side church. And they say the nuns are not a religious order associated with the Roman Catholic Church.
"We are a new order. We want to be with the Vatican. We want to be with the Archdiocese. We are working on it and took some steps to be with the Vatican," Sister Marie Valerie said.
The Archdiocese does say that the nuns are "good people of faith who do important work for the poor."
Bishop Kozik began the order in 1977 in France after reporting the Virgin Mary spoke to him. Now he lives - at least part-time - in Marengo. Kozik did not reply to the I-Team's requests for an interview.
There are numerous organizations like his around the world that describe themselves as a "traditional Catholic order" that follow older Catholic practices, but are not recognized by the Vatican.
As for the zoning board hearing, the order of nuns asked that it be moved to April 9.

Boiler backstory on Chicago nuns left without heat | abc7chicago.com

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Gay music director fired after becoming ‘engaged’ to partner sues Catholic parish, pastor | News | LifeSite

 

The former choir director of a Chicago-area Catholic church is suing the parish and its pastor for firing him after learning he planned to participate in a homosexual “marriage.”

Colin Collette filed suit December 4 against Holy Family Parish in Inverness and Father Terry Keehan. The complaint was filed with the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Cook County Commission on Human Rights.

"It saddens me to have this integral part of my life taken away because I have chosen to enter into a marriage, as is my right under Illinois law," Collette said.

In July of this year Holy Family Pastor Father Keehan asked Collette to resign after learning Colette had become “engaged” to his male partner. Collette refused and was subsequently fired.

Collette alleged at the time it was Cardinal Francis George, then archbishop of Chicago, who pressured Father Keehan to fire him, saying Father Keehan had been aware of his relationship and had been to dinner with him and his partner.

He subsequently requested to meet with Cardinal George. The two met September 9, and Collette described the meeting as “spiritual.”

“It was wonderful, he was very pastoral in this moment,” Collette told NBC Chicago. “The cardinal and I had a wonderful conversation, and a conversation that I hope will continue.”

Prior to the meeting Cardinal George had said of the matter, “It was his (Collette’s) decision that caused this crisis.”

The Archdiocese of Chicago told LifeSiteNews it has not seen the complaints that Collette has filed with civil authorities and so is unable to comment on them.

“We will respond to the complaints in the forums in which they are filed at the appropriate time,” Archdiocesan Media Relations Director Susan Burritt said.

At the time of Collette’s firing the archdiocese said that individuals involved in Church ministries are obliged to adhere to Church teaching in public.

“Those that serve as Ministers of the Church, including worship ministers, are expected to conform their lives publicly with the teachings of the Church,” the diocese said in a statement. “Pastors hire and dismiss all parish personnel and govern according to the teachings of the Church and Archdiocesan policies. This is a matter of personal integrity on their part."

Collette’s lawyer Kerry Lavelle said the courts will make the determination of whether Illinois’ 2013 homosexual marriage law would impact the Catholic Church.

Ranjit Hakim, executive director of the Cook County Human Rights Commission, told The Christian Post he could not comment on the case because of the commission’s role as a forum in which the case has been filed, but that that they "will conduct an independent investigation of the charges," as well as, "if necessary, hold an administrative hearing."

Collette’s firing is one of a few recent instances where local Church leadership has upheld Church teaching by removing employees living in contradiction of Catholic morals.

The Church teaches that “those with homosexual tendencies should be accepted with respect, compassion and sensitivity,” but also that, “under no circumstances” can homosexual acts be approved.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church states as well that “homosexual persons are called to chastity.”

Gay music director fired after becoming ‘engaged’ to partner sues Catholic parish, pastor | News | LifeSite

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Cupich calls Obama action on immigration a 'first step' - Chicago Tribune

 

Cupich, who met privately with the president Tuesday in Chicago, said the Archdiocesan Office of Immigrant Affairs and Immigration Education, the first and only office of its kind in the American Catholic Church, will prepare parishioners to assist immigrants in surrounding communities to take full advantage of Obama's action.

"This is a time for momentary celebration, a time to give thanks for a first step toward immigration reform for all of those who are being granted this relief," Cupich said in a statement. "It is also a time to mobilize our communities to assist in helping those affected by the President's actions to realize the full benefit of what is being offered."

Read the entire story by clicking on the following:  Cupich calls Obama action on immigration a 'first step' - Chicago Tribune

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Jeff Anderson, Attorney at Law, Indexes Archdiocese’s abuse cases

Below is taken from:  http://www.andersonadvocates.com/Archdiocese-of-Chicago-Documents.aspx   If any of the links do not work go to that source.

Archdiocese of Chicago Documents

* Files released by the Archdiocese of Chicago on November 6, 2014
Searchable files obtained from Bishop Accountability

Priest Files

Baranowski, Alexander Sylvester *
Timeline

Bartz, Richard Barry *
Timeline

Becker, Robert C.
Timeline

Bennett, Joseph R.
Timeline

Bogdan, Leonard Adolph *
Timeline

Bowman, Robert Peter *
Timeline

Braun, David Francis *
Timeline

Brigham, Kenneth.
Timeline

Buck, Daniel Peter *
Timeline

Burns, Eugene Patrick *
Timeline

Calicott, John Walter *
Timeline

Cloutier, William J.
Timeline

Craig, Robert D.
Timeline

Curran, John
Timeline

Czajka, Norman J. *
Timeline

DeRoeck, Walter George *
Timeline

Dilla, Francis Emil *
Timeline

Fassbinder, Richard Wayne *
Timeline

Fitzharris, Joseph L.
Timeline

Flosi, James Vincent *
Timeline

Friese, Robert *
Timeline

Garza, Jesus P. *
Timeline

Hagan, James C.
Timeline

Hefferan, John Edward *
Timeline

Hoder, James *
Timeline

Hogan, Michael J. *
Timeline

Holihan, Daniel M.
Timeline

Huppenbauer, Walter Edward *
Timeline

Job, Thomas J.
Timeline

Kealy, Robert Louis *
Timeline

Keehan, John James *
Timeline

Kelly, Thomas F.
Timeline

Keough, John Joseph *
Timeline

Kissane, Joseph P.
Timeline

Kmak, Leonard Paul *
Timeline

Lupo, William L. *
Timeline

Maday, Norbet J.
Timeline

Mayer, Robert E.
Timeline

McCaffrey, Vincent E.
Timeline

McDonald, Robert Joseph *
Timeline

McNamara, Peter John *
Timeline

Miller, Gary M. *
Timeline

Mulsoff, Donald John *
Timeline

O'Brien, William J.
Timeline

Owens, Joseph
Timeline

Pallakunnen, Emmanuel
Timeline

Ray, James M. *
Timeline

Robinson, John Allen *
Timeline

Rohrich, John F. *
Timeline

Romano, Russell L.
Timeline

Ruge, Kenneth C.
Timeline

Savage, Joseph E. *
Timeline

Skriba, Raymond
Timeline

Snieg, Marion J.
Timeline

Steel, James R.
Timeline

Stewart, Victor
Timeline

Strand, Ralph S.
Timeline

Swade, Thomas J.
Timeline

Swider, Henry P.
Timeline

Tanghal, Albert *
Timeline

Theisen, Richard Gregory *
Timeline

Thomas, Joseph S. *
Timeline

Turlo, Walter J.
Timeline

Ulatowski, Donald Francis
Timeline

Vader, Anthony Joseph *
Timeline

Weston, Michael
Timeline


Key Documents

Depositions

Priest Files


Search Contents of All Chicago Documents Below

 

Key Documents

Cardinal George's Knowledge of Abusive Priests:

Brigham, Kenneth
Maday, Norbet J.
Curran, John
Holihan, Daniel M.
McCormack, Daniel J.
Strand, Ralph S.
Bennett, Joseph R.

Priests Placed Back in Ministry Despite Danger to Minors:

Brigham, Kenneth.
O'Brien, William J.
Skriba, Raymond
Mayer, Robert E.
Curran, John
Cloutier, William J.
Hagan, James C.

Fitzharris, Joseph L.
Becker, Robert C.
Snieg, Marion J.
Holihan, Daniel M.
Job, Thomas J.
McCormack, Daniel J.
Swider, Henry P.

McCaffrey, Vincent E.
Romano, Russell L.
Ruge, Kenneth C.
Stewart, Victor
Strand, Ralph S.
Swade, Thomas J.
Weston, Michael

Priests Criminally Convicted for Abuse of Minors:

Maday, Norbet J.
Fitzharris, Joseph L.
McCaffrey, Vincent E.
Mayer, Robert E.
Strand, Ralph S.

Reasons for Removal of or Restrictions on Predator Priests Other than Abuse of Minors:

Skriba, Raymond

Swade, Thomas J.

Laicized Priests:

Job, Thomas J.
Holihan, Daniel M.
Weston, Michael
Fitzharris, Joseph L.

Hagan, James C.

Steel, James R.

Abusive Priests whom Cardinal George or Cardinal Bernardin Chose Not to Laicize:

Curran, John

Maday, Norbet J.

O'Brien, William J.

Ruge, Kenneth C.

Skriba, Raymond F.

Bennett, Joseph R.

Archdiocese of Chicago Documents

Monday, September 22, 2014

"The Pope Gave This Man A Promotion And He Could Dramatically Change The Focus Of The Catholic Church" Share:

"The Pope Gave This Man A Promotion And He Could Dramatically Change The Focus Of The Catholic Church"

 

Bishop Blase Cupich.

CREDIT: AP

by Jack Jenkins Posted on September 21, 2014 at 3:02 pm

 

The Archdiocese of Chicago announced on Saturday that Pope Francis has named Bishop Blase Cupich, a moderate bridge-builder with a history of supporting many progressive-leaning positions, as the next archbishop of Chicago. The Nebraska native will be replacing a highly political — and deeply conservative — bishop, and could potentially usher in a new era of American Catholic leadership that spends less time fighting culture wars and more time echoing the populist leadership of Pope Francis.

The move might not seem like much to a non-Catholic, but the elevation of Cupich represents a significant change in tone for the Catholic church in America. Politically and theologically speaking, the 65-year-old Cupich, who will be leaving behind his position as Bishop of Spokane, is notably different from his predecessor, Cardinal Francis George, on several counts. George, who is currently fighting cancer, has enjoyed prominence among Catholic conservatives for his hard-line stance against abortion and marriage equality, but has often stoked controversy for how he expresses his views: in 2011, George compared organizers of the Chicago Pride Parade to the Ku Klux Klan, and recently wrote that being a Catholic citizen under a pro-gay, pro-choice government is akin to living under Shariah law.

Cupich, by contrast, is the very embodiment of a Catholic moderate. When the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) publicly opposed the Affordable Care Act in 2010, he expressed skepticism about their confrontational approach, preferring a deeper dialogue with President Obama’s administration about the issue of Catholic institutions providing contraception to employees. Similarly, when serving as the bishop of Spokane, Washington during the state’s battle over marriage equality, Cupich published a pastoral letter that defended the church’s opposition to same-sex marriage while also condemning anti-gay bullying, saying it was wrong to “incite hostility towards homosexual persons or promote an agenda that is hateful and disrespectful of their human dignity.” He has also frustrated many pro-life activists by reportedly privately asking priests and seminarians in Spokane not to pray in front of Planned Parenthood abortion clinics, arguing that such actions were unnecessarily provocative, according to Crux.

So why should anyone care that Cupich is the new head of the Catholic church in Chicago? From a practical perspective, Cupich’s promotion could signal a change in how the Catholic church in the United States impacts governmental policy. As a well-funded and highly organized messaging machine, the USCCB regularly wades into national policy debates, having weighed in on the aforementioned battle over the Affordable Care Act (they opposed it), various state-level vote on marriage equality (they’re against it), and the recent battle over comprehensive immigration reform (they’re for it). Lifting up people like Cupich, however, makes it far more likely that Catholic leaders in the United States will be proactive in following Francis’ lead — that is, avoiding most public culture war battles, which Francis says the church is too “obsessed” with, and refocusing their profound resources on a broader understanding of “pro-life” that includes serving the poor and the marginalized.

“Pope Francis sent a clear message to an American hierarchy that has lost its way fighting the culture wars in recent years,” said John Gehring, Catholic program director at Faith in Public Life, a progressive advocacy group in Washington, told ThinkProgress. “It signals that pastoral leadership, the search for common ground and a broader pro-life vision must be the new guideposts. The Francis agenda is now anchored in a city that has long been a powerhouse of American Catholicism. This could be a game changer.”

In addition, from a global Catholic perspective, it is well known that the most effective way for a pope to impact the future of the church is to appoint like-minded bishops. To be sure, Pope Francis, who has miffed some conservatives for insisting that the church shift its focus away from decrying abortion and same-sex marriage and towards issues such as poverty, climate change, and immigrant rights, has found a kindred spirit in Cupich. In addition to his moderate positions listed above, Cupich wrote in June that economic inequality is “a powder keg that is as dangerous as the environmental crisis the world is facing today,” and reaffirmed his position on immigration during his press conference on Saturday, saying, “I don’t want to dance around the issue that we need comprehensive immigration reform.” In fact, so obvious is the mind-meld between Francis and Cupich that Catholic news outlets are already referring to him as the “American Pope Francis.”

Thus, the more people like Cupich that Francis elevates to positions of power — and the more he fills the empty slots they leave behind with other bishops who share his views — the more likely it is that the Catholic church will carry on Francis’ vision long after he leaves the papacy. It is bishops (specifically Cardinals), after all, who usually become popes, primarily because they are the only ones eligible to vote for who gets the papacy. And it is popes like Francis that have profound impacts on global politics, including here in the United States.

Of course, it remains to be seen how Cupich will operate in his new position, and he’s faced with a steep learning curve: whereas his previous position in Spokane oversaw 90,000 Catholics and 82 parishes, the Chicago archdiocese boasts a whopping 350 parishes and 2.2 million Catholics. Leading such a huge institution will undoubtedly have its pitfalls, and Chicago is known for taking a toll on its leaders, be they political or religious.

Then again, no one expected that much from Pope Francis either, and it stands to reason that Cupich — and possibly others like him — are primed to be the new face of a more moderate, less antagonistic brand of American Catholicism.

Above is from:  http://thinkprogress.org/home/2014/09/21/3570151/ope-francis-just-named-a-new-archbishop-of-chicago-heres-why-you-should-care/

Saturday, August 2, 2014

Rev. Pfleger wants guns banned from all archdiocese buildings

BY MICHAEL SNEED July 31, 2014 9:28PM

Pfleger, the firebrand pastor of one of the largest African-American Catholic congregations in Chicago, now wants guns banned from all buildings belonging to the archdiocese.

“Guns shouldn’t be in our churches,” said Pfleger, the combative pastor of St. Sabina who describes himself “as the only priest in the archdiocese to be suspended twice!”

“How can we be role models and a witness in the world if guns are in our buildings and offices — especially when gang crime is destroying our neighborhoods and when the CEO of a Loop company was shot in his office today by an employee, who then killed himself,” he tells Sneed.

Read the entire article by clicking on the following:  http://www.suntimes.com/news/sneed/28984488-452/sneed-exclusive-rev-pfleger-wants-guns-banned-from-all-archdiocese-buildings.html#.U9zOU410zIV

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Chicago Catholics to See Letter on Abuse This Sunday | NBC Chicago

 

By Mary Ann Ahern

Next week the Chicago Archdiocese will release the names and details of 30 priests involved in sexual misconduct, and the information will grace the bulletins for thousands of Catholics this weekend. The disclosures are part of a settlement agreement ongoing for years. The church notes that most of these cases are from 20 years ago.

Cardinal Francis George has written a letter to all priests under his supervision, and requested that his letter be published in this Sunday’s parish bulletins, hoping to get in front of what he explains will be the “the actual records of these crimes.”

“It will be helpful, we pray, for some," George said. "But painful for many.”

Click on the following for more details:  Chicago Catholics to See Letter on Abuse This Sunday | NBC Chicago

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Gay marriage in Illinois, and the Catholic Church's opposition - Greg Hinz - Crain's Chicago Business

 

In the first, and smaller, case, the bishop of the Springfield diocese last week called in police and vowed to bar the cathedral door to anyone who showed up with a gay rainbow sash for a threatened rosary protest, in which participants would say their Hail Marys and Our Fathers in a prayer for legal gay marriage in Illinois. Such activity would constitute “blasphemy,” disputing God's word in his own house, Bishop Thomas John Paprocki declared.

To the extent anyone was going to disrupt services—I know of no evidence of that—the bishop was perfectly correct. But calling the prayer itself “blasphemy” doesn't make sense. ….

ultimatum Cardinal George issued last summer to the Illinois Coalition on Immigrant and Refugee Rights. The group mostly is known for its views on U.S. immigration reform. But, for its own reasons, its board decided to endorse the gay-marriage bill. The archdiocese reacted by threatening to cut off hundreds of thousands of dollars in grants to 11 smallish community groups that are part of the coalition unless they quit the group

Read more of this article by clicking on the following:  https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/?shva=1#inbox/141f7a819a6d35db

Saturday, August 3, 2013

Cardinal George Defends CCHD Canceling Group’s Funds Over Same-Sex ‘Marriage’ | Daily News | NCRegister.com

by CNA/EWTN NEWS

Cardinal Francis George has defended the Churchʼs decision to cut off funds from a state immigrant coalition, and he accused its leaders of betraying both the Church and their own members by openly supporting the redefinition of marriage to include same-sex couples.

Cardinal George said that CCHD did so in order to not betray its donors. He said Catholics “give to this anti-poverty organization with the understanding that their money will be passed on to organizations that respect the teachings of the Catholic faith.”

An open letter published in the Chicago Tribune on July 29 had accused CCHD of “turning her back on the poor.”

Read more: http://www.ncregister.com/daily-news/cardinal-george-defends-cchd-canceling-groups-funds-over-same-sex/#ixzz2auFEF42P

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Chicago Cardinal George: no red carpet for Schüller | National Catholic Reporter

 

In fact, the ACP had not endorsed Schüller. The chair, Fr. Dennis Ziomek (acting on his own initiative), had merely notified those on his email list of the Austrian priest's willingness to talk. Meanwhile, the pastor of the parish where the conversation was to take place had already canceled the event at his church immediately upon learning that the auxiliary bishop of his vicariate was urgently trying to contact him. Fr. Dennis O'Neill, the pastor, then arranged for the meeting to take place instead at a nearby Presbyterian church.

So the event did take place, but because details were publicized so late, only seven priests attended: five from the Chicago archdiocese, two from Milwaukee

Click on the following for more details:  Chicago Cardinal George: no red carpet for Schüller | National Catholic Reporter

Friday, July 19, 2013

Chicago Cardinal Francis George should cancel appearance at Courage conference | National Catholic Reporter

Courage is going further -- much further. It is hosting two therapists, Bill Consiglio and Timothy Lock, affiliated with the National Association for Research and Therapy of Homosexuality (NARTH), a group that promotes the view that homosexuality is a disorder that can be cured. Consiglio and Lock offer seminars for clergy and mental health providers

Regardless of the Roman Catholic hierarchy's teachings on homosexuality, Cardinal George should dissociate himself from these bogus and harmful medical techniques.

Click on the following to read the entire articleChicago Cardinal Francis George should cancel appearance at Courage conference | National Catholic Reporter

Friday, July 5, 2013

Attorneys Question Chicago’s Cardinal George For Hours About Sex Abuse | Illinois Public Media News | Illinois Public Media

By Chip Mitchell

That deposition, a secret June 25 session at a law firm downtown, included about six hours of questioning by a half dozen lawyers. The attorneys represented boys and young men who claimed to have been abused by Daniel McCormack, a former pastor of St. Agatha’s, a parish in an impoverished West Side neighborhood….

Last week’s session was at least the third George deposition about sexual abuse in the archdiocese. The first took place in 2008. Transcripts the archdiocese released months later provided an unprecedented look at the church’s handling of sexual abusers among its clergy.….

 

Click on the following for more details:  Attorneys Question Chicago’s Cardinal George For Hours About Sex Abuse | Illinois Public Media News | Illinois Public Media

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Chicago Jesuits hid sex crimes - chicagotribune.com

By Manya BrachearTribune reporter

Internal church records released Tuesday show that Chicago Jesuits consciously concealed the crimes of convicted sex offender Donald McGuire for more than 40 years as the prominent Roman Catholic priest continued to sexually abuse dozens of children around the globe.

One letter written in 1970 by the Rev. John H. Reinke, then president of Loyola Academy in Wilmette, described McGuire's presence at the school as "positively destructive and corrosive." Instead of insisting he be removed from ministry or sent to treatment, Reinke suggested a transfer to Loyola University.

The documents contributed to a $19.6 million settlement between the Jesuits and six men from four states announced Tuesday….

lawyers have identified 28 men who have alleged abuse by McGuire from the 1960s until 2004. Eight have filed lawsuits.

Click on the following for more details:  Chicago Jesuits hid sex crimes - chicagotribune.com

Note this story regarding Mother Teresa and Donald McGuire

Last month (Janu7ary 2012), SF Weekly published a cover story revealing that two candidates for Catholic sainthood -- including Mother Teresa, founder of the Missionaries of Charity order and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize -- had taken steps to protect convicted pedophile priest Donald McGuire after molestation allegations were lodged against him by a Bay Area family in 1993.
Mother Teresa's implication in the McGuire scandal comes through a typed 1994 letter, never before published, in which she appears to urge the priest's Jesuit superior to return him to active ministry despite the abuse allegation. (McGuire returned to ministry, and molested multiple additional boys before his arrest in 2003.) While the letter is unsigned, it bears a salutation in her characteristic handwriting, and contains strong clues indicating Mother Teresa as the author. For instance, the letter-writer refers by name to the nun's four top deputies, calling them "my assistants."

Read the Mother Thersa story by clicking on the following:  http://blogs.sfweekly.com/thesnitch/2012/02/mother_teresa_pedophile_mary_j.php

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Benedictine monk charged with attempted child abduction | FOX6Now.com

 

A judge has set bail at $50,000 for a Benedictine monk from the Archdiocese of Milwaukee accused of trying to abduct a 14-year-old girl in Antioch, Illinois.

Police arrested 57-year-old Thomas Chmura on Friday, April 26th after seeing him stop his car in the middle of traffic to talk to three women on the sidewalk.

Police say Chmura was driving next to the girl on Thursday night when he asked her to get into his car. After his arrest, officers say Chmura admitted he approached the girl for purposes of sexual gratification.

Click on the following for more details:  Benedictine monk charged with attempted child abduction | FOX6Now.com

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Cardinal George heading to Rome for final meeting with Pope Benedict | abc7chicago.com

By Ross Weidner

February 18, 2013 ( CHICAGO) (WLS) -- Chicago's Francis Cardinal George will head to Rome on February 26th to prepare for the conclave that will choose the next leader of the Roman Catholic Church. …

  After mass at Chicago's St. Bride church Sunday, Cardinal George told reporters that he'll join Pope Benedict XVI and other cardinals at the Vatican for a final meeting with the aging pontiff on the morning of Pope Benedict XVI's last day as Pope. …

Cardinal George says a specific date for the start of the conclave will not be available until after Pope Benedict steps down. But, he expects a period of time for the world's cardinals to meet and discuss viable Papal candidates before the conclave begins.

Click on the following for more details:  Cardinal George heading to Rome for final meeting with Pope Benedict | abc7chicago.com

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Illinois LGBT activists to demonstrate against Cardinal George – LGBTQ Nation

By Tony Merevick
Chicago Phoenix

The rally will take place on Feb. 10 outside of Holy Name Cathedral, 730 N. State St., at 10:30 a.m. and will continue through the high-profile church’s Sunday Mass at 11 a.m., GLN Co-Founder Andy Thayer told Chicago Phoenix Thursday.

Click on the following for more details:  Illinois LGBT activists to demonstrate against Cardinal George – LGBTQ Nation

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Business leaders come out in support of gay marriage in Illinois - chicagotribune.com

 

By Manya BrachearTribune reporter

Dozens of Illinois business leaders and several companies publicly endorsed gay marriage Sunday in an attempt to reignite the issue after a proposed bill failed to get traction in Springfield this month.

….In addition to Google, Orbitz Worldwide and Groupon, individual signers of the letter include Desiree Rogers, CEO of Johnson Publishing Co.; Lance Chody, CEO of Garrett Popcorn Shops; Fred Eychaner, chairman of the Newsweb Corp.; and Laura Ricketts, co-owner of the Chicago Cubs.

The bishops and ministers from about 1,700 Illinois congregations and ministries said the attempt to alter the state's definition of marriage threatens an institution that society counts on as the ideal environment for raising children and teaching men and women to depend on each other.

While the bill exempts religious institutions from having to consecrate same-sex marriages, religious leaders worry that it would not protect their rights to freely exercise their religious beliefs because they would have to treat same-sex unions as the equivalent of marriage in their business practices. For example, they might be forced to provide health insurance to an employee's same-sex spouse.

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