Pastoral Training on Human Sexuality Education and HIV/AIDS

16 November 2017

Dear fellow youth ministers,

Greetings in our Lord Jesus!

We would like to invite you once more to this formative opportunity offered to us by the CBCP-Episcopal Commission on Health Care: a training on human sexuality and HIV for youth leaders this

November 29-December 01 at St. Camillus Pastoral Health Center, 18 Nicanor Reyes St., Varsity Hills Subdivision, Loyola Heights, Quezon City.

This workshop–training aims to mainstream  v​alues-based Human Sexuality Education and HIV/AIDS amongst youth programs in organizations and parishes.

The registration, food and accommodation will be shouldered by CBCP-ECHC–Camillians, while the participants take care of their transportation to and from the venue.

We hope to hear from you about this at most by Monday, November 27, through emailing to us the Reply Form – HIVAids Training. (Just click to download.)

with the names of your endorsed participants.  We earnestly hope that your youth ministries will be able to accommodate this invitation in response to this urgent call to educate our young people towards HIV and AIDS prevention.

Also, since the invitation is limited to 30 persons, we will receive your registration on a “first come-first serve” basis.

Should there be further questions, please feel free to reply to this email.

Thank you very much for your kind attention.

 

Sincerely yours in Christ,

Rev. Fr. CONEGUNDO B. GARGANTA
Executive Secretary
Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines
Episcopal Commission On Youth

Ipagbawal ang Pagmimina sa Isla ng Manicani

Photo credit: Msgr. Bernie Pantin

Pahayag ng Pagsuporta Ng Urban Poor Alliance (UP-All) Mega Manila sa Protect Manicani Island, Inc. (PROMISI)

Kaisa ng PROMISI ang Urban Poor Alliance–Mega Manila (UP-ALL Mega Manila), isang alyansa ng mga people’s organizations at NGOs na nagsusulong ng reporma sa sektor ng pabahay para sa mga maralitang tagalungsod, sa panawagang hindi dapat i-renew ng Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) ang panibagong aplikasyon para sa 25-taóng Mineral Production Sharing Agreement (MPSA) ng Hinatuan Mining Corporation (HMC).

Naniniwala kaming mapanganib para sa isang maliit na islang tulad ng Manicani ang pagmimina, at nakita na natin sa mga nakalipas na panahon, noong operational pa ang mga minahan sa isla, ang matinding epekto ng pagmimina sa kapaligiran ng isla at sa ugnayan ng mga magkakapamilya.

Naniniwala rin kaming ihihiwalay ng pagmimina ang mga tao sa kanilang pangunahing kabuhayan. Aagawin ng minahan ang mga lupang tinataniman ng mga magsasaka, at dudumihan nito ang karagatang pinapangisdaan ng mga taga-Manicani. At sa pagkawala ng kanilang kabuhayan, gutom at kahirapan ang daranasin ng mga taga- Manicani. Hindi pa sila lubusang nakababangon mula sa iniwang pinsala ng Super Bagyong Yolanda; nawa’y hindi na madagdagan pa ang kanilang paghihirap ng panibagong banta ng pagmimina.

Hindi maitatangging maraming likas-yaman ang Pilipinas, ngunit ang paglinang sa mga ito ay hindi dapat magdulot ng pinsala sa kapaligiran at sa buhay mga tao. Tungkulin ng lahat na pangalagaan ang mga biyayang ipinagkaloob sa atin ng Poong Lumikha, at tinutupad ito ng mga kasapi ng PROMISI, alang-alang sa kasalukuyan at susunod pang henerasyon sa Manicani. Nawa’y gampanan din ng pamahalaan, sa pangunguna ng DENR, ang tungkuling ito sa pamamagitan ng pagtiyak na hindi na muling masisira ng pagmimina ang isla ng Manicani.   Continue reading

24 November Indigenous Women’s Action to Protect Manicani Island

Ang indigenous women ay nakakaranas ng iba’t ibang porma ng karahasan bilang babae, at bilang katutubong kababaihan. Kaya’t nangangailangan na kumilos at magpahayag ng kanilang mga partikular na nararanasang karahasan; at ipakita ang kanilang kahandaan na kumilos at maki-isa sa malawakang pagtutol sa karahasan at magtanggol ng karapatan ng kababaihan.

Katutubong babae rin – Tutol sa karahasan!

Lumalaban para sa kalikasan! Nagtatanggol ng Karapatan!

#KamiRin   #KatutubongBabaeRin

Ang mga katutubong kababaihan ay may suot na maskara na kulay lila, kagya ng maskara ng Mamamayan Ayaw sa Karahasan. . .  kasi may mga katutubong kababaihan na hindi pa rin handang lumantad sa publiko, pero handang kumilos, kaya may maskara. Pero sa dulo ng programa, mag-aalis ang ilan ng maskara, para ipakita ang kanilang kahandaan.

Martsa mula sa NHA patungong DENR kung saan nagkakampo ang mga residente ng Manicani may ilang linggo na rin. Ito ay pagpapahayag ng pakiki-isa sa pinaglalaban ng mga kababaihan ng Manicani – Kami Rin ay ayaw sa minahan; Kami Rin ay lumalaban para sa Kalikasan; Kami rin ay Nagtatanggol ng Karapatan.

Programa

4:30 PM – Assembly time NHA

5:00 PM– March to Manicani Camp/ DENR

5:30 PM – Start of program

*Salubong (Key leaders ng tribes at Manicani women)

*Welcome message: Manicani women

*Rationale

*Messages: Indigenous Women speak about the different forms of violence against indigenous women

Eight Years of Frustrated Justice for Maguindanao Massacre Victims

Andal Ampatuan. Photo credit: The Telegraph

PRESS STATEMENT

23 November 2017

Passionist Center for Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation, Inc. (PC-JPIC)
St. Paul of the Cross Pastoral Center
Old Novitiate Compound, National Highway, General Santos City
Contact person : Fr. Rey Carvyn P. Ondap, CP (0908-624-3330) / +1 (832)620-9826

How does one put in the various stages of grief eight years of waiting for justice for the families of the victims Maguindanao Massacre?

Should one still be shocked that the wheels of justice for this case continues to grind ever so slow when there is already a dedicated Judge to hear this case week-in week-out, but it appears she is no match for the bully defense counsels of the Ampatuans, epitomized by no-less than the Presidential Legal Counsel Sal Panelo who boasted to a foreign journalist he “packs” like an 18-year old and while he left as counsel around 2015, lawyers with a demeanor like him remain to this day as guardians of the basic rights of the accused Ampatuan Clan and their minions.

Or perhaps denial should still be the order of the day, given that such an event may be a collective nightmare and while it put the Philippines on top of the global list of countries hazardous to working journalists, hey, the passage of time truly blurs the jarring impact of such dastardly acts on the Filipino subconscious now, eight years after the event.

Anger is there still, it cannot be denied, and it actually boils up every now and then, especially when one of the supposed champion of the victims and their families, Atty. Harry Roque, of Center Law, who nearly threw the case away because he championed the early release of some lesser-known to equally-culpable perpetrators who will then have the capability to cause personal harm to the remaining families, now regularly pops up on radio, TV and social media, and he does not appear to have any concrete proposal to President Duterte his boss, how this case may be speeded up in its resolution.

Continue reading

Deadly Philippine drug war wages on social media

Bishop, award-winning priest take on internet trolls in bid to combat killings in Duterte’s narcotics campaign

Argentinean Father Luciano Ariel Felloni of Novaliches Diocese accepts the 2017 Social Media Influencer of the Year at the 3rd Catholic Social Media Awards in Manila. (Photo by Joe Torres)

UCAN Joe Torres, Manila Philippines November 21, 2017

A Catholic bishop in Manila and an Argentinean priest in an urban poor community in the Philippine capital are using social media to draw attention to drug-related killings in the country.

Father Luciano Ariel Felloni of Novaliches Diocese said that through social media he was able to explain the contribution of the church in the government’s war against narcotics.

The priest, who is known for his “healing not killing” community-based rehabilitation program for drug addicts, was named “Social Media Influencer of the Year” at the 2017 Catholic Social Media Awards.

Father Felloni is one of several church leaders who have become the target of online criticism because of their vocal opposition to the killings of suspected drug users and dealers.

“By using social media to explain that our work has no political color, and that it is our contribution to the war against drugs, people change their opinion, they understand,” said the priest.

He added, however, that trolls are different. “They are paid to attack,” said the priest.

“Ignore the trolls, it’s obvious that they are fake,” said the priest. He emphasized, however, that people of other opinions should also be heard.

A “troll” is internet slang for somebody who sows discord by posting inflammatory, extraneous, or off-topic messages in an online community.

In a discussion at the 6th Catholic Social Media Summit before the awards night on Nov. 18, Bishop Pablo Virgilio David of Kalookan said so-called trolls shoot the messenger and ignore the message.

Suspected trolls have been attacking Catholic Church leaders who have been vocal against the government’s war on drugs. Bishops and priests have been accused corruption and sex abuses.

“The truth hurts,” said Bishop David, “but it sets the people free.”

Both Father Felloni and Bishop David said that instead of shying away from the so-called trolls and those who attack the church online, Catholics must look at it as an opportunity.

“If you don’t react to these statements, soon they become like Gospel truth,” said the prelate. “Truth has become a more serious concern in the context of so much untruth in things that we hear or read.”

“Don’t allow yourself to be intimidated,” said Bishop David, adding that online bashing will always be there but good work must continue “because people are interested in the truth.”

He said he uses social media to correct “[wrong] soundbites that are quickly accepted if they are not corrected.” The prelate said the result is “death of the conscience” if a lie is accepted as truth.

“As a church leader, I would feel amiss in my leadership if I allow the consciences of people to die,” Bishop David told about 600 mostly young people, who attended the social media summit.

The prelate said that through the use of social media people responded to his diocese’s program for the poor, including the families of victims of extrajudicial killings.

“God works also through social media. That’s also a forum for truth and empathy,” he said. “That’s what empathy is also about. It leads to compassion.”

“Preserve and Cultivate the Land; Clean the Air and Conserve the Water”

DIOCESE OF BALANGA

PASTORAL LETTER REGARDING POWER PLANTS IN BATAAN

Magmula noong December 8, 2015 hanggang December 8, 2016, sa utos ni Papa Francisco, ipinagdiwang natin ang Dakilang Hubileo na tinawag nating “TAON NG AWA.” Sa kalatas na Misericordiae Vultus (Bull of Indiction of the Extra Ordinary Jubilee of Mercy), binigyan diin ng Papa ang dakilang larawan ng Diyos Ama bilang isang mahabagin. At ang pagiging mahabagin na ito ng Diyos Ama ang isa sa masasalamin natin sa buong ministeryo ng ating Panginoong Hesukristo. Yayamang ang isa sa mga hamunin ng pagdiriwang ng Taon ng Awa ay ang panawagan sa simbahan na maging “presensiya at patotoo ng Awa ng Diyos sa Mundo” (Misericordiae Vultus, 22. ), niloob ng mga organizers ng World Apostolic Congress on Mercy (WACOM, 2017) na talakayin sa huling araw ng nasabing kongreso, ang paksa na mayroong kinalaman sa kalikasan. Ang huling araw na ito ay ginanap sa ating Diyosesis noong Enero 21, 2017 na may paksang , “Preserve and Cultivate the Land; Clean the Air; Conserve the Water.” 

Ano ang kinalaman ng paksang ito sa ating pagsusumikap na maging anyo ng pagiging mahabagin ng Diyos?   Sa kanyang liham Ensilikal Laudato Si, sinabi ng Papa na ang mga nilalang ng Diyos ay

“nanawagan sa atin ukol sa kapahamakang idinulot sa kanya ng ating iresponsableng paggamit at pag-aaksaya sa mga yamang ipinagkaloob sa kanya ng Diyos. Itinuring natin ang ating mga sarili bilang mga may-ari at panginoon na may karapatang abusuhin siya. Ang karahasan sa ating mga pusong sinugatan ng kasalanan ay masasalamin sa mga sintomas ng karamdaman na makikita sa lupa, sa tubig, sa hangin at sa lahat ng may buhay. Dahil dito, kasama ang lahat ng kawawang pinabayaan natin at pinahirapan, pinagpasan at nilapastangan, ang lupa ay ‘dumaraing dahil sa matinding hirap tulad ng isang nanganganak’.(Laudato Si, 2.).

Sa maikling salita, gustong sabihin ng Papa Francisco sa ating lahat, ang daigdig sa kaniyang kasalukuyang kalagayan ay nanghihingi ng awa. At ang mga taong naapektuhan sa negatibong pamamaraan bunga ng pang-aabuso sa kalikasan ay nanghihingi rin ng awa. Ang awa ay kanilang hinihingi mula sa mga taong nag aastang Panginoon ng kalikasan. Nangangahulugan, ang maawa sa kalikasan at sa mga taong naapektuhan bunga ng pagmamalabis sa kalikasan ay isang konkretong pamamaraan ng pagpapakita at pagpapadama ng awa ng Diyos.

Sa pagnanais na makapagbigay ng wastong pagtugon sa hamunin na bigay ng Misericordiae Vultus at ang panawagan ng Laudato Si at WACOM 2017, kami ay nagpasyang sumulat sa napapanahong liham pastoral na ito.

Sa aming pagliham sa inyo gusto naming ipamulat at ipanawagan ang mga sumusunod:

A.   KALAGAYAN NG MUNDO SANG AYON KAY PAPA FRANCISCO

Kinikilala ng Santo Papa na malayo na ang narating ng sangkatauhan at ng daigdig. Mabilis ang pagbabagong nangyayari. Pero kasabay nito kaniyang binigyang diin ang ilang obserbasyon na hindi kanais nais at lubhang nakababahala. Una, ang bilis o tulin ng pagbabagong ito ay malayo sa likas na hinay ng ebolusyong biyolohikal. Pangalawa, ang mga nilalayon ng mabilis at tuloy-tuloy na pagbabago ay hindi palaging nakatuon sa ikabubuti ng lahat, at sa pang matagalan at pangkabuuang pag- unlad ng tao. At ang pangatlo, ang mabilis na pagbabago ay humahantong sa pagkasira ng daigdig at sa kalidad ng pamumuhay ng malaking bahagi ng sangkatauhan.

Mga nangyayari sa daigdig bunga ng mabilis na pagbabago

  1. Polusyon

Sa mismong pagwiwika ng Santo Papa, kanyang sinabi,

“May mga anyo ng polusyon na nakakaapekto sa mga tao araw-araw. Nagdadala ng samu’t saring pinsala sa kalusugan, lalo ng mahihirap, ang pagkakababad sa mga dumi sa hangin na nagdudulot ng milyon-milyong maagang kamatayan. Nagkakasakit sila…(Laudato Si, 20.)

Ang hangin na itinuturing nating napakahalaga sa pag-iral ng lahat ng humihinga ay padumi ng padumi. Ang hangin na pumapasok sa loob ng ating katawan ay lubhang nakababahala dahil ito ay nagbibigay ng panganib sa kalusugan at buhay ng tao. Kaya sa mismong pananalita ng Santo Papa ang polusyon ang siyang sanhi ng maagang kamatayan at pagkakasakit ng nakararami.

2.  Pagbabago ng klima bunga ng tinatawag na Global Warming

Gamit ang matibay na pagkakasundo-sundo ng mga siyentipiko, binigyang diin ng Santo Papa na tayo ay

“nahaharap ngayon sa isang nakababahalang pag-init ng sistema ng klima. Sa mga huling dekada, ang pag-init na ito ay sinabayan ng patuloy na pagtaas ng nibel ng dagat at bukod pa rito, mahirap na hindi ito iugnay sa pagdami ng matitinding pagbabago sa panahon, higit pa sa maaaring ikabit sa isang sanhing matutukoy ng agham para sa bawat isang pangyayari.” (Laudato Si, 23.).

Sa maikling salita, ang global warming ay siyang nagiging dahilan kung bakit mayroong matinding pagbabago sa panahon. Dito sa ating bansa ito ay nararanasan na. Kapag panahon ng tag-init, katulad ng alam ninyo, mayroong bahagi sa ating bansa ang bukirin ay natutuyo bunga ng kawalan ng tubig. Marami tayong kababayan na ang kabuhayan ay nakasandig sa lupa ang hindi makapagtanim.   At katulad ng inaasahan, marami sa kanila ang nakakaranas ng gutom. Kapag panahon naman ng tag-ulan, kapansin pansin ang maraming tubig na binubuhos. Bunga ng malalaking baha na nararanasan natin, may mga nawawalan ng buhay at maraming ari-arian (katulad ng mga tanim, bahay, mga alagang hayop) ang lumulubog at nasasayang. At ang panghuli, huwag nating kalilimutan na mayroon ding kinalaman ang Global Warming sa palakas ng palakas na mga bagyong dumaraan sa ating bansa.

Continue reading

Romero speaks in the here and now

Raul Julia as Óscar Romero in the 1989 film “Romero” (Paulist Productions)

National Catholic Reporter  Nov 11, 2017
by Antonio D. Sison   Media

The year, 1977, the circumstantial background, the turbulent presidential election in El Salvador. With his hands, the 60-year-old bishop cups water from a basin and washes his face. That day, in the capital San Salvador, he passively witnessed how armed military men terrorized a busload of voters from the city’s poor sector as they made their way to the polling station. Just earlier, he had tried to caution his Jesuit friend Rutillo Grande, pastor and social activist, about “going too far.” As he splashes water on his face a couple more times, he is stopped midstream by a colleague bearing the news: “You have been appointed archbishop.”

In the biopic “Romero” (John Duigan, 1989), the inaugural Mass of newly appointed archbishop of San Salvador Óscar Arnulfo Romero, gives us an unambiguous picture of his centrist theological and sociopolitical perspective; he is the “safe choice.” Conservative members of the church hierarchy, and prominent figures of the oligarchy dominate his bevy of well-wishers. “I come from a world of books,” he declares from the pulpit. “We in the church must keep to the center watchfully, in the traditional way, but seeking justice.”

But as the story arc unfolds, Romero, in a state of inertia, is drawn into a gradual conversion experience, not just in a general sense, but in the specific trajectory of a “conversion to justice.” It is by the portrayal of such a conversion that the film offers insight to Romero’s deepening spirituality that would lead him to a prophetic, liberating solidarity.

I find Jesuit activist Peter McVerry’s description of the three-stage process that leads to a conversion to justice an illuminating lens through which we can understand Romero’s transformation in the film.

The first stage, a “conversation of the feet,” is that latent doubt and discomfort when, after some form of sharing in the experience of the poor, we realize that our incapacity to love our marginalized brothers and sisters has a lot to do with our over-attachment to the comfortable lives we live. We become open to this realization not from paper cuts we get on our fingers from reading, but from the mud we get on our feet from immersion.

Early in the film, Romero faces new encounters at the edge of society where poor Salvadorans are hard-pressed on every side. This brings about a real “dis-ease” in him, especially as he continues hobnobbing with San Salvador’s rich and powerful. The camera works well to capture nuances and close-up shots of Raul Julia, the gifted actor who plays Romero, revealing subtle emotional hints; his face is a threshold of a simmering crisis of belief.

A “conversion of the head” is that juncture when we are “called to social analysis.” We come to a realization that there are structural causes for poverty and suffering, and for as long as our values and assumptions remain unexamined, we are complicit in this social injustice.

Again, the film is replete with sequences that lead Romero to a more clear-eyed social analysis. In one scene, panning shots display a collage of disturbing, real-life photographs of the victims of military atrocities as the archbishop listens to the stories of the bereaved families. This layer of realism works to convey that the scales have fallen from Romero’s eyes; he now sees the “view from below,” the barefaced reality of the ongoing human tragedy and its structural causes. Inevitably, he begins to distance himself from members of society’s elite he once called friends.

Finally, a “conversion of the heart” involves an actual, committed response after having journeyed through the two previous conversions. Catholic social teaching and theologies of liberation refer to this turning point as an “option for the poor.”

The film brings this to deeper focus in the “barracks” scene when Romero heroically attempts to re-enter the church in Aguilares that the military had occupied and desecrated. Twice, he was threatened with gunfire and literally kicked out the church building. Just as all hope seemed lost, Romero — now garbed in priestly vestments — attempts to return a third time. But he is no longer entering the church alone; the faithful had gathered around him, and in procession, they enter the building as the church. In his homily, the archbishop’s message resonates with the very heart of the reign of God: “You are the church, you are the people of God. You are Jesus in the here and now.”

The year, 2017, the circumstantial background, the rising xenophobia and racism in the United States. Or the refugee crisis in Italy and the Mediterranean. Or the violent drug war in the Philippines.

It also happens to be the centennial of Blessed Óscar Romero’s birth.

Purposefully, “Romero” is the film for us to revisit at such a time as this.

[Precious Blood Br. Antonio D. Sison is associate professor of systematic theology at Catholic Theological Union, Chicago, and author of the book The Sacred Foodways of Film. “Romero” is available on DVD and video streaming from PaulistProductions.org.]

This story appeared in the Nov 3-16, 2017 print issue.

Pope condemns possession of nuclear weapons in shift from church’s acceptance of deterrence

Cardinal Peter Turkson, prefect of the Vatican’s Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, speaks to journalists during a conference on building a world free of nuclear weapons, at the Vatican Nov. 10. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

Nov 10, 2017
by Joshua J. McElwee Vatican

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis has openly denounced the continuing possession of nuclear weapons by various world governments, in what appears to be a departure from the Roman Catholic Church’s prior acceptance of the Cold War-era global system of nuclear deterrence and mutually assured destruction.

In a talk Nov. 10 to participants in a high-profile Vatican conference on nuclear disarmament, the pope also seemed to indirectly criticize world leaders such as U.S. President Donald Trump, who has openly threatened nuclear war with North Korea over that country’s continuing development of nuclear arms.

Francis told the conference participants — who include the U.N. High Representative for Disarmament Affairs, NATO’s deputy secretary general, and 11 Nobel Peace Prize laureates — that humanity cannot fail “to be genuinely concerned by the catastrophic humanitarian and environmental effects of any employment of nuclear devices.”

“If we also take into account the risk of an accidental detonation as a result of error of any kind, the threat of their use, as well as their very possession, is to be firmly condemned,” he said.

“International relations cannot be held captive to military force, mutual intimidation, and the parading of stockpiles of arms,” the pope continued. “Weapons of mass destruction, particularly nuclear weapons, create nothing but a false sense of security. They cannot constitute the basis for peaceful coexistence between members of the human family.”

While previous popes have called for the abolition of nuclear weapons, they also granted conditional moral acceptance to the system of nuclear deterrence, which arose after World War II when the United States and the Soviet Union stockpiled nuclear weapons in order to discourage either country from launching an atomic attack.

Pope John Paul II, for example, said in a message to the U.N. in June 1982 that the system of deterrence could be judged “morally acceptable” as “a step on the way toward a progressive disarmament.”

The Vatican conference, hosted Nov. 10-11 by the new Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, is the first major international gathering on disarmament since 122 countries signed a new U.N. treaty in July that calls for the complete elimination of nuclear weapons.

The Vatican is one of three signatories that have already ratified the agreement. None of the nuclear powers and no NATO members have signed on to the measure.

The disarmament conference is taking place as Trump is on an 11-day visit to several Asian nations. In South Korea Nov. 8, Trump warned North Korean leader Kim Jong Un that his quest to acquire nuclear weapons is putting his regime “in grave danger” and threatened: “Do not try us.”

Cardinal Peter Turkson, the head of the Vatican dicastery, said at the conference’s opening Nov. 10 that the event was planned long before Trump’s visit to Asia was announced. “It just happens to be a happy coincidence,” Turkson joked, adding: “If we believe in divine providence, that was part of it.”

Turkson said he and the participants at the event had gathered “for a very candid conversation about how to achieve a world free of nuclear weapons.”

In an apparent nod to North Korea, he added: “This conversation is urgently needed, given the current tensions among nuclear weapons states and given the tensions between nuclear weapons states and states seeking to become nuclear weapons states.”

Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican’s Secretary of State, told the conference their considerations take place during a “decidedly disheartening state of affairs” across the world.

Parolin noted that 2017 marks the 50th anniversary of Pope Paul VI’s encyclical Populorum progressio, which proposed that the world’s governments set aside a portion of their military spending for a global fund to relieve the needs of impoverished peoples.

Paraphrasing the encyclical, he stated: “Is it not plain to everyone that such a fund would reduce a need for those other expenditures that are motivated by fear [or] stubborn pride? Countless millions are starving. We cannot approve a debilitating arms race.”

‘Ethic of nuclear deterrence not morally warranted’

One of the speakers at the Vatican conference said he hopes it refocuses world attention on the nuclear ban treaty.  Continue reading

NYD2017 and Synod 2018 – Muchismas Gracias & Puede Pa!

Your Eminences,
Your Excellencies:

The Mighty One has done great things for us!

May we express once more our deep gratitude to all of you who sent your delegations of young people, accompanied by your youth ministers, to the National Youth Day 2017 in the Archdiocese of Zamboanga!  As well, our heartfelt thanks to the Archdiocese of Zamboanga, led by His Excellency, Most Rev. ROMULO DELA CRUZ, DD, for their warm welcome and generous hospitality!  We pray for safe travels back to our origins, and a beautiful way forward inspired by the experience of the NYD2017 national celebration.

The Synod Secretariat has informed us today that they are still open to accept responses from us.  Therefore, may we request those dioceses which have not yet submitted their diocesan responses to the Synod 2018 to please send to us not later than November 15.

Thank you very much for your kind attention.  May we seek your support for a meaningful local celebration of the National Youth Day this December 16, the first day of the Misa de Gallo.

Holy is God’s Name!

Yours sincerely,


+ LEOPOLDO C. JAUCIAN, SVD, DD
Bishop of Bangued
Chairman of the CBCP-Episcopal Commission on Youth
Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines
EPISCOPAL COMMISSION ON YOUTH
Visit us on the World Wide Web  cbcp-ecy.ph 
Like us on Facebook  CBCPECY

An Invitation to a Forum: Do We Need Duterte’s Federalism?

Photo credit: Philstar

Dear friends of JJCICSI,

Please join us on the morning of November 18, Saturday, from 8:30AM to 12nn, for a a forum titled “Do We Need Duterte’s Federalism?” Speaking at the forum will be Atty Christian Monsod, a drafter of our current constitution, and Dean Ronald Mendoza of the Ateneo School of Government. Atty. Monsod will begin the forum by sharing his perspective on the idea of, and prospects for, a “revolutionary government”–a proposal that President Duterte and his allies and supporters have been floating as a means to achieve a federalist structure and the change that President Duterte has promised.

The forum will be held at the Walter Hogan Conference Hall, Social Development Complex, Ateneo de Manila University (aka the ISO Conference Hall).

Slots are limited, so please confirm your attendance by Tuesday, November 14. You may confirm by sending an email to eremitafeliz@gmail.com

Thanks and hope to see you there,

Eleanor R. Dionisio
Associate Director
Tel. 426-6001, local 4660