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PAGE 6—The Georgia Bulletin, August 5,1971
Gary Storms Coiffeurs
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H. M. WEIR, Proprietor At The Expressway
ANNOUNCING A NEW
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TELEPHONE: 634-8642
• GENUINE GEMS
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Slabbing Material-Tumbling
Field Trips Arranged
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REPAIRING and SETTING of GEMS
and JEWELRY
Dealers For Highland Park & Covington
Designers Of Custom Jewelry
PROFESSIONAL GEM. CUTTER WILL BE
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We Also Carry A Nice Selection Of Weber Art Supplies
Canvas-Oil Painting Kits-& Accessories -
Sketch Books & Art Books-
Bill Brinkman - Mgr. and Owner
CHILDREN
NEED
YOU
THE HOLY FATHER'S MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL CHURCH
GIVE You are needed ... to act as a Mom or Dad to
A an orphan in the Holy Land, Ethiopia, or India.
CHILD The cost is very little. The satisfaction is great.
A More than half of the 1,400,000 refugees in the
HOME Holy Land are boys and. girls. A great many are
orphans. Some barely exist by begging for milk,
food, clothing. Others are in the Holy Father's
care — supported by the generous friends of
Near East Missions . . . You can 'adopt' one of
these children and guarantee him (or her) three
meals a day, a warm bed, love and companion
ship and preparation to earn his own living. An
orphan's support costs only $10 a month . . .
$120 a year. Send us the first month's support
and we will send your 'adopted’ child's photo.
You can write to him or her. The Sister who
cares for your child will write to you-, if the child
cannot write yet. A close bond of love will
develop. Please send the coupon with your of
fering today.
WHO ORPHANS BREAD is the club (dues: $1 a
CAN'T month) that comes to the rescue when orphans
SPARE need milk, medicines, underwear. Like to join?
$1 Send $1 every month.
WILL It's never too late to remember children in your
POWER will. The Holy Father knows where children are
the neediest. Simply tell your lawyer our legal
title: Catholic Near East Welfare Association.
Dear enclosed please find $.
Monsignor Nolan:
FOR
Please name
return coupon
with your street_
offering
city
_STATE.
.ZIP CODE-
THE CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
NEAR EAST
M
MISSIONS
TERENCE CARDINAL COOKE, President
MSGR. JOHN G. NOLAN, National Secretary
Write: Catholic Near East Welfare Assoc.
330 Madison Avenue-New York, N.Y. 10017
Telephone: 212/YUkon 6-5840
Best Hope
Of Church
Is Laity?
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico
(NC) — Jesuit Bishop Antulio
Parrilla-Bonilla said here he
thinks the best hope for the
Church is the new role of the
laity.
“Everything points to the
urgency of accepting and
recognizing this, he said in an
interview with CIRIC, an
international Catholic photo
service based in Geneva. “The
decreasing number of priests
and seminarians does not
indicate a crisis that would
destroy the Church. No, I
believe God is permitting that
so that the laity may take
stock of their role.
“Today, certain liturgical
functions are granted to
them. They will have to take
charge of the administration
of the goods of the Church,
which will have to be put in
cooperatives. The works or
services of the Church must
no longer be reserved to a
privileged group which can
pay for them. They must be
offered impartially to all.”
“I proposed this a long
time ago,” Bishop Parrilla
said. “Well conceived
coo perativism ... is a
socialist system. And I do not
see why a good cooperative
system could not, in the long
run, functionally create, from
the bottom up, a socialism,
respectful of the person and
of liberties. The true
cooperative is a ‘socializing’
system.”
Bishop Parilla, 52, who has
had no episcopal duties since
1967, has been an outspoken
opponent of the Vietnam war
and the draft and an advocate
of independence for his
native Puerto Rico. He has
participated in numerous
demonstrations.
“To come back to the
goods of the Church,” the
bishop said, “I could not say
exactly what businesses the
Church invests in, but it
would not astonish me that it
has invested, among other
things, in the armament
industry. For it is very
difficult today to invest in
the United States without
finding oneself involved in
matters
o f
war
and
armament. Must we not think
about that
change it?”
and
want
to
Bishop
Parilla
said
he
believes the Church in Puerto
Rico, as in the other
countries of Latin America,
“is waking up.”
“There exist minorities
who are aware of the
conditions of oppression and
dependence to which our
peoples are submitted-
. . . Despite the bishops,
these minorities are going to
take the lead in the
renovation of the Church, so
that they will be the leaven in
the search for liberating
solutions.”
He said, however, that a
certain passivity exists in the
Church in Puerto Rico
compared to the Church in
some other countries of Latin
America.
Despite that, he added,
awareness is growing among
certain intellectuals,
particularly at the Catholic
University in Puerto Rico. He
said this awareness is leading
them “in an irreversible way,
toward a position of
advanced struggle, in Puerto
Rico, a struggle that
inevitably is going to lead
them to rise up against the
bishops. But I believe that
these minority groups will
win within the Church,
understood in the sense of
‘People of God.’ ”
Bishop Parrilla said he feels
isolated within the Church in
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INVESTMENT BROKER-NUN - “Jo Ellen Moser, registered
representative,” sells bonds and mutual funds at the Milwaukee
office of B.C. Ziegler and Company, an investment firm, three
days a week. The rest of the week she is Sister Jo Ellen Moser,
O.P., and assumes the duties of treasurer general of the Racine
Dominican Sisters. Here, Sister Jo Ellen discusses business with
Grant Wilcox, resident manager of the local office of Ziegler
company. (NC PHOTO, courtesy Catholic Herald Citizen)
Puerto Rico. He said he has
not been invited to any
meetings of the bishops’
conference since December
1970. He attributed that to
his challenge of what he
called “a pretended reform of
the process of electing
bishops.” The reform has
given no voice in the process
to the clergy or the laity, he
said, and he had argued that
it was urgent to let lay
councils and priests’ councils,
participate in the choosing of
bishops.
Despite his isolation, he
said, he is able to fulfill the
duties of a bishop. He
explained:
“The denunciation of
injustices in the world, as
long as one proposes
solutions for remedying
them, seems to me to be the
legitimate task of a bishop.”
Asked to what extent he is
involved in the Puerto Rican
independence movement,
Bishop Parilla-Bonilla said: “I
do not belong to any group. I
am not a politician. In fact, I
am trying to enlighten
Christians on the urgency of a
solution to the political
problem of our country. This
-problem is that of sovereignty
and there is no other possible
solution, as I see it, than
independence.
The bishop was asked what
impressions he gained during
his visit to the United States
in December 1969 and
January 1970, when he
sought to visit war opponents
in military prisons. “My
impression,” he said, “is that
a totalitarian system reigns
there.”
He said he had been
allowed to visit only 18
prisons and had been arrested
twice.
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Gunfire At Church, Etc.
DETROIT (NC) - Among
some 3,000 Albanian-speak
ing refugees in Michigan,
there are nearly 700 families
residing in the Detroit
northside.
The refugees here are
presenting a variety of
problems, including gunfire at
church rites, in attempts by
the Church to accustom them
to the American way of life,
The Michigan Catholic,
Detroit archdiocesan
newspaper reported.
The obstacles include
inability to speak English;
lack of employment
opportunities, and, among a
minority, a loyalty to a
political organization which
has resulted in assassination
attempts against a priest
working among the refugees,
the newspaper said.
against Albanians in
promotion of the Church. He
is now associate pastor at
Resurrection parish, which
serves the Albanian colony.
The newspaper reported
there are 40 political factions
among Albanians. A group of
five men formed a group
called the Trepalski organized
along communist lines and
opposed to work of the
Church among the Albanian
community.
Father Ndrevoshaj, shortly
after arrival here, refused to
endorse the political group,
explaining it was contrary to
Church policy. Since March,
the newspaper reported, the
priest has been confronted by
party members brandishing
pistols and several automobile
hit-and-run attempts have
been made on his life.
Msgr. Thomas Jobs, pastor
of Resurrection parish,
commented: “The Albanians
have to be reached. If we do
not reach them, we will lose
them.”
Some special services, such
as weddings, have been
interrupted at Resurrection
church by Albanian men,
accustomed to firing guns in
the air on such occasions.
Attempts have been made to
convince the Albanians such
customs are not considered
proper in this country.
Gunfire in the church parking
lot on some occasions have
brought police to the scene.
Father Ndrevoshaj is
reluctant to speak of the
intimidation attempts by the
Trepalski party and shrugs off
the attempts which have been
made agains his life.
Albanians are described as
industrious, intelligent
people, loyal to the Church
which defended them
spiritually, morally and
socially against medieval
invasions by Turkish Moslems
and the more modern
communists.
Faced by need of the
Church to relate to the small,
overwhelmingly Catholic
community, Cardinal John F.
Dearden of Detroit, requested
the services of Father Prenk
Ndrevoshaj, an Albanian
refugee who was working
among his countrymen in
Rome.
Father Ndrevoshaj came
here despite several protests,
including charges that he was
a fascist and would work
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