Lent 2008:
A guide for spiritual preparation


Week One

Our Church and our world


By Janet Haggarty
Special to the CS&T


Catholic theology often addresses the relation between the Church and the world. In his letters, St. Paul calls that relationship the struggle between the spirit and the flesh.

For him, flesh refers to the world’s strong pull on us toward pleasure and ease. Spirit, on the other hand, draws us toward holiness. But how can spirit hope to compete with flesh? Flesh, the world, offers us so much distraction and illusion; spirit is poor and comes with empty hands.

But the spirit, as St. Paul knows, is given to us to order the flesh toward holiness, too. In this way, all is made holy. This is the fulfillment and glory of the flesh: to be made one with spirit and placed at the service of holiness.

St. Paul has seen the victorious union of flesh and spirit and sets it before us as our hope. The victorious union that he witnessed is the Paschal Mystery of our Lord. Our Lord Himself, then, is our hope that flesh and spirit can be finally reconciled in us. For that reason, our hope is firmly grounded.

This victorious union, this raising up of the flesh at the service of holiness, is unveiled for us on Easter. It allows us to proclaim that in our Lord the victory has already been won. Hope is the conviction that there is communion between His flesh and ours, between His victory and us.

When Catholic theology addresses the relation between the Church and the world, it is to stress that the mission of the Church is to transform the world.

We could just as easily say that the spirit transforms the flesh. They are not simply intended to exist side-by-side. They certainly are not intended to remain antagonists.

The Church draws the world to herself in order that the world may be put at the service of holiness. The way in which the Church carries out that mission is in the lives of her members. When we live our faith by placing ourselves at the service of holiness, we carry out the Church’s mission.

We are needed to transform the world. Knowing our participation in the Church’s mission can bring a new and more fruitful perspective to our lives. It becomes the substance of our spiritual lives. It is a fuller way to live our faith.

The primary way by which the Church draws the world to herself in order to transform it is by means of the Liturgy.

Real transformation can only happen through the liturgy. Only what is drawn into the liturgy can be substantially transformed. Many celebrations in the liturgical year sanctify man’s natural attempts at union with God.

The liturgical year begins with an urgent sense of coming. This is Advent. In ancient days, mankind observed that the daylight began to last longer when the winter solstice arrived. Longer days and shorter nights in the cold of winter caused much rejoicing.

Our Lady brought forth our Lord at the very time when the sun made its triumphant return to the earth. Our heavenly Father allows the sun’s return to direct our attention to the coming of another Son and the endless Day He brings.

Harvest-time is another example of a celebration in the liturgical year drawing the world into the Church.

In autumn, the harvest is ripe and the fruit of the earth is gathered through the labor of the farmer, the same one who sowed the seed in the spring. Through the sweat of his brow and the concerned anxiety of his spirit, the farmer plants in order to reap.

The fruitfulness of his labor, which is revealed in the harvest, is the joyful testimony he seeks. The fruitfulness gives meaning and purpose to the labor. In this relation between the farmer and the fruit of the earth, the Church recognizes the bloody sweat and labor of our Redeemer.

The threefold communion of saints — in heaven, on earth, and in purgation celebrated at harvest-time — is the new fruit of the earth giving joyful testimony to the victory of the Cross.

Dr. Janet Haggarty is a professor of systematic theology at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary, Wynnewood. She has served on the Seminary faculty since 1995, after completing graduate studies at Fordham University, New York.


Fast and abstinence and other acts of penance for Lent 2008


The Bishops of the United States prescribe, as minimal obligation, that all persons who are 14 years of age and older are bound to abstain from eating meat on Ash Wednesday, on all the Fridays of Lent and Good Friday.

Further, all persons 18 years of age and older, up to and including their 59th birthday, are bound to fast by limiting themselves to a single full meal on Ash Wednesday and on Good Friday, while the other two meals on those days are to be light.

All the faithful are encouraged, when possible, to participate at Mass and to receive the Holy Eucharist daily, to celebrate frequently the sacrament of penance, to undertake spiritual reading, especially the study of the Sacred Scriptures, and to participate in parish Lenten devotions as well as Lenten education programs.

Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament is especially recommended.

All are encouraged to participate in “Operation Rice Bowl,” which has aided countless hungry persons here in the Archdiocese as well as throughout our nation and our world.


Lunches offer glimpses of our human family in need


By NADIA MARIA SMITH
CS&T Staff Writer


PHILADELPHIA — The terrifying reality of human trafficking will be the first topic for the annual Operation Rice Bowl Lenten speaker series sponsored by Catholic Relief Services (CRS) in the Archdiocese this year.
Pravin Parshuram Patkar, founder and chairperson of Prerana, an organization committed to fighting human trafficking and assisting its survivors in India, will speak at the Lenten lunch at 12:15 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 13 in the Archdiocesan Office Center.

India is the world’s most active clandestine source, transit route and destination point for the trafficking of women and girls into commercial sexual exploitation. In Mumbai, where Patkar’s organization operates, hundreds of thousands of women and girls are trafficked annually. He will talk about how and why human trafficking happens in his country and what Prerana and its partner, CRS-India, are doing about it.

“Rice Bowl is so much more than just a [monetary] collection,” said Anne Ayella, CRS archdiocesan director and the organizer of the event. “It really embraces the traditional practices of Lent ….

“What we try to do in those Wednesday sessions is to pray for the country being highlighted that week, learn something about the people and projects, have a simple meal and make a donation — if you want — rounding out the Rice Bowl spirit,” she said.

In addition to India, the series will highlight how Operation Rice Bowl helps individuals in the Philadelphia region as well as in Guatemala, Mali, Haiti and Cameroon.

The speakers will include Sister Barbara Tickner, I.H.M., social service coordinator for St. Katharine Drexel Social Services and Food Cupboard, who will describe her local ministry and the way Operation Rice Bowl helps in that work.

In addition, Candice Harris from the CRS northeast regional office will talk about Guatemala, where she visited CRS projects. Geraldine O’Hare will share about her longtime work with the people of Haiti through Hospice St. Joseph, which was founded in 1989 by the Sisters of St. Joseph.

All sessions will be held at the Archdiocesan Center, 222 North 17th Street, from 12:15 p.m. to 1:15 p.m., with a simple lunch of soup and bread provided. The Feb. 14 session will be in the ground-floor auditorium, and subsequent sessions will be in the 13th floor conference room. All are welcome.

For more information contact Anne Ayella at 215-895-3486 x717.

CS&T staff writer Nadia Maria Smith may be reached at npozo@adphila.org or (215) 965-4614.

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Week Two

Lent’s 40 days of ‘death’
lead to life


By Janet Haggerty
Special to the CS&T


The liturgical seasons of Lent and Easter are a further way by which the Church transforms the world.

Easter always falls when springtime is upon us and new life is seen on the earth. Just as nature prepares for spring, the Church renews our faith lives through the yearly recurrence of Lent.

Year after year, we see new life appear out of the deadness of winter. At first, it seems as if this new life vanquishes winter. But in reality, winter and spring are not opponents.

Instead, winter is at the service of spring. Winter is the way the earth is handed over so that life can come forth. The death that we see in nature during winter is how new life is formed in a hidden way.

Along with nature’s seasons of winter and spring, we can think of winter and spring in a spiritual sense, as descriptions of the spiritual life. The relation between the deadness of winter and renewed life in spring thus takes on a fuller meaning.

Revelation presents the hidden formation of new life in winter by means of the number 40.

One famous example is the 40 years the Israelites wandered through the desert before entering the Promised Land. On a map, the distance between Egypt and Canaan is not so very great and could be traveled, even on foot, in a matter of weeks, not years. Did the Israelites simply have bad directions? That cannot be the case because God, Himself, dwelled at the head of the people and guided them to the Promised Land.

Forty years in the desert and steady guidance from the Lord are not incompatible. The purpose of the journey was not to get through the trip as quickly as possible — new life awaited the Israelites, and that life was formed through their 40-year journey.
Without those years in the desert, new life with the Lord could not have happened. Their experiences during the 40 years revealed God to the people in ways they would not have known without this extended “winter.” The years also revealed the people to themselves: their sin and hardness of heart.

For Noah and his clan, the deadness of winter happened as a 40-day flood. Of course, a flood is very different from a desert, but the same pattern applies: The Lord invites His people to cooperate with Him in bringing forth new life.

Noah’s submission to the Lord’s command and the days of flooding that followed purified the earth of sin, even if only temporarily and in a limited way. The dove carried back testimony of new life from the earth as the waters receded.

Also during the Israelites’ 40-year exodus, the Lord called Moses up Mount Sinai, where Moses remained for 40 days and 40 nights.

The Lord described to Moses how he was to construct the dwelling place of the Lord, the Ark of the Covenant, and the consecration of His priests and their vestments, placed at the service of the altar.

The life coming forth from those 40 days was the presence of the Lord in the midst of Israel and the call of faithfulness to the Law.

New life is also seen on the earth in the continued formation of the Chosen People and their worship of the true God. They achieved renown as a people through the 40-year reign of King David.

For Mary, as for all mothers, 40 weeks pass from the conception of our Lord to His birth. And 40 days after Christmas, Jesus is presented in the temple — the life that was formed in secret becomes the Light of the world.

Forty days pass between Jesus’ resurrection and our celebration of His ascension to heaven. Forty hours of Eucharistic devotion celebrate the hidden work of redemption from the hour of our Lord’s death to the hour of His resurrection from the dead.

Within that clearly established pattern, then, the Holy Spirit drives our Lord into the desert for 40 days of prayer and fasting before He enters into His public life.

Now, the 40 days of Lent place us in that saving tradition.

Dr. Janet Haggerty is an associate professor of systematic theology at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary, Wynnewood. She has served on the Seminary faculty since 1995, after completing graduate studies at Fordham University, N.Y.


Operation Rice Bowl addresses local needs


By NADIA MARIA SMITH
CS&T Staff Writer


Thirty million people live below the poverty line in the United States — which means 30 million people cannot afford adequate food, housing, health insurance or a good education.

That’s why contributing to programs such as Operation Rice Bowl is so important: Twenty-five percent of the donations address local needs such as stocking emergency food cupboards and soup kitchens, including St. Katharine Drexel Social Services and Food Cupboard in Chester.

“We get 500 pounds of food a month [from Operation Rice Bowl] … a great help to us, because we have a large number of poor here in Chester — 300 people a month come here,” said Sister Barbara Tickner, I.H.M, who is social services coordinator for the agency and food cupboard.

Sister Barbara will speak about the history and work of the parish food cupboard at 12:15 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 20 at the weekly Operation Rice Bowl Lenten lunch series at the Archdiocesan Center. The lunches are sponsored by Catholic Relief Services.

“[The] Rice Bowl is so much more than just a [monetary] collection,” said Anne Ayella, the CRS diocesan director and organizer of the event. “It really embraces the traditional practices of Lent.”

The Lenten lunch series aims to bring Catholics together to pray, fast and experience solidarity as they learn about the plight of the poor in Philadelphia and abroad.

The lunches are held on at 12:15 p.m. Wednesdays in the 13th floor conference room at the Archdiocesan Center, 222 North 17th Street. They consist of a meal of soup and bread, and will run through March 12. All are welcome.

For more information contact Anne Ayella at (215) 895-3486, ext. 717.

CS&T staff writer Nadia Maria Smith can be reached at npozo@adphila.org or (215) 965-4614.


Lent: Season of remembering

Guest Columnist
By Father Leonard Peterson


Being old enough to remember the thrill of watching a steam engine go past at the head of a train, for me the very mention of the word Lent causes memory cells to stir with what are now dated images.

From the perspective of a 1950s kid, Lent was a long, dreary season. There was, for example, the volunteered absence of candy in my life. (After all, “What are you giving up for Lent?” was a perennial Catholic question.)

Then came Fridays, marked with tuna sandwiches for lunch, and macaroni and cheese for supper. Neither of those was that bad — but, ah! when mackerel came out on the main plate, complete with bones, or canned salmon with its pink and charcoal tones, then the idea of penance hit home. Along with all that I would overhear adult conversations about what constituted “breaking the fast,” although that wasn’t yet my problem.

Another experience to be endured was Stations of the Cross for children on Friday afternoons. There we were — 10 young Americans crammed into a pew made for six, smelling of school and tuna, bouncing up and down 14 times to the beat of our metal lunch boxes.

We never really understood St. Alphonsus’ foreign-sounding text, with its “infamous gibbet,” but at least we had the artwork of Christ’s suffering to follow. We all dreaded being caught being less than devotional because the punishment was a forced kneeling in the aisle as the priest and three altar boys processed around us. Lent ended at noon on Holy Saturday, and one could potentially hit the bag of jelly beans early, if they were available.

Ours was not an overly religious family, although our lives did center around the parish and its school. The Friday arrival of this newspaper in its old form was just as much a part of the routine as Sunday Mass. The crucifix hung in our living room. My siblings and I all had our statues of Mary. It fell to Mom to explain the origin of the ashes on Good Friday, and the meaning of the “Mass of the Pre-Sanctified.” I was an altar boy, and among other good deeds, Dad faithfully woke me and then drove me to church in the dark when it was my turn to serve the early Mass.

Present-day Lent offers a clear but soul-satisfying contrast to any negatives of those bygone days. The Church presents the season as a kind of retreat, or journey toward Easter, with an attendant purification of our souls from all the post-baptismal clutter that accumulates over the course of a year, or years.


Fasting is now largely an option, except on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday — merely two mandated days out of 365 (or 356). Books have been written about the health advantages of fasting. But the greatest book, the Bible, speaks often about that way of recalling our dependence on God for everything. Fasting also stands in stark contrast to the current culture of ease, and answers the health problem of obesity.

The Stations of the Cross prayers have been beautifully expanded and adapted for many age groups. I now find it my favorite Lenten devotion because it recalls dramatically how far God’s love is prepared to go for us.

The one remaining obstacle to a profitable, adult living out of Lent for many people is the sacrament of reconciliation. There are several reasons for that, I know. Some ask, for instance, “Why should I have to tell my sins to a man?” Allow me to try a little logic. Jesus gave His Apostles the power to forgive or retain sins. How would those simple fishermen be able to judge what to do? Only by hearing the penitent’s expression of sorrow and desire to reform. Their ordination did not make the Apostles mind-readers. Nor did it erase their own personal failures. It was Christ’s choice of them that gave them the task.

Does going to confession take faith? Absolutely. It also takes humility, and sometimes not a little courage. Allow me to say that I have great admiration for a person who has both.

Let me add that hearing confessions is one of the most satisfying and rewarding of my priestly duties. To those who are fearful, allow me to quote Pope John Paul II, who said at his installation, “Be not afraid!”

So here is Lent 2008, a long way from the 1950s. Trains can now travel at more than 200 m.p.h. without a steam engine. Along with so much progress, we now have a refined understanding of Lent as an invitation as well as a grace — a time to take stock of our spiritual progress.

It’s a chance to trek down memory lane not so much for nostalgia’s sake but to evaluate our previous year with Christ, and to be grateful for a living Church that helps make life worth living.

Father Peterson is pastor of St. Maria Goretti Parish in Hatfield.

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Week Three

In desert fasting and prayer,
Jesus continues His mission


By Janet Haggerty
Special to the CS&T


The season of Lent is the way Catholics enter into our Lord’s 40 days of prayer and fasting in the desert at the start of His public ministry, His proximate preparation for the sacrifice of the cross.

While the whole of Jesus’ life has been ordered toward the cross, the mission of redemption intensifies during those last three years. His 40 days in the desert bear fruit in His public ministry and in the new life that comes from the cross.

In the Gospel, we see Him baptized in the Jordan by St. John. After His baptism, the Holy Spirit leads Him into the desert. All those examples of the number ‘40’ that we see in salvation history — whether in 40 hours, days, weeks or years — receive their meaning through those 40 days.

Jesus, as God and man, fulfills in Himself the work of redemption taking place in the flood, the Exodus, Moses’ stay on Mount Sinai, David’s reign and even His own gestation in Mary’s womb. All those mysteries have their origin in — and are ordered toward — the mission of redemption that He fulfills in His public life and crucifixion.

It is because our Lord is divine that we can assert such a communion between all the mysteries of salvation history and Him. In fact, none of those mysteries can be understood in fullness apart from their relation to His mission.

But He fulfills that mission in a fully human, as well as fully divine, way. For that reason, all the human involvement in salvation history — as well as all the divine — belong to Him. That all becomes the focus of His prayer during those 40 days in the desert.

The relation between Jesus’ 40 days in the desert and the work of the three years that follow is very instructive for us.

His desert prayer and fasting come after His baptism, when the Holy Spirit is seen to descend upon Him. Likewise, our life in the Church begins with baptism and the gift of the Holy Spirit to us.

Baptism inaugurates the public and visible dimension of Jesus’ mission of redemption. We, too, are given a public and visible participation in His mission of redemption through our baptism.

His 40-day retreat after baptism — a time of prayer, fasting, and temptation — is not a test of physical and spiritual endurance. It is not a show of discipline or willpower or self-mastery. Instead, it is the way He makes room — time and space — for the Holy Spirit’s work in Him.

We might wonder, at first, why the Holy Spirit would be at work in Him — He is divine, after all, and the fullness of perfection.

But it is important to remember that the holiness and perfection of our Lord are here in the world on a mission: the mission of redemption. And at the heart of that mission is the work of the Holy Spirit in the heart of man.

As a man, Jesus submits Himself to the working of the Holy Spirit in order to put His sacred humanity at the service of the mission.
We do not see our Lord asserting Himself, as our Redeemer, over the Father or Holy Spirit. Instead, we see Him entrusting Himself to their care, and placing His life at their service.

Prayer and fasting are the ways He commends His humanity to the Holy Spirit: Prayer is the offering of His human soul; fasting is the offering of His human body — both of which, together, constitute His humanity. Here, we see our Lord unfold the plan by which He transforms the flesh, the world, humanity.

In the desert, our Lord entreats the Holy Spirit to accomplish His will for man in Him — Jesus — first. He lays down His human body and soul at the service of holiness — at the service of the divine Son, who is at the service of the Holy Spirit and the heavenly Father.

Then, at the end of His 40 days in the desert, when He is hungry, our Lord confronts Satan.

Dr. Janet Haggerty is an associate professor of systematic theology at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary, Wynnewood. She has served on the Seminary faculty since 1995, after completing graduate studies at Fordham University, N.Y.


‘Operation Rice Bowl’ focuses
on Mali


By Christie L. Chicoine
CS&T Staff Writer


PHILADELPHIA — Mamadou, a native of Mali in West Africa who works as a cook in Philadelphia to make ends meet for his family back home, will speak at a Lenten luncheon sponsored by Catholic Relief Services of the Philadelphia Archdiocese on Feb. 27.

“Mamadou is a very vibrant individual who has overcome many obstacles in coming to this country,” said Sister John Dolores Bruno, I.H.M., who instructs him in English at the I.H.M. Literacy Center at St. Francis De Sales Parish in Southwest Philadelphia.

Sister John added that Mamadou, 47, is a good choice for a speaker: “Even when things are hard, he is able to give us a laugh during class.”

A Muslim who has a son in Mali, Mamadou moved to the United States nearly seven years ago because his business selling clothing, jewelry and furniture had slowed.

Highlights of his talk will include stories about his life in Mali, and the struggle of families there to earn enough to meet the basic needs.

The session will begin with a brief CD-Rom presentation about Mali, including its need for food because of drought conditions, and CRS-sponsored relief projects there.

A light lunch of soup and bread is served at the hour-long Lenten luncheon series, which is held at 12:15 p.m. on Wednesdays during Lent in the 13th floor conference room at the Archdiocesan Office Center, 222 N. 17th St.

Donations for lunch will be directed to the CRS Operation Rice Bowl.

Obtain a rice bowl and home calendar guide at your parish or Catholic school, or through the archdiocesan Nutritional Development Services Office by calling (215) 895-3470, Extension 717, or e-mailing: aayella@ndsarch.org. Rice bowls and guides may also be obtained through the CRS Northeast Regional Office in Radnor at (610) 293-4669, or by e-mailing: mmccullo@crs.org.

CS&T Staff Writer Christie L. Chicoine may be reached at (215) 587-2468 or cchicoin@adphila.org.

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Week Three

During prayer and fasting, temptations met in name of us all


By Janet Haggerty
Special to the CS&T


Our Lord Jesus faces Satan in the desert as the New Adam.

He does not face Satan simply as an individual man confronting the old Adversary. As the New Adam, He faces Satan for us and in the name of us all.

Adam was formed as the head of the human race. His sin was committed as an individual man, but also as head of mankind. Because of that, we know the legacy of his sin is something real that now belongs to humanity — all mankind comes forth from the old Adam and bears his failure in original sin.

Because our Lord is the New Adam, we see many parallels between His public ministry and Adam’s trial at the tree in Eden.

Our Lord establishes an inheritance of holiness, which will belong to all who come forth from Him. The 40 days of prayer and fasting, and the temptations He undergoes, in the desert, are for the sake of that holiness.

As the New Adam, Jesus’ fidelity in temptation is carried out as an individual man and as head of a new humanity

The work of the Savior is one of re-creation: His mission is not merely to set us a good example to follow, any more than Adam’s failure was merely a bad example to avoid. Jesus’ mission is to re-create mankind in Himself.

Satan tempts Jesus away from that mission in three ways. He presents our Lord with three alternatives to the suffering of the cross.

Satan does not try directly to convince our Lord to give up the idea of redeeming man. Instead, he offers a “plan of redemption” that would be more expedient, immediate and successful than the cross. (Of course, his motive is to destroy any hope of redemption for man.)

There is a parallel here with Satan’s activity in the Garden of Eden. There, he drew Adam to the tree from which the Father forbade man to eat. In the desert, he seeks to draw our Lord away from the tree of the cross, where the Father has hidden Himself.

After Jesus’ 40-day communion with the Holy Spirit in the desert, He steps forth as the New Adam to face Satan and temptation in the name of us all. As He does in eternity, He chooses the Father.

When Adam and Eve ate the forbidden fruit it was because Satan convinced them that it would make them equal to God. They grasped at that prospect.

God the Son, who does possess equality with the Father, “does not deem equality with God something to be grasped at.”

In eternity, He possesses this equality by emptying Himself. On earth, He continues to empty Himself, “taking the form of a slave.”

Satan, then, tempts our Lord to grasp at His equality, as he tempted Adam. He baits our Lord to prove His equality with the Father. He says: “If you are the Son of God, command these stones to turn into bread,” knowing that Jesus’ divinity would allow Him to do so.

He tells Jesus to throw Himself off the temple: “If you are the Son of God … He will bid His angels take care of you.”

Jesus more surely reveals His equality with the Father by refusing to rely on the power of His divine nature. He relies, instead, on His Father’s love for Him. Emptying Himself in trust this way is how He possesses equality with the Father, because it is how He possesses (with love) the Father.

Finally, Satan tempts Jesus with the mission of redemption, itself. He offers our Lord power, control and domination over the kingdoms of the earth.

Jesus’ equality with the Father, however, could never be revealed through control and manipulation of man. Through worship and adoration of the Father as His God, the Son chooses to decrease, in order that the presence of the Father in man’s life may increase.

Dr. Janet Haggerty is an associate professor of systematic theology at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary, Wynnewood. She joined the Seminary faculty in 1995, after completing graduate studies at Fordham University, N.Y.


Operation Rice Bowl focuses on hunger, poverty in Guatemala


By Christie L. Chicoine
CS&T Staff Writer


PHILADELPHIA — About 76 percent of Guatemala’s nearly 13 million people live on less than two dollars a day, according to an official with Catholic Relief Services (CRS).

Candice Harris, an advocacy program officer at the CRS northeast regional office in Radnor, will bring information about that Central American country’s poverty — especially its hunger — to the table at the archdiocesan Lenten lunch series on March 5.

The lunch series runs for an hour, beginning at 12:15 p.m., on Wednesdays during Lent at the Archdiocesan Office Center on 17th Street in Center City

In her talk, Harris will discuss her trip to Guatemala last year and describe sites where CRS provides relief work there.

“Guatemala has the region’s largest economy,” Harris said recently. “However, the highly unequal distribution of income, infrastructure and land contribute to the high level of poverty, low levels of health and education, and chronic food insecurity for the majority of the population.”

The nation’s economy is based on agricultural exports and depends heavily on a small variety of cash crops, including coffee and sugar cane, Harris said.

About 60 percent of its people are indigenous, living in communities that speak more than 21 distinct Mayan languages. They make up the majority of the rural poor, especially the extremely poor, Harris said.

Yet those same, desperately poor people share in making Guatemala “such a culturally rich place …,” she said. “It’s also a beautiful country — with breathtaking landscapes and a diversity of cultures [that include the] Mayan ethnic groups and the Caribbean Garifuna people.”

Harris said CRS Guatemala promotes human dignity and social justice throughout the region in coordinated programs that aim to increase the local communities’ income and production, thereby improving their general health as well as protecting and advancing their members’ basic rights.

CRS has been working in Guatemala since 1963, targeting the poorest and most vulnerable sectors of its society, Harris said. She added that the organization works with local civic organizations and church partners in its efforts.

Harris said most of CRS Guatemala’s programs are in the following “departments” — the equivalent of states — Alta and Baja Verapáz, Chiquimula, Guatemala, Izabal, Quiché, San Marcos, Santa Rosa, Retalhúleu and Suchitepéquez.

A light lunch of soup and bread is served at the lunch series, which is held in the 13th floor conference room of the Archdiocesan Office Center at 222 N. 17th St.

Donations for lunch will be directed to the CRS’ Operation Rice Bowl.

Reservations are not required.

Obtain a rice bowl and a home calendar guide at your parish or Catholic school, or through the archdiocesan Nutritional Development Services office by calling (215) 895-3470, Extension 717. Or e-mail: aayella@ndsarch.org.


Rice bowls and guides may also be obtained through the CRS office at (610) 293-4669, or by e-mailing: mmccullo@crs.org.

CS&T Staff Writer Christie L. Chicoine may be reached at (215) 587-2468 or cchicoin@adphila.org.

 

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