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"These refugees are fleeing terror themselves—violence like we have witnessed in Paris," said Seattle Auxiliary Bishop Eusebio Elizondo, chairman of the migration committee. "They are extremely vulnerable families, women, and children who are fleeing for their lives. We cannot and should not blame them for the actions of a terrorist organization."
A memorial is seen at the Place de la Republique in Paris on November 15. (CNS photo/Lucie Brousseau)
We now have yet another red-vs.-blue map to keep track of.
In Republique square in Paris on Nov. 14, people gather in memory of victims of terrorist attacks. Coordinated attacks the previous evening claimed the lives of 132 people. The Islamic State claimed responsibility. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)
In the aftermath of the attacks in Paris, which at press time had claimed 132 lives and left hundreds more wounded, President François Hollande vowed to “be unforgiving with the barbarians from Daesh.” By Nov. 15 France had begun bombing raids on the ersatz capital of ISIS, Raqqa in Syr
A woman mourns in Republique square in Paris Nov. 14 as people gather in memory of victims of terrorist attacks. Coordinated attacks the previous evening claimed the lives of 129 people. The Islamic State claimed responsibility. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)
Some of the terrorists were heard shouting out “Allah u-Akbar” (“Allah is Great!”) as they launched their deadly attacks in Paris.
Outside the Bataclan, a survivor puts his cellphone to use. Dozens of people were killed in a series of attacks in Paris on Nov. 13. (CNS photo/Etienne Laurent, EPA)
Some of Paris’ wounds are hidden; others are quite literally buried. Friday night’s events showed us the bloody gash of violence and opened up a new and seemingly more terrible wound.
REFUGE. A Christian mother and child on Oct. 15 at a camp for displaced people at a Catholic school in Manduamas, Indonesia. More than 4,000 Aceh residents fled to North Sumatra following attacks by Islamic groups and the burning of two churches.
During a press briefing after the report’s release on Oct. 14, Secretary of State John Kerry said these non-state actors “are now the principal persecutors and preventers of religious tolerance and practice.”“Most prominent, and most harmful, obviously, has been the rise of i
Three years after Paul Ryan and Joseph R. Biden debated as vice presidential candidates, Washington is anxiously waiting for them to make anguishing choices about their futures—whether Mr. Ryan will answer his fractured party’s pleas to serve as speaker and whether Mr. Biden has the emot
Iraqi Christians take refuge in Jordan
Non-state actors, Secretary of State Kerry said, “are now the principal persecutors and preventers of religious tolerance and practice. Most prominent, and most harmful, obviously, has been the rise of international terrorist groups such as Daesh, al-Qaida, al-Shabaab, Boko Haram. And all have been guilty of vicious acts of unprovoked violence.”
Pope Francis addresses a joint meeting of Congress at the U.S. Capitol in Washington Sept. 24. In the first such speech by a pope, he called on Congress to stop bickering as the world needs help. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)
Francis demonstrates how to share Catholic moral principles in ways that invite and persuade rather than alienate and push people away.
Pope Francis made a passionate appeal to the international community to find ways to resolve the conflicts in Syria, Iraq, Jerusalem and the West Bank of the Jordan, where there is “an escalation of violence” that is bringing destruction and great sufferings to the peoples living there.S