Ballintubber Abbey is set to receive €350,000 from the National Monuments Service for reconstruction and renovation of the 800-year-old church. Green Party TD Malcolm Noonan announced the contribution while visiting the Mayo abbey, where Mass has been celebrated for more than 800 years, July 22. He was “delighted” to announce the funding, as “the local…
Month: July 2021
Ethiopia’s bishops plead for peace in Tigray
As the war over control of Ethiopia’s Tigray region expands into neighbouring regions, the country’s bishops on Saturday urged an end to the violence. “It saddens our hearts hearing about war while we all would like to hear about peace and reconciliation,” read a July 17 statement from the Ethiopian bishops’ conference. The conference had…
Navigating the tougher aspects of being a teenager
The View I missed the movie, Eighth Grade, when it was in cinemas but saw it recently on Netflix. In the US, being in eighth grade is roughly equivalent to second year, a particularly difficult age. Hormones kick in and friendships become complicated. Painful Social media has made being a teenager even more difficult. The protagonist,…
When it comes to stroke, prevention is the best medicine
New research suggests that the tell-tale signs of a stroke may be evident a decade before the life-threatening event, writes Chai Brady On the island of Ireland, more than 13,000 people have a stroke every year. About 205 of these will die as a result of the stroke. Time is of the essence, and medics have…
The Plinys, uncle and nephew, and the claims of classical culture
In the Shadow of Vesuvius: a Life of Pliny by Daisy Dunn (William Collins, £9.00 / €11.90) The Natural History by Pliny the Elder, translated with an introduction by John Healey (Penguin Classics, €15.99 / £9.99) The Letters of the Younger Pliny translated by Betty Radice (Penguin Classics, £9.99 / €9.42) A life of Pliny? Yes please, I said,…
Will we soon need a vaccine passport to go to Mass?
Churches must seek to reduce social distancing requirement so that public worship can return to normal as soon as possible, writes David Quinn Public worship was permitted again in Ireland in May. Nowhere else in Europe had stopped people from gathering together for religious worship for so long. But now, as we face into August,…
Bishop hails Des O’Malley as man of courage
Bishop Brendan Leahy has described former minister Des O’Malley as a man of “courage and decency”. The former leader of the Progressive Democrats was laid to rest following requiem Mass in Dublin on Friday. He represented Limerick in the Dáil for many years and served in numerous ministries, including the Department of Justice. On hearing…
Cuban government preparing a law regulating dissidents’ defence lawyers
Cuba’s communist government has drafted a law that would equate the role of dissidents’ defence lawyers with that of public officials. In May, the People’s Supreme Court, Cuba’s highest judicial authority, drew up a series of legislative proposals that it sent to the island’s legislature, the National Assembly of People’s Power, for passage. Among these…
Explorations of the Ignatian spirituality
To Love and to Serve: Selected Essays Exploring the Ignatian Tradition by Brian O’Leary SJ (Messenger Publications, €25.00 / £23.00) From the beginning of his career as a priest and academic Brian O’Leary has been involved in exploring various aspects of spirituality, especially as they derive from the Ignatian tradition to which he himself belongs. Much…
The Lord of the Rings – Grace, truth and a summer long-read
With a month of summer left, Ruadhán Jones reflects on the ideal Catholic long read The Lord of the Rings by JRR Tolkien has a broad fan base, within and outside Catholic circles, but due to its length – 900 pages and some – it can be off-putting. For many, Peter Jackson’s film adaptation is…