Kateri Tekakwitha, Tisha B'av, Syria And Just War, Romney As Bishop

Friday, July 27, 2012
MOHAWK VALLEY, New York (RNS) Twelve-year-old Jake Finkbonner leaned over and ran his hand through a pool of water from a natural spring at the National Shrine of Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha, in Fonda, N.Y.. With that simple gesture, on a recent July weekend, the boy connected literally to the story of the 17th-century Native American woman who the Roman Catholic Church will elevate to sainthood on Oct. 21.
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BLOG POSTS
Rabbi Laura Geller: On Tisha B'av, Move Beyond the Place Where We Are Right
How we talk to and about each other around issues that matter can destroy a city or maybe even a country. Words matter. Innuendo can kill. More and more, that seems to be true today, as well.
Sarah Jawaid: Reduce, Reuse, Ramadan
Ramadan teaches us through the long days of fasting that we don't own anything in this world, except for our souls. In my fast, when I forgo food, water, buying new things, Styrofoam and plastic water bottles, I remind myself of my power and my smallness.
Greg Carey: Elaine Pagels on Revelation -- and Revelations
Pagels attempts not only to explain the Bible's mysterious last book but also to place it in a narrative about conflict and suppression in early Christian history. The book features vivid historical imagination, along with helpful explanations and provocative, sometimes dubious, judgments.
Jalees Rehman, M.D.: Bridging the Atlantic Divide Between Muslims
By learning from each other, American and European Muslims have the ability to realize their own potential and develop a synergy that can give rise to new sociopolitical ideas and intellectual movements.
Avi Spiegel: Who's Afraid of Muslim Women Exercising?
When a YMCA recently set up an extra swim class for a group of Muslim women, it caused an unprecedented backlash. The women sought a safe space to exercise without men around -- in a way that would honor their Muslim faith and their personal traditions of modesty.
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