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British
cardinal prays to end "crisis of governance" in Zimbabwe
Catholic
News Agency
February 06, 2008
Harare - Cardinal Cormac
Murphy-O'Connor, the Archbishop of Westminster, recently called
for prayer and solidarity with the people of Zimbabwe on a pastoral
visit to the African country.
The cardinal traveled
with the chair of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of England
and Wales international affairs department, Bishop Crispian Hollis.
He met with bishops, including Archbishop of Harare Robert Ndlovu
and others from the Zimbabwean bishops' conference.
Cardinal Murphy-O'Connor
visited a township in the south of Harare where poverty and illness,
including cholera outbreaks, are endemic. Economic collapse and
extreme food shortages have created a desperate situation, with
many people gathering near parishes for handouts. The Jesuits recently
distributed five tons of corn, but the supply lasted for only three
days.
The cardinal visited
several projects run by the local Church that were partially funded
by Cafod, Caritas Internationalis, and the Pontifical Mission Society,
these sites primarily focused on caring for HIV/AIDS victims. Sister
Margaret McAllen, director of an HIV/AIDS project in Mashambanzou,
told the cardinal that they had cared for over 3,500 families in
the community, bringing the most sick into residential care until
they recover enough to return to the community.
Sister McAllen said that
dealing with death and the dying required spiritual support, telling
the cardinal, "We get our spiritual energy from people like
you coming here. This is vital to our work. We are all channels
of God's grace and knowing that you are with us is important
as it gives us strength in our mission. We need this support."
Cardinal Murphy-O'Connor
said that he was "profoundly moved . . . by the suffering
and anguish of those living in terrible poverty and living with
HIV/AIDS but also by the compassion and strength of those in the
Church working with the most vulnerable."
"It is when caring
for the poor, sick and most vulnerable to bring them hope that the
Church is at its finest," he said.
The cardinal said that
there was a "crisis of governance" in Zimbabwe, brought
on by "a crisis of spiritual and moral leadership and a collapse
of civic society." He said it could take years to restore
the country to stability, and that material assistance was essential.
However, the Church can offer "our sense of prayer and solidarity
through which hope grows."
Archbishop Ndlovu
thanked the cardinal and Bishop Hollis at a crowded public Mass
at Harare Cathedral. The cardinal delivered a homily focusing on
hope for a better future for the people of Zimbabwe.
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