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Poor Canada - Losing our religion
Paula Adamick - used by permission of Catholic Insight
Every year, in the run-up to Canada Day, my office calls the various Canadian expatriate groups here in London to confirm their plans for the festivities. Their events are then publicised in our newspaper, which caters to Canadians living in Britain.
Among these annual commemorative events is a Canada Day thanksgiving prayer service at the Free Church of Scotland in Covent Garden which, this year, has been cancelled. The reason? Poor attendance. Lest readers be tempted to view this as a sign of expat indifference to the day itself, consider this: last July 1, more than 4,000 Canadians turned out to drink beer with their compatriots at the Maple Leaf Pub (located two blocks from the church) forcing police to close down the street and patrol the noisy crowds on horseback.
According to the 2001 census, Canadians are losing their religion. In a recent report by Statistics Canada based on the census, 4.8 million Canadians, 16 percent of the population, declared themselves as having no religion at all, a staggering 44 percent increase over the past decade.  Ken Ryan of Orangeville, Ontario -- one of the growing number of Canadians with no religion -- is typical. Raised as an Anglican, he lost his faith at university. "I don't see any reason to believe in religion," he told Canadian Press."I think faith is a great comfort to people and I think it would be really nice to have it ... but either you do or you don't. And I don't."
His views are shared by Michael FitzPatrick, an Ottawa father of two children, who was raised Catholic. His partner was also raised Catholic and their children attend a Catholic school because he wanted them to have a taste of spirituality. But he doesn't consider himself Catholic.  "What's the difference between Catholic and Anglican? ... King Henry VIII," says FitzPatrick. "I don't know there is any one religion that is right and I certainly don't know enough to say that any of them is wrong.  You can have faith without religion."
Almost 40 percent of those with no religion were aged 24 and under, with the Yukon having the highest proportion, 37 percent, followed by B.C. with 35 percent. Newfoundland and Labrador had the lowest-- 2.5 percent -- reporting no religion.
Still, the majority of Canadians remain Roman Catholic or Protestant, with Roman Catholic the largest religious group with 12.8 million or 43 percent of the population. Just under half of Canada's Catholics live in Quebec, accounting for 83  percent of the province's population.  Catholics are also the majority in New Brunswick, with 54 percent.  British Columbia, with 17 percent, had the lowest proportion of Catholics.
Some 8.7 million Canadians identified themselves as Protestants, Canada's second largest religious group at 29 percent--down from 35 percent in 1991, while the number of Jews in Canada increased 3.7 percent, representing 1.1 percent of the population. In the past decade, the number of Muslims in Canada doubled, now representing two percent of the population, and accounting for 15 percent of immigrants to Canada. Of those immigrants, seven percent were Hindus, five percent were Sikh and five percent were Buddhist.
But despite these figures, StatsCan notes that attendance at religious services has fallen dramatically over the past 15 years, leading to the inescapable conclusion that the gap between nominal claims of faith and its actual practice is widening. So what does this mean? Does this mean that Canada--its back now turned on its Christian roots and all public references to the Almighty prohibited--has no religion?  Since the late 1960s, Canada's national religion has been affluent secularism which, in turn, masks deepening decay within. Canadians now spend a half billion dollars a year on anti-depressants, the nation's abortion levels compete with live births and its teenagers have the second highest suicide rate in the world.
On the economic side, Canadian companies are being shut out of contracts to rebuild Iraq because of Ottawa's opposition to the war to topple Saddam Hussein, SARS, BSE (aka Mad Cow Disease) and West Nile virus are all recurring, the national airline is teetering on the brink and tourism is in freefall.
Yet, mere weeks before Canada's 136th birthday, the
prime minister, nominally a Catholic, was boasting about the nation's outstanding economic performance and proclaiming that he, unlike the conservative "right-wing" U.S. president George W Bush, is a "pro-choice" liberal, the implication being that he is the better man. In face of such breathtaking hubris, even an atheist might see this as a spectacular temptation of fate by an increasingly faithless nation.
"Poor Canada," Our Lady of Fatima is reputed to have said to the three children during an apparition in 1917. Within two years of the apparitions, two of the children were dead, but the third, Lucia dos Santos, who became a Carmelite nun, has at various times disclosed messages revealed to her in 1917.
"Poor Canada!" Lucia says Our Lady said. And the parish priest of Fatima repeated it to the bishop, who mentioned it to the archbishop who confided the phrase to the papal nuncio, who reported it to the Pope who much later said a few words about it to Cardinal Leger, then a pastor in Montreal. When parishioners heard about it, they fell to their knees in prayer for our country. If true, what do you think Our Lady meant?
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Here is her response to "poor Canada"

Paula Adamick responds:
I had never heard of this reputed quote either, until I came across it recently in one of my favourite reference books-Colombo's Canad-ian Quotes, edited by John Robert Colombo, Hurtig Publishers, 1974.  The quote is attributed to Lucia dos Santos-one of the three  shepherd children whom Our Lady appeared to at Fatima six times, from May 13 to October 13, 1917- and who has at various times further disclosed messages revealed to her in 1917. According to Colombo, some Catholics in Quebec believe that at least one of the prophecies concerns Canada.  The quote appeared in an article by Jacques Godbout in The Toronto Star, December 30, 1972: "'Poor Canada!' said the Virgin Mary in Portuguese to the children of Fatima, who didn't know how to read or write and who didn't know geography...."
Apparently the quote was repeated to various clergy until it finally reached the Pope, who allegedly said a few words about it to the late Cardinal Léger, then a pastor in Montreal. When the whole French-Canadian population eventually heard about it, "they fell on their knees to save the country."
Although the amplification of the quote does not indicate when Cardinal Léger was told of Our Lady's reputed exclamation, one wonders whether Quebecers would be similarly moved if they heard it today.

Sr. Lucia speaks about Medjugorje!

Dear prayer group, Charlie asked us all whether Sr. Lucia, the sole surviving Fatima visionary, has anything to say about Medjugorje. I am happy to report that Sr. Lucia continues to speak with Our Lady and that the Blessed Mother often speaks about her work in Medjugorje!
This was reported by Sr. Lucia's nephew, Fr. Salinho, a Salesian priest. The source for this information is the very trustworthy Sr. Emmanuel in her book, 'Medjugorje: the 90's', Pub.1997, page 71.
This information should really get out, since Fatima is the most Church approved Marian apparition in history.
If Our Lady of Fatima says that she is appearing in Medjugorje then she IS appearing in Medjugorje!
I don't know how the Church could ever disprove Medjugorje after all the conversions, miracles and this: that Our Lady of Fatima says that she is appearing in Medjugorje!
It should also be more widely known because there are many people who say, 'I don't follow Medjugorje, I follow Fatima'. The two are not in opposition with each other: it is the same Blessed Virgin Mary appearing in both places, repeating the same call to conversion.
Our Lady who appeared in Fatima and is now appearing in Medjugorje, pray for us, pray for us, pray for us!    Ryan.

Pope John Paul II to Bishop Hnilica
"Medjugorje is the fulfillment and continuation of Fatima."

Alberta's Bishop Fred Henry, chastising Prime Minister Jean Chretien and Progressive Conservative leader Joe Clark for their "pro-choice" stance on abortion. Both leaders profess to be Catholic themselves, although, as Bishop Henry noted,   "no Catholic can responsibly take a 'pro-choice' stand when the 'choice' in question involves the taking of innocent human life."

Wolves in Sheep's

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Bishop O'Malley. a Capuchian friar, was described by the Vatican official as "a man of great spirituality."
Archbishop-elect O'Malley delivered a strong pro-life statement when appointed to the Palm Beach diocese last year.   In that reflection he said:
"I will not vote for any politician who will promote abortion or the culture of death, no matter how appealing the rest of his or her program might be. They are wolves in sheep's garments, the K.K.K. without the sheets."

Pick and choose Catholics are not good Catholics - Pope John Paul II

If you they can't be trusted in things that are important WHY WHY WHY would you trust them to run our country.

Sounds like they are nott the only ones who have spiritual problems.
What about those who vote for them?

Boston Archbishop Sean Patrick O'Malley has stated that Catholic politicians who support legal abortion should not receive Communion of their own volition