Italians Help Flood Of Refugees In Pope Francis's Vision Of ‘A Church For The Poor'

CATANIA, Italy (RNS) Sitting outside the central train station here in eastern Sicily, a 16-year-old who would only give his name as “Simon” hunched his knees up to his chest and wrapped himself up into a ball. With little spoken English, the teenager from Eritrea has taken to miming the way he traveled across the Mediterranean.

He was one of around 325 migrants crammed into an overcrowded boat that left Libya earlier this month, only to lose power a few hours into the journey.

“For six hours we floated on top of the sea,” he said, explaining how he was kept below deck until being rescued by the Italian navy. Having been stored like cargo by people smugglers, Simon had become sick and was swiftly treated by a doctor.

He was first taken to the island of Lampedusa, Italy’s southernmost point, which Pope Francis chose in 2013 for his first official trip outside Rome. During the visit, the pontiff tossed a wreath into the sea to commemorate the untold number of migrants who had lost their lives en route to Europe.

Nearly two years later, an estimated 750 migrants died last month in a single shipwreck. Simon and his fellow passengers all survived the dangerous crossing, which has become the world’s most dangerous migrant route.

So far this year, an estimated 34,000 people are thought to have arrived in Italy by sea; this week alone, rescuers saved hundreds more. A handful find their way to a center set up by Caritas, the international Catholic charity, in the shadow of Catania’s central train station.

After arriving in the city three days ago, Simon found his way to the center, along with other Eritreans. The group had met in Sudan, where Simon says he spent four months before embarking on a weeklong journey to Libya.

The friends have joined the stream of migrants who pass through the Sicilian city before continuing their journey to northern Europe. Almost all the migrants who visit the Caritas center have avoided being identified by Italian authorities; European Union laws would make them unable to cross borders if they were identified.

Despite the help given by the Italian navy and medics, Simon said he ran away from the authorities to avoid being fingerprinted. Finding himself on an Italian register of asylum-seekers would hinder his journey to Germany, via Milan, where his brother awaits.

Filippo Cannizzo, spokesman for Caritas, said the Catania center has become a “place of transit” in recent months. First opened in 2007 to offer food and advice to people living in extreme poverty, the center has welcomed an increasing number of migrants from African countries.

Most have just arrived and sleep on the streets, taking refuge in the center during the morning and early evening.

Although thousands of Syrians have fled their country’s bloody civil war across the Mediterranean, Cannizzo said none seek Caritas’ help. “Probably because they have more economic resources, and they’re well-organized in the region,” he explained.

Eritrean migrants such as Simon say they paid $4,000 each for the journey to Europe, and Cannizzo said those from the east African country are the worst off when they arrive in Catania.

All those who pass through the center are offered breakfast and dinner by a small army of Caritas volunteers. The words of the pope, who since his Lampedusa visit has repeatedly highlighted the plight of migrants, have further boosted Sicilians’ willingness to help.

“There’s certainly been an impact on the volunteers. As a city, Catania has responded with solidarity. Even in a city where there’s no work, there’s a high level of criminality, in addition to the problems of the migrants,” Cannizzo said.

The proof is on the table, where pastries donated by 14 local bakeries are piled high. “In this period of crisis, a lot of people have given donations. The entire food network here is from donations,” said Cannizzo, adding that there are also clothes given for migrants and poor Italians.

Last month, Francis met Italian President Sergio Mattarella and thanked him for the country’s commitment to welcoming migrants. But Italy is stretched nearly to the breaking point in dealing with the high number of new arrivals, with immigration centers long since full.

Other buildings across Sicily and elsewhere have been used to house migrants, with organizations such as Caritas seeking to offer additional support.

Despite the Christian ethos that governs Caritas, Cannizzo is firm in saying there is no Catholic agenda. There is no need for volunteers to be religious, while the cooks are careful to prepare food in accordance with others’ beliefs.

“On Sundays we hold Mass; whoever wants to come can, but there’s absolute freedom,” he said. But the pope’s words are not far from Cannizzo’s mind, as he remarks on Francis’ desire to create “a church for the poor.”

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The Science Behind Why Naming Our Feelings Makes Us Happier

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In many kinds of individual and group therapy, we are instructed how to identify what we are feeling, disclose what we are feeling, listen carefully and without judgment to the feelings of others and acknowledge others’ feelings with empathy, caring and compassion.

It’s often helpful to assign a “feeling word” to the emotion you wish to express. Examples might include feeling: anxious, worried, happy, angry, confused, left out, frustrated, peaceful, determined, relieved, joyous, etc.

By using this format, you learn about yourself by uncovering and expressing the emotions that are fueling your behavioral choices. As this internal muscle of self-awareness grows, it becomes much easier to connect within and also to express feelings more clearly and directly to trusted others. This, in fact, is the primary goal of group therapy — to increase emotional and social intimacy and decrease isolation in our lives. This increased awareness also fosters more deliberate and conscious lifestyle choices.

A study conducted by UCLA professor of psychology Matthew D. Lieberman found that putting feelings into words makes sadness, anger and pain less intense. According to Lieberman, when we feel angry we have increased activity in the part of the brain called the amygdala. The amygdala is responsible for detecting fear and setting off a series of biological alarms and responses to protect the body from danger. When the angry feeling is labeled, Lieberman and researchers noted a decreased response in the amygdala and an increased activity in the right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex. This part of the brain is involved with inhibiting behavior and processing emotions.

Lieberman explains it this way:

When you put feelings into words, you’re activating this prefrontal region and seeing a reduced response in the amygdala. In the same way you hit the brake when you’re driving when you see a yellow light — when you put feelings into words you seem to be hitting the brakes on your emotional responses. As a result, a person may feel less angry or less sad.

As we learn to identify, label and express emotions, this area of the brain is strengthened. In turn, we are then better able to respond to our feelings less reactively and more responsively.

Dr. Ornish writes: “When you take time for your feelings, you become less stressed and you can think more clearly and creatively, making it easier to find constructive solutions.”

Science is now verifying what we have known to be true in our experience. Naming and sharing our emotions with a trusted other helps us to understand the breadth and depth of what matters most to us. Lieberman believes that this is “ancient wisdom.” He says: “Putting our feelings into words helps us. If a friend is sad and we get them to talk about it, they will feel better.”

In our daily, lifestyle practice we know that when we feel better, we do better. As we learn to pay greater attention to our feelings by identifying and sharing them with others, our stress will decrease and our emotional intimacy and support will increase. Dr. Ornish sums the result up nicely: “When you take time for your feelings, you become less stressed and you can think more clearly and creatively, making it easier to find constructive solutions.”

What benefits have you found in sharing your feelings with those you trust?

This blog was originally published on Ornish Living.

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Germany's Catholic Church Just Took An Amazing Step For LGBT And Remarried Catholics

The Catholic Church in Germany is taking a stand for its remarried, lesbian, and gay employees.

More than two-thirds of Germany’s 27 Roman Catholic dioceses voted in favor of relaxing the morality clauses in employee contracts, a church spokesman confirmed to Reuters on Tuesday.

The change means that getting remarried after a divorce or being part of a same-sex union is no longer grounds for automatic dismissal from a job at a church institution.

In the past, such violations of the morality clause have been “often ignored” by church officials, the National Catholic Register reports. Officially changing the labor law will allow the church to show German Catholics that it is adapting to modern lifestyles.

“The new rule opens the way for decisions that do justice to the situations people live in,” Alois Glueck, a prominent lay Catholic leader, told Reuters.

Cardinal Rainer Woelki of the Cologne diocese emphasized that the church in Germany is still standing by official Catholic doctrine that marriages shouldn’t be broken and that homosexuality is a sin.

It’s still possible for employees who publicly advocate against church teachings or who are hostile toward the church to be fired, but only in “exceptional cases,” the Catholic News Agency reports.

German bishops and theologians have been prominent advocates of making the church a welcoming place for lesbian, gay, divorced and remarried Catholics. During the Synod of the Family in October, German leaders supported the idea of allowing remarried Catholics to receive Communion, Crux reports.

The Catholic church in America doesn’t have a national policy on morality clauses in Catholic institutions. But some dioceses have been vocal about keeping their employees in line with Catholic doctrine.

Most recently, San Francisco’s Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone has come under criticism for trying to strengthen the morality clause in Catholic school teachers’ contracts. Prominent members of the San Francisco Catholic community have spoken out against the move.

According to Francis DeBernardo, executive director of the LGBT advocacy organization New Ways Ministry, about 40 LGBT people have been fired from Catholic schools or parishes over the past 3 1/2 years.

“If Catholic bishops here in the U.S. do not do something to stop these firings, which they have often sanctioned and directed, the future of Catholic institutions — parishes and schools — is dismal as more and more people become disaffected with a church leadership which does not practice justice,” DeBernardo told HuffPost.

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Fast Retailing Redux

Forget Weed, Maybe It’s Ecstasy

A few weeks ago, I suggested that Tadashi Yanai, President and CEO of Fast Retailing (parent of Uniqlo), must be smoking something, as he declared he would have 1,000 stores opened in the U.S. by 2020. Not long after, I read in WWD.com, which covered the company’s annual media event, that his aim is to reach $253 billion (yes, USD), in global sales by 2030, up from their August current year-end revenue projection of about $13 billion. His new projection for 2020 was $42 billion, which by the way, is way lower than $61 billion target I had reported that Mr. Tadashi had projected in the article. So, which numbers are we to believe?

And, even with the lowered projection for 2020, does the $250 billion goal for 2030 sound like something a person with all of their marbles would throw out at such a meeting? Mr. Tadashi said, “So we are within sight of 5 trillion yen, ($42 billion) and that’s not just big talk. I think soon we have to start making big ambitions for the year 2030 as well, and if it’s the year 2030, why not 30 trillion yen ($253 billion)?” The audience laughed thinking that this must be Yanai’s type of a Japanese joke. He responded, “It’s not a joke. I believe it’s possible that we can realize this dream.”

I was so flabbergasted I just had to follow up on my past article to advise my readers that this guy has got to be on something much stronger than weed, based on my limited knowledge of drugs, even though “… I didn’t inhale.” I have never sampled Ecstasy (too bad for me I guess), but I am told that it does a great job unlocking dopamine in the human brain, providing feelings of euphoria, well being, satisfaction and can even result in addiction.

Apparently still in the euphoria stage, Yanai went on to say, “The year 2020 is right around the corner, so we have started to talk about 2030. We have to look ahead.” His main targets for growth are the U.S., Europe and China.

A logical question for such audacious goals was raised from the audience about any acquisitions Mr. Tadashi might have in mind (obviously to help in reaching the $253 billion number). Allowing that he would be interested in good brands with a “compatible appeal across the world,” he said organic growth would be the primary driver. “Even with a 5 trillion yen goal, ($42 billion by 2020), organic growth is good enough from our perspective.”

How’s it Working for You so Far, Yanai?

Uniqlo opened 62 stores in the first quarter, outside of Japan, bringing the total to 757 stores internationally. At the end of January there were 39 Uniqlo stores in the U.S.- in New York, Boston, LA and San Francisco. The newest one in Chicago will open later this year, and more are planned for Seattle, San Diego and Houston over the next couple years. Remember, with 39 stores out of the starting gate, if they want to reach 1000 stores in the U.S. by 2020, the math says: 200 a year. I think I need to pass along Eddie “abracadabra” Lampert’s middle nickname, now better placed as Yanai “abracadabra on steroids” Tadashi.

With 341 stores now in China, which is experiencing an economic slowdown, Mr. Tadashi said, “Some people tend to be worried about the Chinese economy but the economic climate is worse in Japan than China.” Okay Yanai, but just what is that supposed to mean? I guess the high is still working.

Even so, if he expects to reach such outrageous goals in such a short period of time, maybe he should try some “speed,” which will provide both a euphoric, kind of delusional fantasy, as well as speeding things up, or at least make him think they are moving faster. Again, of course, I have no direct knowledge of these effects.

About the Author

Robin Lewis has over forty years of strategic operating and consulting experience in the retail and related consumer products industries. He has held executive positions at DuPont, VF Corporation, Women’s Wear Daily (WWD), and Goldman Sachs, among others, and has consulted for dozens of retail, consumer products and other companies. In addition to his role as CEO and Editorial Director of The Robin Report, he is a professor at the Graduate School of Professional Studies at The Fashion Institute of Technology.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

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