Herbs & Plants: Basella alba, an incredibly rich sources of vitamin A

Basella alba (Plant family Basellaceae) is an edible, fleshy, perennial, climbing creeper. Basella or vine spinach is a popular tropical leafy-green vegetable, commonly grown as a backyard herb in home gardens. It is popularly known as Indian spinach, Malabar spinach or Country spinach. Vine-spinach has two chief cultivars; Basella alba, which features green-stems and deep-green […]

Great Missionaries: Archbishop Guido Maria Conforti

To bring the Gospel to those who had yet to hear it was a fundamental feature of the apostolic activity of Archbishop Guido Maria Conforti, founder of the Xaverian Missionaries. Guido Maria Conforti was born on March 30th, 1865, at Ravadese, in the Diocese of Parma, in the north Italy. While still attending primary school […]

Catholic Church in Numbers

According to the Church’s book of statistics updated to December 31, 2018, which takes in everything from the number of Catholics globally to the numbers behind the Church’s worldwide involvement in healthcare, welfare and education, on December 31, 2018, the world population was 7,496,394,000, up 88,020,000 people compared to the previous year. On the same […]

Archbishop Justin Welby: “Fratelli Tutti is a truly ecumenical document”

Commentary on Encyclical Letter “Fratelli tutti” by Justin Welby, Archbishop of Canterbury. In this Encyclical, Pope Francis sets out a clear, exciting and ambitious vision of the role of human friendship and solidarity as the basis for a better future world order. Throughout this work, he interweaves the themes of the individual and the social, […]

Great missionaries: Cardinal Lavigerie, a man of strong convictions

Charles Martial Allemand Lavigerie, Cardinal Archbishop of Algiers and Carthage, missionary founder and anti-slavery campaigner, was born near Bayonne in the Basque region of southern France. After his schooling, he studied theology at Saint Sulpice in Paris. In 1854, after priestly ordination and further studies, he was appointed professor of church history in the university […]

Oral literature: why the bananas belong to the monkey

Once upon a time when the world had just been made and there was only one kind of banana, but very many kinds of monkeys, there was a little old woman who had a big garden full of banana trees. It was very difficult for the old woman to gather the bananas herself, so she […]

DR Congo: asking for justice and to promote reconciliation

From the assassination of Archbishop Christophe Munzihirwa to the violence in the country today. The Catholic bishops speak out. “More than 24 years have passed since the assassination of Archbishop Christophe Munzihirwa in Bukavu in circumstances that have not yet been clarified. People want to know the truth,” said the Archbishop of Bukavu, Mgr. François-Xavier […]

Reflection: The challenges of “Fratelli Tutti”

On October 4, the feast of St. Francis of Assisi, Pope Francis released a new encyclical entitled, “Fratelli Tutti” on fraternity and social friendship. It can appear a rather depressing read because of its searing realism, except it plays the long game of Christian hope. “Fratelli Tutti” lays out reasons why there’s so much injustice, […]

Reflection: can humanity ever be united in doing good?

The latest letter of Pope Francis, his encyclical, Fratelli Tutti “Brothers and Sisters All,” is one that should touch every heart, stimulate our minds, awaken our conscience, warm our emotions and motivate us to do good and make this a happier, just and better world. Can we humans ever unite as one humanity to change […]

Great Missionaries: Bishop Daniel Comboni

Daniel Comboni was born at Limone on Lake Garda in Brescia on March 15, 1831, into a family of cultivators. With the passing of their other children, Daniel’s parents, Luigi and Domenica, were inordinately attached to him. So, they formed a very close unit, rich in faith and human values, but poor in material things. […]