Sign Up for Our Newsletter!


By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: . You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the SafeUnsubscribe® link, found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Constant Contact

EPISODE #311
EMPOWERED BY THE SPIRIT: CAMINO DE SANTIAGO

Summertime is the perfect time to get outside and enjoy the beautiful weather in southern California. And when you can couple this great weather with a blessed, holy event, it’s a win-win situation!

 

Our friends at Santiago de Compostela Catholic Church in Lake Forest recently hosted the annual “CAMINO DE SANTIAGO.” Guest Deacon Dan Diesel is a key point person in bringing this event together.

 

What’s this popular event all about? Tune in and find out!

 

 

 

Originally broadcast on 7/3/22

THIS ‘PILGRIM GRANDMOTHER’ WALKED 570 MILES TO PRAY FOR FAMILIES

Mexico City, Mexico, May 14, 2018 / 07:00 pm (CNA/EWTN News) – Emma Morosini has been called the “pilgrim grandmother.”  Earlier this month, at the age of 94, she earned that nickname by concluding a 570-mile walking pilgrimage in honor of Our Lady of Guadalupe.

Her 40 day pilgrimage took Morosini from Monterrey, in northeastern Mexico, to Mexico City, where she prayed at the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe, before the tilma of Saint Juan Diego.

Emma Moronsini. 91 años. Camina hace 1 mes. Salió de Tucumán. Quiere llegar a la Basílica (Luján). Ya está en Córdoba pic.twitter.com/zwXJFnIRFw

— Sebastián Volterri (@SebaVolte) February 13, 2015

 

Morosini, a native of Italy who for more than 25 years has made pilgrimages to shrines around the world, arrived the afternoon of May 12 at the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico City, to pray for families, young people, and “world peace.”

The “pilgrim grandmother” has visited shrines in Portugal, Spain, Poland, Israel, Brazil and Argentina.

During this pilgrimage, Morosini began walking each day at 6:30 am, carrying a small suitcase and an umbrella, and wearing a reflective vest as a safety precaution.

For food, Morosini carried milk, juice, bread, and water, receiving along the way some donations of fruits and vegetables.

At various points on her way she was accompanied by medical and civil defense personnel or by Mexico’s Federal Police. She was often housed by municipal authorities along her route.

During a 2015 pilgrimage in Argentina, when she was 91, Morosini told reporters that she was praying for “peace in the world, for young people, for all these families that are divided. Many are separated, some live together but aren’t spouses, or they don’t have children. It’s very sad.”

The “pilgrim grandmother” was applauded by fellow pilgrims when she arrived at the the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe. Before entering the church, she woman knelt down, kissed the ground, made the sign of the cross and prayed silently for a few moments.

TENS OF THOUSANDS RALLY AT THE WALK FOR LIFE WEST COAST IN SAN FRANCISCO

SAN FRANCISCO (CNS) — Tens of thousands of people rallied in San Francisco’s Civic Center Plaza Jan. 23 and then walked down Market Street for the 12th annual Walk for Life West Coast, undaunted by intermittent rain, abortion protesters who briefly disrupted one of the speakers, or by traffic congestion related to the upcoming Super Bowl.

“They tell us the lie that women — in order to have opportunities and in order for us be successful — we must have abortion rights,” said Obianuju Ekeocha, Nigerian founder and president of Culture of Life Africa, at the rally. Culture of Life Africa’s philosophy is consistent with St. John Paul II’s theology of the body. It rejects international aid tied to abortion, sterilization and other anti-life initiatives.

“I stand here before you not just as a black person or an African person. I stand here before you as a woman to say we should never have to buy success with the blood of our babies,” Ekeocha said.

Center for Medical Progress founder David Daleiden — whose undercover videos recorded Planned Parenthood officials discussing payments for procuring organs and other body parts from an abortion and how best to keep them intact during the procedure — was the first speaker at the one-hour rally at Civic Center Plaza.

The videos led Congress to vote to defund Planned Parenthood in January; President Barack Obama vetoed the measure and the House plans a vote to attempt to override the veto. The videos also prompted Planned Parenthood to file a lawsuit charging the center, Daleiden and others with violating the Racketeer Influence and Corrupt Organization Act, known as RICO. Planned Parenthood claims Daleiden’s undercover investigation was a “criminal enterprise.”

Daleiden also is now facing an indictment on a felony charge and a misdemeanor charge related to his video project. A Houston grand jury Jan. 25 handed down the indictment, while finding Planned Parenthood has done no wrongdoing, according to an AP story.

“The videos raise the biggest question that Planned Parenthood and their allies cannot answer,” Daleiden told the San Francisco rally. “That is how on the one hand in our country the humanity of the baby fetus is not considered to be equal enough to our own in order to be totally protected by law. But at the same time, it is precisely their equal and identical humanity to our own that makes them so valuable for sale.”

A Californian, Daleiden listed some of the many saints cities are named for in California, including St. Francis, St. Joseph, the angels and St. Clare. “I don’t believe that the curse of abortion and the curse of Planned Parenthood baby trafficking can last forever in a state like ours,” Daleiden said.

Several people who were behind the stage demonstrating in favor of abortion briefly interrupted Daleiden’s speech. They ripped off their shirts to display an obscene slogan written in black ink, and threw fliers on the stage before being handcuffed by police.

The Sisters of Life, whose founder Mother Agnes Donovan had just received the Walk for Life’s St. Gianna Molla award for pro-life heroism, tried to shield one of the three bare-breasted women from the men in front of City Hall taking photographs “and so they formed a rosary circle around her and were praying for her,” said Martha Garza, sister of Eva Muntean, the walk’s co-chair.

One of the Sisters of Life, who asked not to be named, said later, “The heart hurts for them.”

The women were charged with infractions of the city’s park code for baring their chests and with disturbing the peace under California’s penal code, said Officer Albie Esparza, a public information officer. The women were released from custody the next day.

A counterdemonstration of about 100 people also took place along Market Street, with participants waving orange signs: “Abortion on demand without apology.”

At the Walk for Life Mass earlier at St. Mary’s Cathedral, San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone, referred to the videos and to California’s new assisted suicide law saying, “The big question is, what does this say about us as a society. How can we do this to ourselves?” The archbishop tied respect for the Eucharist and respect for life together and called upon pro-life supporters to be Jesus’ “light shining in the darkness.”

During the Walk for Life rally, Archbishop Cordileone imparted Pope Francis apostolic blessing, sent by Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican secretary of state, and Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, the apostolic nuncio. In part, the letter read, “Pope Francis sends warm greetings and his assurance of his closeness in prayer to all taking part in the annual Walk for Life West Coast.”

Other speakers included the Rev. Clenard Childress who has spoken at almost every Walk for Life West Coast, beginning with the first in 2005. The New Jersey Baptist minister is a national African-American voice for the unborn, marriage and family. The rally concluded with testimony by Emmanuel — Jesus Emmanuel Arturo Acha Martinez — a musical icon in the Latin world. “We are here in defense of life. We have to do it. We all have to do it,” Emmanuel said before speaking in Spanish to those gathered.

Walk for Life was founded in 2005 by a group of Bay Area residents with the mission of changing the perception that abortion is the answer.

 

Schmalz is assistant editor of Catholic San Francisco, newspaper of the Archdiocese of San Francisco.