


The ayatollahs need Maduro’s failed narco-state hurting the Western Hemisphere.
The post Iran Is Backing Venezuela’s Maduro To Keep a Presence in America Latina appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
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The ayatollahs need Maduro’s failed narco-state hurting the Western Hemisphere.
The post Iran Is Backing Venezuela’s Maduro To Keep a Presence in America Latina appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
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This is a Gateway Hispanic article.
The post Captured in Málaga: ‘Pipo,’ leader of the Ecuadorian cartel Los Lobos, the most wanted drug trafficker in Hispanic America arrested after years on the run with a false identity appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
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Top Republicans banned GOP Rep Dan Crenshaw (TX) from international travel for three months after an alcohol-related episode during a congressional trip to Mexico in August, according to Punchbowl News.
The post BREAKING: Top Republicans Banned Dan Crenshaw From International Travel After Alcohol-Related Episode During Congressional Trip to Mexico appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
Read MoreJesus, my God, I adore You,
here present in the Blessed Sacrament of the altar,
where You wait day and night to be our comfort
while we await Your unveiled presence in heaven.
Jesus, my God,
I adore You in all places
where the Blessed Sacrament is reserved
and where sins are committed
against this Sacrament of Love.
Jesus, my God,
I adore You for all time,
past, present and future,
for every soul that ever was,
is or shall be created.
Jesus, my God, …


Long Island, New York, Nov 19, 2025 / 18:38 pm (CNA).
A coalition of Catholic faith leaders filed suit Nov. 19 to seek access to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility in Broadview, Illinois, where clergy have been denied entry to distribute Communion.
The complaint alleged that ICE’s refusal to allow clergy to pray with detainees or offer Communion violates the First Amendment, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, and the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act. Catholic spiritual leaders attempted to bring Communion to detainees at the ICE facility Nov. 1 after making formal requests to the Department of Homeland Security and ICE, and officials denied entry.
“Despite the long history of religious access to the Broadview detention center established through the persistence and perseverance of the late Sister JoAnn Persch, RSM, and Sister Pat Murphy, RSM, recent months have brought shifting, contradictory, and often opaque communication from DHS and ICE officials. Faced with this lack of honesty and transparency, we were left with no choice but to file this lawsuit,” said Michael N. Okińczyc-Cruz, executive director of the Coalition for Spiritual and Public Leadership, in a statement.
Asked Nov. 17 whether it would take a judge’s order to get Communion to detainees at the Broadview facility, Nate Madden, DHS principal deputy assistant secretary for communications, told CNA: “I will not engage in hypotheticals about Broadview’s policies.” He suggested faith leaders contact ICE for entry.
“What we say is that all religious leaders and religious people who want to come and take pastoral care, and they want to take Communion or Bible studies or anything like that, to come into our detention facilities, they can reach out to ICE,” Madden said.
In another case, a Chicago-based federal judge postponed a hearing scheduled for Nov. 19 to assess whether ICE had improved living conditions for migrants detained at the suburban Broadview facility.
As reports of the number of people held at the facility sharply dropped this month, Judge Robert W. Gettleman of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois said he would conduct a hearing on conditions at the facility in December.
Earlier this month, Gettleman issued a temporary restraining order directing DHS and ICE to improve living conditions at Broadview. Detainees alleged they were being held for several days in squalid conditions, with clogged, overflowing toilets, poor-quality food, inadequate sleeping arrangements, and a lack of access to basic hygiene supplies. On Nov. 5, Gettleman — appointed to the bench in 1994 by President Bill Clinton — ordered that all detainees be provided with soap, towels, toilet paper, oral hygiene products (including toothbrushes and toothpaste), and menstrual products.
His Nov. 5 order further specified: “Defendants shall provide each detainee with at least three full meals per day that meet the U.S. recommended dietary allowance … Defendants shall provide each detainee with a bottle of potable water with each meal and bottled water upon request free of charge.” The court also directed that paperwork provided to detainees “should include an accompanying Spanish translation.”
DHS Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs Tricia McLaughlin responded to the lawsuit by noting that Broadview is technically a “field office,” not a “detention facility.” She said religious organizations are welcome to provide services to detainees in ICE detention facilities.
In a significant development for the plaintiffs, Gettleman this week granted the detainees’ request to proceed as a class action. The decision could allow the named plaintiffs to represent not only themselves but also potentially hundreds of current and future migrants processed at Broadview.
On Nov. 13, the ACLU of Illinois — one of the legal groups representing the detainees alongside the MacArthur Justice Center and the Chicago office of Eimer Stahl — said they had completed an inspection of the Broadview facility.
“We are grateful that the court gave us an opportunity to inspect the Broadview facility,” the group said. “We remain committed to ensuring that any detainees at Broadview are treated with dignity, have access to counsel, and are provided due process.”
Gettleman did not address detainee complaints concerning a lack of religious accommodations at Broadview, including the ability to receive holy Communion. The lawsuit alleges that detainees have been unconstitutionally denied access to clergy and faith leaders “who have provided religious services at Broadview for years but are now denied the ability to provide pastoral care under defendants’ command.”
“For many years, faith leaders and members of the clergy … provided pastoral care to individuals detained inside Broadview,” the detainees’ lawyers told the court. “Now, no one is allowed inside Broadview. Faith leaders seeking to provide religious services are blocked from providing Communion and spiritual support to detainees, even from outside.”
Catholic leaders in Chicago attempted to minister to detainees at Broadview on Nov. 1. Auxiliary Bishop José María García-Maldonado and others were not admitted, despite requesting access weeks in advance and attempting to follow DHS guidelines.
Pope Leo XIV said earlier this month that the spiritual needs of migrants in detention must be taken seriously by government authorities. “I would certainly invite the authorities to allow pastoral workers to attend to the needs of those people,” he said. “Many times, they’ve been separated from their families for a good amount of time. No one knows what’s happening, but their own spiritual needs should be attended to.”
U.S. bishops likewise issued a special message Nov. 12 calling for the human dignity of migrants to be respected.
Read MoreA reading from the First Book of Maccabees
1, 2:15-29
The officers of the king in charge of enforcing the apostasy
came to the city of Modein to organize the sacrifices.
Many of Israel joined them,
but Mattathias and his sons gathered in a group apart.
Then the officers of the king addressed Mattathias:
“You are a leader, an honorable and great man in this city,
supported by sons and kin.
Come now, be the first to obey the king’s command,
as all the Gentiles and the men of Judah
and those who are left in Jerusalem have done.
Then you and your sons shall be numbered among the King’s Friends,
and shall be enriched with silver and gold and many gifts.”
But Mattathias answered in a loud voice:
“Although all the Gentiles in the king’s realm obey him,
so that each forsakes the religion of his fathers
and consents to the king’s orders,
yet I and my sons and my kin
will keep to the covenant of our fathers.
God forbid that we should forsake the law and the commandments.
We will not obey the words of the king
nor depart from our religion in the slightest degree.”
As he finished saying these words,
a certain Jew came forward in the sight of all
to offer sacrifice on the altar in Modein
according to the king’s order.
When Mattathias saw him, he was filled with zeal;
his heart was moved and his just fury was aroused;
he sprang forward and killed him upon the altar.
At the same time, he also killed the messenger of the king
who was forcing them to sacrifice,
and he tore down the altar.
Thus he showed his zeal for the law,
just as Phinehas did with Zimri, son of Salu.
Then Mattathias went through the city shouting,
“Let everyone who is zealous for the law
and who stands by the covenant follow after me!”
Thereupon he fled to the mountains with his sons,
leaving behind in the city all their possessions.
Many who sought to live according to righteousness and religious custom
went out into the desert to settle there.
From the Gospel accoording to Luke
19:41-44
As Jesus drew near Jerusalem,
he saw the city and wept over it, saying,
“If this day you only knew what makes for peace–
but now it is hidden from your eyes.
For the days are coming upon you
when your enemies will raise a palisade against you;
they will encircle you and hem you in on all sides.
They will smash you to the ground and your children within you,
and they will not leave one stone upon another within you
because you did not recognize the time of your visitation.”
Jesus weeps, because we have chosen the way of war, the way of hatred, the way of hostility”. This is even more glaring now that “we are approaching Christmas: there will be lights, there will be celebrations, trees lit up, even nativity scenes… all decorated: the world continues to wage war, to wage wars. The world has not comprehended the way of peace”. (…)
“What shall remain? Ruins, thousands of children without education, so many innocent victims: and lots of money in the pockets of arms dealers. Jesus once said: ‘You cannot serve two masters: either God or riches.’ War is the right choice for him, who would serve wealth: ‘Let us build weapons, so that the economy will right itself somewhat, and let us go forward in pursuit of our interests. There is an ugly word the Lord spoke: ‘Cursed!’ Because He said: ‘Blessed are the peacemakers!.’ The men who work war, who make war, are cursed, they are criminals. A war can be justified – so to speak – with many, many reasons, but when all the world as it is today, at war – piecemeal though that war may be – a little here, a little there, and everywhere – there is no justification – and God weeps. Jesus weeps.” (Pope Francis, Santa Marta, 19 November 2015)
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Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Nov 19, 2025 / 17:48 pm (CNA).
Longtime immigrant rights advocate Sister JoAnn Persch died on Nov. 14 at age 91.
Two weeks before her death, Persch attempted to bring Communion to detainees at the Broadview, Illinois, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility where for decades the Sisters of Mercy ministered to migrants and refugees. Officials denied her entry.

Persch and Sister Pat Murphy were founding members of the Su Casa Catholic Worker House in Chicago, serving refugees from Central America who were survivors of war, torture, and political persecution. From 1997 until 2002, the pair ministered at Casa Notre Dame in Chicago, a shelter for women fleeing domestic violence or recovering from addiction.
Beginning in January 2007, the two sisters attended prayer vigils every Friday morning outside the Broadview ICE facility where they encountered migrants scheduled for deportation and followed Murphy’s advice that “prayer is powerful, but you also have to put your body on the line.”
Through perseverance, Persch said she gained entry to the ICE facility during those years despite initial repeated refusals from government officials.
“Our motto is peacefully, respectfully, but never take no for an answer, so we kept working with ICE,” Persch said Nov. 1. “Finally, we got inside.”
Persch said eventually she was allowed to ride the buses to the airport with detainees after working with ICE. The sisters took down names of detainees and their families’ phone numbers.
“Then we’d spend the morning at home calling the families,” Persch said.
“We always worked with the families,” Persch said. “It was so traumatic. But then we were finally able to go in, helping families, meeting those being deported, listening to them, talking, praying.”
“We had a good relationship with ICE. We’d talk to each other,” Persch said.
U.S. Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Illinois, said: “These nuns were often the last to see these immigrants before they embarked on their life-changing journeys. Sister JoAnn’s passing is the end of a life of kindness and caring. But it is more. It is a reminder and a challenge to each of us to welcome the stranger and choose kindness over hate and fear.”
Because of relentless advocacy on behalf of migrants and refugees, including lobbying for a law to provide spiritual care for migrants in state detention facilities, the two sisters were affectionately nicknamed “Rabble” and “Rouser” by friends and fellow advocates.
In 2018, U.S. Capitol Police arrested the pair during the Catholic Day of Action for Action for Dreamers in Washington, D.C., a nonviolent civil disobedience protest in support of immigrants.
Persch’s advocacy also won media attention such as from comedian and political commentator Samantha Bee on her television show, “Full Frontal.”
In 2022, the two nuns cofounded Catherine’s Caring Cause in response to a request to help a family seeking asylum, a mother from Sierra Leone with five children, to resettle in the Chicago area. Catherine’s Caring Cause, named in honor of Catherine McAuley, the founder of the Sisters of Mercy, assists refugee families in finding shelter and providing basic necessities.
On Nov. 1, Persch said the organization had found homes for 15 families living in cars and they were looking for housing for a 16th.
Persch entered the Sisters of Mercy in Des Plaines, Illinois, 73 years ago. A native of Milwaukee, she earned a bachelor’s degree in home economics from St. Xavier College (now University) in Chicago and a master’s in religious education from Loyola University. Persch professed her perpetual vows on Aug. 16, 1958.
Sister Susan Sanders, president of the Sisters of Mercy of the Americas, said: “How will it be when we will miss JoAnn’s clear voice — quiet, insistent, regular, and respectful — about the new and daily injustices being perpetrated on already-suffering people? How will it be when we will miss her incisive questions, like those she posed to prison guards about why it would be unsafe to offer the Eucharist to imprisoned immigrants?”
Read More

Los Angeles, California, Nov 19, 2025 / 16:53 pm (CNA).
“The Shroud of Turin: An Immersive Experience,” a $5 million, 10,000-square-foot museum on the chancery campus of the Diocese of Orange in Southern California, opened to visitors Wednesday.
The museum is presented by Papaian Studios in partnership with the Diocese of Orange and Othonia Inc., an international team of specialists dedicated to exploring and sharing the mystery of the Shroud of Turin.
The 90-minute experience introduces visitors to the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, with a special focus on the Shroud of Turin, which many believe to be the burial cloth of Christ.

Inspired by the advanced technology incorporated in “Van Gogh Exhibition: The Immersive Experience” and the “Immersive King Tut,” the museum features 360-degree projection-room theaters as well as shroud replicas, interactive kiosks, a life-sized corpus, and a variety of artwork.
Jason Pearson of FiveHive Studios, which offers AI special effects and animation services, is a Catholic convert who worked with Othonia, a team of shroud specialists, to design the museum. Among his movie credits is Mel Gibson’s 2004 “The Passion of the Christ.” He has long had an interest in the shroud and has been a volunteer guide at the Shroud Center of Southern California located at the Santiago Retreat Center, also in the Diocese of Orange.
“Using technology on display like that of the Van Gogh or King Tut exhibits, we’re doing things that have never been done before,” Pearson told CNA. “Whether it be Jesus walking on water or through the streets of Jerusalem, or in the tomb at the moment of the Resurrection, we make use of sound and projections so that the visitor feels like he’s going back into a time machine and experiencing these things himself.”

The museum is designed for everyone, Pearson continued, even those who have no religious background at all.
Located on the second floor of the campus’ Richard H. Pickup Cultural Center, the museum has three theater rooms. Using surround sound and images, including on the floor, the first room introduces the visitor to the person of Jesus Christ through presentation of 12 stories from his life, but each one is selected to show Christ’s connection to the supernatural (e.g. the Transfiguration). The next introduces the visitor to the shroud itself, including proof of its authenticity and what it tells us about the sufferings of Christ. The third is devoted to the Resurrection leading the viewer to ponder a pointed question: Who do you believe the man on the shroud is?
The third theater exits into the museum area, which includes displays of reproductions of items that were part of the passion of Christ, including a flagellum (whip), the crown of thorns and nails, as well as a reproduction of what the tomb of Christ might have looked like.

Other exhibits include an AI presentation of Secondo Pia (1855–1941) who, while photographing the shroud in 1898, discovered that its negative image offered a clearer image of the man on the shroud with a detail in his face that could not been seen by the naked eye. Another traces the history of the iconography of Christ, demonstrating how accurate, when comparing it to the shroud image, many of the icons were. And, one compares the Sudarium of Oviedo, or the facial cloth that covered Christ’s face after his death, to the image on the shroud.
Pearson hopes that the museum will be a prototype for additional shroud museums in different regions of the country. Inquiries have been made about establishing shroud museums from places as far away as Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia.

One portion of the museum is dedicated to the science of the shroud, and two kiosks allow visitors to ask questions of a digital Father Robert Spitzer, who has extensively researched the shroud over the past 20 years. Spitzer, who has an office at Christ Cathedral, noted that he was pleased with the museum’s opening. “It gets the pedagogy right, it’s biblically accurate, and they tell me the visual imagery is amazing.” (Spitzer has gone blind in recent years.)
He continued: “And while we welcome anyone, we especially hope many young people will come to learn about the shroud and lead many to come to know more deeply the person of Jesus Christ.”
Nora Creech is on the leadership team of Othonia and helped develop content for the museum. “We want people to come with an open mind, explore, and ask questions. We want them to ask, ‘Who is the man of the shroud?’” she said.
One special target group of the museum, Creech said, is younger people, “many of whom have not been brought up with knowledge of who Jesus is. That is why we seek first to introduce people to Jesus so that they will become interested in his burial shroud.”
Pearson agreed and related the story of two young women who visited the Shroud Center and began weeping, asking: “Why hasn’t anyone told us about him?”
But while the shroud is important in showing us what Jesus suffered, Creech continued, we also need the Church and the Scriptures “to learn why he suffered.”

Orange Auxiliary Bishop Timothy Freyer, who played a key role in bringing the museum to Christ Cathedral, noted that his favorite feature was the reproduction of the crown of thorns, which, contrary to most artistic renditions, was actually shaped like a helmet or cap. He continued: “I’ve been impressed with the entire exhibition. It is very engaging, and I believe it will be an important tool in helping visitors come to know Christ better.”
Also among those excited to see the opening of the museum was Gus Accetta, a physician who has devoted much of his free time to studying the shroud. In 1996, he founded the Shroud Center in Huntington Beach, since relocated to the Santiago Retreat Center and welcoming 25,000 visitors annually.
“It’s a wonderful exhibit,” he said. It not only looks at the shroud but the whole life of Christ, of which the shroud is just a part.”

The Shroud of Turin experience will be on display at Christ Cathedral at least through 2030. The museum is located on Christ Cathedral campus, 12141 Lewis St., Garden Grove, California, a few miles away from Disneyland and the Anaheim Convention Center. For more information, visit the website www.theshroudexperience.com.
Read MoreBeyond The Beacon Episode 101: The future is now – Inspiring interviews from our diocesan youth conference #Catholic – ![]()
Just back from the fall meeting of the United States’ bishops, Bishop Kevin J. Sweeney shares his perspective on participating in the issuance of a rare “special message” regarding the bishops’ concern for the evolving situation affecting immigrants in the United States.
For the second half of the episode, we go remote to the 2025 Diocese of Paterson Youth Conference, “Anchored in Hope,” where Bishop Sweeney interviewed participants.
Hosted by Bishop Sweeney and Communications Director Jai Agnish of the Diocese of Paterson.
Guests:
Listen to the episode here, or on any major podcast platform, or watch it on Bishop Sweeney’s YouTube channel.
–
Just back from the fall meeting of the United States’ bishops, Bishop Kevin J. Sweeney shares his perspective on participating in the issuance of a rare “special message” regarding the bishops’ concern for the evolving situation affecting immigrants in the United States. For the second half of the episode, we go remote to the 2025 Diocese of Paterson Youth Conference, “Anchored in Hope,” where Bishop Sweeney interviewed participants. Hosted by Bishop Sweeney and Communications Director Jai Agnish of the Diocese of Paterson. Guests: Jessica Martinez – Christ is Alive Youth Ministry, Our Lady of Fatima & St Nicholas in Passaic,
![84 anniversary couples celebrate marital love at Paterson Mass #Catholic - On Nov. 16, 84 couples who marked 25, 50, and 60 or more years of marriage celebrated their love for each other and their example to all in the world with Bishop Kevin J. Sweeney during the annual Diocesan Silver and Gold Mass at the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Paterson, N.J.
Bishop Sweeney was the principal celebrant of the Mass, which the Office of Family Life of the Paterson Diocese in New Jersey coordinated. The couples renewed their vows before Bishop Sweeney. Several priests from parishes where the couples are parishioners came to support them and were concelebrants of the Mass.
Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
Each couple was invited to meet Bishop Sweeney after the Mass and take a photo with him, and to receive a commemorative certificate signed by him.
GROUP PHOTOS AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD
BEACON PHOTOS | JOE GIGLI
[See image gallery at beaconnj.org]
60+ Years
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Alexander, 69 years
Our Lady of Pompei, Paterson
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Pomante, 66 years
Our Lady of Pompei, Paterson
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Ferriso, 63 years
St. Luke, Long Valley, Washington Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry LaCorte, 63 years
St. Philip the Apostle, Clifton
Mr. and Mrs. James Whelpley, 62 years
St. Joseph, Mendham
60 Years
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Ays
St. Luke, Long Valley, Washington Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Brubaker
St. Joseph, Mendham
Mr. and Mrs. George Cozzolino
Our Lady of Mercy, Whippany, Hanover Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfonso Falivene
St. Catherine of Siena, Mountain Lakes
Mr. and Mrs. William Feeney
Church of the Sacred Heart, Clifton
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Guidone
St Lawrence, Chester
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Keegan
St. Matthew the Apostle Parish, Randolph
Mr. and Mrs. William Kuehner
Our Lady of Mercy, Whippany, Hanover Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Lanzerotti
Christ the King, New Vernon, Harding Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. James Meng
St. Philip, Clifton
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Rosa
St. Mary Parish, Pompton Lakes
Mr. and Mrs. James Scannelli
St. Virgil, Morris Plains
Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Sciarrillo
St. Rose of Lima, East Hanover
Mr. and Mrs. Wilhelmus Schouten
St. Catherine of Bologna, Ringwood
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Sullivan
Holy Spirit, Pequannock
Mr. and Mrs. John Trombetta
St. Virgil, Morris Plains
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Volpe
St. Thomas More, Morristown
50 Years
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Albizati
St. Philip the Apostle, Clifton
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ament
St. Philip the Apostle, Clifton
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Babula
St. Pius X, Montville
Mr. and Mrs. Candido Baldino
St. Mary’s, Wharton/Dover
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Becker
St. Mary’s, Denville
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Carlsson
Corpus Christi, Chatham
Mr. and Mrs. Robert V. Chester
Our Lady of Good Counsel, Pompton Plains
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Czaplinski
Our Lady of the Holy Angels, Little Falls
Mr. and Mrs. John D’Agostino
St. Mary’s, Denville
Mr. and Mrs. Antonio Del Valle
St. Gerard Majella, Paterson
Mr. and Mrs. Peter DeNigris
Notre Dame of Mount Carmel, Cedar Knolls, Hanover Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Dietlein
Our Lady of the Mountain, Long Valley, Washington Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. David DiNapoli
St. Paul, Clifton
Mr. and Mrs. Lou D’Onofrio
St. Mary’s, Pompton Lakes
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Filosa
St. Pius X, Montville
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Jovino
Notre Dame of Mount Carmel, Cedar Knolls, Hanover Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Kirchmer
St. Francis de Sales, McAfee, Vernon
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Klein
St. Mary’s, Denville
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Lis
St. Mary’s, Wharton/Dover
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Little
St. Mary’s, Denville
Mr. and Mrs. Jesus Lopez
Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, Paterson
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Miller
St. Lawrence, Chester
Mr. and Mrs. John Novalis
Church of the Holy Family, Florham Park
Mr. and Mrs. John O’Mullane
Our Lady of Mount Carmel, Boonton
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Polcari
St. Mary’s, Pompton Lakes
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Prendergast
St. Margaret of Scotland, Morristown
Mr. and Mrs. Roque Ramos
St. Clement Pope & Martyr, Rockaway Twp.
Deacon and Mrs. James Rizos
St. Mary’s, Denville
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Salerna
Our Lady of Pompei, Paterson
Mr. and Mrs. John Sette
Assumption Morristown
Mr. and Mrs. Rich Sokerka
St. Matthew the Apostle, Randolph
Mr. and Mrs. James Tangen
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, Flanders, Mount Olive Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. William Trodden
St. Francis de Sales, McAfee, Vernon
Mr. and Mrs. John Ukson
Our Lady of Fatima, Highland Lakes, Vernon Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Angel Ventura
Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, Paterson
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Wozniak
St. Luke, Long Valley, Washington Twp.
25 Years
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Bubniak
St. John Vianney, Stockholm, Hardyston Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Cheski
St. Andrew the Apostle, Clifton
Mr. and Mrs. Arvind D’Cunha
St. Pius X, Montville
Mr. and Mrs. Saverio Dello Russo
Notre Dame of Mount Carmel, Cedar Knolls, Hanover Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Domenico Di Maio
Our Lady of the Valley, Wayne
Mr. and Mrs. James Fischer
St. Virgil, Morris Plains
Mr. and Mrs. Felix Hernandez
Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, Paterson
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Horn
St. Joseph Church, Newton
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Jassin
Our Lady of the Valley, Wayne
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kelly
Assumption Parish, Morristown
Mr. and Mrs. John Kilkeary
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, Flanders, Mount Olive Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Mario Lemongello
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, Flanders, Mount Olive Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Marinelli
Holy Family, Florham Park
Mr. and Mrs. David Meehan
St. Luke, Long Valley
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Onufryk
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, Flanders, Mount Olive Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Lou Palazzo
St. Bonaventure, Paterson
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Passaro
St. Luke, Long Valley, Washington Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Kingsley Pathrose
St. Peter the Apostle, Parsippany
Mr. and Mrs. Sebasten Raffal
St. Ann Parish, Parsippany
Mr. and Mrs. Leopoldo Ramirez
St. Mary Parish, Pompton Lakes
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Redyke
St. Francis de Sales, McAfee, Vernon
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reisinger
Our Lady of Mercy, Whippany
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Scerbak
St. Mary’s, Pompton Lakes
Mr. and Mrs. David Schulz
St. Virgil, Morris Plains
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sweezy
Our Lady of the Holy Angels, Little Falls
Mr. and Mrs. Ramon Villafuerte
St. Mary’s Parish, Pompton Lakes](https://unitedyam.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/84-anniversary-couples-celebrate-marital-love-at-paterson-mass-catholic-on-nov-16-84-couples-who-marked-25-50-and-60-or-more-years-of-marriage-celebrated-their-love-for-each-other-and-their-exa.jpg)
84 anniversary couples celebrate marital love at Paterson Mass #Catholic – ![]()
On Nov. 16, 84 couples who marked 25, 50, and 60 or more years of marriage celebrated their love for each other and their example to all in the world with Bishop Kevin J. Sweeney during the annual Diocesan Silver and Gold Mass at the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Paterson, N.J.
Bishop Sweeney was the principal celebrant of the Mass, which the Office of Family Life of the Paterson Diocese in New Jersey coordinated. The couples renewed their vows before Bishop Sweeney. Several priests from parishes where the couples are parishioners came to support them and were concelebrants of the Mass.
Each couple was invited to meet Bishop Sweeney after the Mass and take a photo with him, and to receive a commemorative certificate signed by him.
<!–
— Michael Wojcik
–>
GROUP PHOTOS AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Alexander, 69 years
Our Lady of Pompei, Paterson
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Pomante, 66 years
Our Lady of Pompei, Paterson
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Ferriso, 63 years
St. Luke, Long Valley, Washington Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry LaCorte, 63 years
St. Philip the Apostle, Clifton
Mr. and Mrs. James Whelpley, 62 years
St. Joseph, Mendham
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Ays
St. Luke, Long Valley, Washington Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Brubaker
St. Joseph, Mendham
Mr. and Mrs. George Cozzolino
Our Lady of Mercy, Whippany, Hanover Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfonso Falivene
St. Catherine of Siena, Mountain Lakes
Mr. and Mrs. William Feeney
Church of the Sacred Heart, Clifton
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Guidone
St Lawrence, Chester
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Keegan
St. Matthew the Apostle Parish, Randolph
Mr. and Mrs. William Kuehner
Our Lady of Mercy, Whippany, Hanover Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Lanzerotti
Christ the King, New Vernon, Harding Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. James Meng
St. Philip, Clifton
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Rosa
St. Mary Parish, Pompton Lakes
Mr. and Mrs. James Scannelli
St. Virgil, Morris Plains
Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Sciarrillo
St. Rose of Lima, East Hanover
Mr. and Mrs. Wilhelmus Schouten
St. Catherine of Bologna, Ringwood
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Sullivan
Holy Spirit, Pequannock
Mr. and Mrs. John Trombetta
St. Virgil, Morris Plains
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Volpe
St. Thomas More, Morristown
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Albizati
St. Philip the Apostle, Clifton
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ament
St. Philip the Apostle, Clifton
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Babula
St. Pius X, Montville
Mr. and Mrs. Candido Baldino
St. Mary’s, Wharton/Dover
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Becker
St. Mary’s, Denville
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Carlsson
Corpus Christi, Chatham
Mr. and Mrs. Robert V. Chester
Our Lady of Good Counsel, Pompton Plains
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Czaplinski
Our Lady of the Holy Angels, Little Falls
Mr. and Mrs. John D’Agostino
St. Mary’s, Denville
Mr. and Mrs. Antonio Del Valle
St. Gerard Majella, Paterson
Mr. and Mrs. Peter DeNigris
Notre Dame of Mount Carmel, Cedar Knolls, Hanover Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Dietlein
Our Lady of the Mountain, Long Valley, Washington Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. David DiNapoli
St. Paul, Clifton
Mr. and Mrs. Lou D’Onofrio
St. Mary’s, Pompton Lakes
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Filosa
St. Pius X, Montville
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Jovino
Notre Dame of Mount Carmel, Cedar Knolls, Hanover Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Kirchmer
St. Francis de Sales, McAfee, Vernon
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Klein
St. Mary’s, Denville
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Lis
St. Mary’s, Wharton/Dover
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Little
St. Mary’s, Denville
Mr. and Mrs. Jesus Lopez
Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, Paterson
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Miller
St. Lawrence, Chester
Mr. and Mrs. John Novalis
Church of the Holy Family, Florham Park
Mr. and Mrs. John O’Mullane
Our Lady of Mount Carmel, Boonton
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Polcari
St. Mary’s, Pompton Lakes
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Prendergast
St. Margaret of Scotland, Morristown
Mr. and Mrs. Roque Ramos
St. Clement Pope & Martyr, Rockaway Twp.
Deacon and Mrs. James Rizos
St. Mary’s, Denville
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Salerna
Our Lady of Pompei, Paterson
Mr. and Mrs. John Sette
Assumption Morristown
Mr. and Mrs. Rich Sokerka
St. Matthew the Apostle, Randolph
Mr. and Mrs. James Tangen
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, Flanders, Mount Olive Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. William Trodden
St. Francis de Sales, McAfee, Vernon
Mr. and Mrs. John Ukson
Our Lady of Fatima, Highland Lakes, Vernon Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Angel Ventura
Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, Paterson
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Wozniak
St. Luke, Long Valley, Washington Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Bubniak
St. John Vianney, Stockholm, Hardyston Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Cheski
St. Andrew the Apostle, Clifton
Mr. and Mrs. Arvind D’Cunha
St. Pius X, Montville
Mr. and Mrs. Saverio Dello Russo
Notre Dame of Mount Carmel, Cedar Knolls, Hanover Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Domenico Di Maio
Our Lady of the Valley, Wayne
Mr. and Mrs. James Fischer
St. Virgil, Morris Plains
Mr. and Mrs. Felix Hernandez
Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, Paterson
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Horn
St. Joseph Church, Newton
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Jassin
Our Lady of the Valley, Wayne
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kelly
Assumption Parish, Morristown
Mr. and Mrs. John Kilkeary
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, Flanders, Mount Olive Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Mario Lemongello
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, Flanders, Mount Olive Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Marinelli
Holy Family, Florham Park
Mr. and Mrs. David Meehan
St. Luke, Long Valley
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Onufryk
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, Flanders, Mount Olive Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Lou Palazzo
St. Bonaventure, Paterson
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Passaro
St. Luke, Long Valley, Washington Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Kingsley Pathrose
St. Peter the Apostle, Parsippany
Mr. and Mrs. Sebasten Raffal
St. Ann Parish, Parsippany
Mr. and Mrs. Leopoldo Ramirez
St. Mary Parish, Pompton Lakes
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Redyke
St. Francis de Sales, McAfee, Vernon
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reisinger
Our Lady of Mercy, Whippany
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Scerbak
St. Mary’s, Pompton Lakes
Mr. and Mrs. David Schulz
St. Virgil, Morris Plains
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sweezy
Our Lady of the Holy Angels, Little Falls
Mr. and Mrs. Ramon Villafuerte
St. Mary’s Parish, Pompton Lakes
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On Nov. 16, 84 couples who marked 25, 50, and 60 or more years of marriage celebrated their love for each other and their example to all in the world with Bishop Kevin J. Sweeney during the annual Diocesan Silver and Gold Mass at the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Paterson, N.J. Bishop Sweeney was the principal celebrant of the Mass, which the Office of Family Life of the Paterson Diocese in New Jersey coordinated. The couples renewed their vows before Bishop Sweeney. Several priests from parishes where the couples are parishioners came to support them and were


NGC 1068, a relatively nearby spiral galaxy, appears in this image released on July 23, 2025.
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WASHINGTON, D.C. — President Trump had been looking forward to releasing all of the Epstein files in accordance with Congress’s "Epstein Files Transparency Act", but reported that a dog actually ate the files, the dog was then lost in a boating accident, and then the boat was struck with a nuclear warhead.
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MEKELLE, ETHIOPIA — Starving African children bravely banded together this week to raise money to feed singer and actress Ariana Grande.
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U.S. Marines raising the American flag on Mount Suribachi during the Battle of Iwo Jima. Today is the United States Marine Corps birthday on which it turns 250 years old.
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Observing the wonders of the night sky begins with selecting the right telescope. Join us on Nov. 20, 2025, at 9:00 am EST for Astronomy Unlocked: How to Choose Your Best Telescope. This virtual event will provide a comprehensive guide detailing everything you need to know about selecting the best equipment for your observing needs.Continue reading “Discover your key to the universe tomorrow at Astronomy Unlocked”
The post Discover your key to the universe tomorrow at Astronomy Unlocked appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
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Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Nov 19, 2025 / 07:00 am (CNA).
Mia Smothers said she is looking forward to the “opportunity of a lifetime” as she prepares to speak with Pope Leo XIV during a digital encounter at the upcoming National Catholic Youth Conference (NCYC).
The Holy Father will hold a 45-minute digital encounter with young people from across the United States during the Nov. 20–22 conference hosted by the National Federation for Catholic Youth Ministry (NFCYM) in Indianapolis.
More than 40 teens have participated in the dialogue planning process, and five of them will get the chance to speak directly with the Holy Father. Smothers, a high school freshman from Joppa, Maryland, is the youngest teen selected to speak with the pontiff.
“I’m feeling excited,” Smothers said in a Nov. 18 interview with “EWTN News Nightly.” She added: “This is a very good opportunity for me to learn more about my faith and others around me.”
This year marks the first time Smothers will attend NCYC. She said she is looking forward to the opportunity for adoration at the conference, because she heard it “is a very powerful experience.”
Smothers said she thinks the young attendees of NCYC want to get a better understanding of how the Church wants them to act in the faith, how they can be more helpful, and how they can be more hands-on in the Church.
The NCYC team and the students who will speak with the Holy Father have been preparing and practicing in anticipation for the encounter to get a better idea of how they can establish themselves in the Church.
“We have been meeting up on Zoom and doing follow-up questions — practicing what the pope might tell us and to figure out how we could answer and how we could switch the conversation to something that we want to ask,” Smothers said.
As a teenager in the Church, Smothers is concerned about how people are supposed to find their vocations in life. She said: “I really want to ask him how he found out he wanted to become a priest and then how he felt about becoming pope.”
“This is an opportunity of a lifetime and something that you’ve never heard of and never … seen before,” Smothers said. “I plan to tell all of my siblings, all of my friends, and everyone at my school … to be involved and see what the pope wants for us.”
The Vatican choosing to set up this dialogue with the youth at the conference is “making a difference,” Smothers said. She said the Vatican and the pope are starting something that will be passed on to the following generations.
It is impactful that the pope himself is going to be “talking with young kids and trying to make a difference in their lives,” Smothers said.
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CNA Staff, Nov 19, 2025 / 06:00 am (CNA).
Sandy Schaetz still mourns the baby she never met.
“It was terrifying and traumatic,” she said of her miscarriage. “I was consoled after by the prayers of a deacon, but never named the baby or knew if it was a boy or girl.”
“It was not something I understood at the time and I only wish I had known more of what was happening,” she told CNA.
Now, Schaetz volunteers with Compassionate Burials for Indigent Babies (CBIB), an organization that buries babies who died, whether stillborn, miscarried, or aborted.
The group organizes everything for the funerals, which are held at a crypt at St. Patrick’s Cemetery in New Orleans.
A shoebox-sized casket lined with donated white fabric, usually from wedding dresses, is processed through the cemetery, with Knights of Columbus present as the honor guard. A volunteer musician plays at every funeral; a Catholic deacon presides at almost every burial.

When Schaetz attended her first burial service as a volunteer, it hit her to the core.
“I find it difficult to put into words how it affected me,” Schaetz said. “All God needed me to do that day was to be present, to pray, to honor the life he had created.”
“It opened my eyes to how each life is such a gift, and when that life ends how important it is to show respect and pray for the soul and bury the dead with love,” Schaetz said.
Women who lose children through miscarriage often suffer silently, according to Lise Naccari, the founder of CBIB.
“Losing a child is hard. Often women suffer in silence the pain of infant loss and ride that sad emotional roller coaster ride alone,” Naccari told CNA.
One in four pregnancies ends in miscarriage — a devastating statistic for many couples.
Naccari herself experienced a miscarriage as well as several challenging pregnancies.
“I feel a special connection with poor mothers who have lost a child. My heart goes out to them,” Naccari said.

Naccari buries the babies who were wanted and loved, but also the babies who were thrown out or mistreated.
“CBIB has buried babies as big as a blueberry and up to 2 years old,” Naccari said. “We buried babies stillborn, miscarried, abandoned, unclaimed, aborted, murdered, and thrown away in the trash — and every situation possible.”
“Many babies were mistreated, abused, and tossed out … these are heartbreaking funerals to go to,” Naccari said.

“Babies are left sometimes because some families can not afford funerals for them but would like one,” Naccari said. “Also, many parents are young, and the grief can be overwhelming and they cannot navigate through funeral arrangements.”
Her life’s work is to bury the dead — and she looks to the Resurrection.
“I consider what I do holy,” Naccari said. “I feel like this is my vocation and I know God orchestrated all of this. I give all honor and glory to him, our loving Father.”
“What I do is not about sorrow and death,” Naccari continued. “What I do is really about joy and life — eternal life.”

It’s not an easy job, and Naccari looks to God for strength.
“Lord, I don’t want to do this anymore. It hurts my heart too much,” Naccari remembered praying as she prepared one baby for burial — a baby girl who had been abandoned and tossed out after she was born.
“I felt a still small voice within me say, ‘Lise, don’t think about their bodies, focus on the Resurrection,’” Naccari recalled.
“The sunlight from the stained-glass windows was shining down a warm yellow color on my face, as I looked up in it and I thought, yes, this is what I needed to hear to keep going — focus on the Resurrection,” she continued.
Sheena Lewis was in jail when her son, still a baby, passed away. She couldn’t attend the funeral, but Naccari organized the burial for her.
Lewis, now sober and out of jail, visits her son’s crypt often.
“I have solace in the fact he was laid to rest in a beautiful manner when I couldn’t be there for him or myself at the time,” Lewis told CNA.
Many young mothers CBIB helps are often “steeped in poverty” and have no support system. They are often “low income, uneducated, coming from sometimes addiction or problem homes,” Naccari said.
“Often I find at these funerals that the young mothers are alone or they may come with children or other women — but there are no men to help support them,” Naccari said.
“My heart is broken for them, for they are not only battling their poverty, they also have to deal with losing a child,” she said.
Funerals help families process their grief — a grief that’s often hidden away due to the nature of miscarriages.
Deacon Ricky Suprean preaches at almost every graveside burial — but after a couple years of volunteering, he realized God had called him to this so he could find healing.
Suprean and his wife, Lynn, experienced two miscarriages.
Suprean struggled to process it at the time, but through his volunteering, he’s found some healing. He still remembers the first CBIB funeral he presided at.
“I felt the power of life that day,” he told CNA. “It was cold. I had no idea I would kneel in front of each little coffin and pray for each child and each family with my hand touching each coffin.”
Volunteers hugged each family member, he recalled.

“God has allowed me to give a proper burial to my own two lost children through CBIB time and time again,” Suprean said.
“God created these children in my wife’s womb, and they will be waiting for us in heaven,” Suprean continued.
Struggling to process grief is common with loss of children, according to Naccari.
“Too often people are hurting so much and don’t want to face a funeral,” Naccari said. “They feel vulnerable and so it is easier to turn away and do nothing.”
“But on the contrary, I have observed that these funerals provide consolation, comfort, solace, and even a healthy way of healing after the loss of a baby,” Naccari said.
“It’s a good grief,” Naccari continued. “Funerals are about love and holding onto friends and family at a time of need. It can be life-changing.”
Some funerals have had as many as 100 people in attendance.
Many volunteers are “faithfully committed” to being present at every funeral.
“It could be freezing cold or blistering hot in the summer, but they just show up and either help set up, greet the parents, or stand tall next to a casket to show the love of Jesus to our families,” Naccari said.

These funerals “allow parents that special moment to mourn their loss and to remember their little one and ponder the person that little one could have been,” Naccari said.
“CBIB celebrates each life, and we believe that God somehow rights all the wrongs and makes all things new,” Naccari said. “And then we move to the next funeral.”
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