Featured Archives - Catholic Herald https://catholicherald.org/category/featured/ Serving the Archdiocese of Milwaukee Mon, 08 Jan 2024 19:05:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://catholicherald.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/cropped-logo-letters-1-32x32.png Featured Archives - Catholic Herald https://catholicherald.org/category/featured/ 32 32 Archbishop to Submit Retirement Paperwork in March https://catholicherald.org/featured/archbishop-to-submit-retirement-paperwork-in-march/ Mon, 08 Jan 2024 19:05:48 +0000 https://catholicherald.org/?p=38943 Archbishop Listecki to reach 75 years of age March 12 When Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki turns 75 years old March 12, it will set off a chain of events that could result in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee having a new shepherd before the end of 2024. Archbishop Listecki will submit his retirement [...]

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Archbishop Listecki to reach 75 years of age March 12

When Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki turns 75 years old March 12, it will set off a chain of events that could result in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee having a new shepherd before the end of 2024.

Archbishop Listecki will submit his retirement letter to Pope Francis on that day.

Canon 401 of the Code of Canon Law says that all bishops must submit their resignation to the pope at the age of 75. The pope can accept their resignation at that time or ask them to stay on until their successor is chosen.

There is no set timeline for the replacement of a bishop/archbishop, but the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops website notes it is a time-consuming process, “often taking eight months or more to complete.”

In anticipation of the archbishop’s impending retirement, the Catholic Herald will have two special sections chronicling Archbishop Listecki’s tenure in Milwaukee, which began in 2010.

In the March 7 edition, the Catholic Herald will run birthday greetings from lay Catholics and clergy from around the 10-county archdiocese along with a lengthier overview on the process for selecting a new archbishop.

In the April 18 issue, the Catholic Herald will feature an oral history on some of the biggest moments of Archbishop Listecki’s time in Milwaukee.

In addition, the Catholic Herald will publish a special section introducing his successor just before he is installed.

To advertise in any of these special keepsake sections, contact Jenny Mullen at 414-769-3477 or mullenj@archmil.org.

Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki

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2024 Archdiocese of Milwaukee Major Events Calendar https://catholicherald.org/featured/2024-archdiocese-of-milwaukee-major-events-calendar/ Fri, 22 Dec 2023 17:42:08 +0000 https://catholicherald.org/?p=38898 Arise Family Day in Menomonee Falls in July 2023. (File photo) JANUARY 1 - Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God 1 - New Year’s Day 1 – World Day of Peace 1 – Emmaus 90 Launch (through Easter) 5 – Arise Family Adoration 13 - Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Prayer Service 18-25 [...]

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Arise Family Day in Menomonee Falls in July 2023. (File photo)

JANUARY

1 – Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God

1 – New Year’s Day

1 – World Day of Peace

1 – Emmaus 90 Launch (through Easter)

5 – Arise Family Adoration

13 – Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Prayer Service

18-25 – Week of Prayer for Christian Unity

20 – Respect Life Mass

21 – Sunday of the Word of God

22 – Day of Prayer for the Protection of Unborn Children

23 – Natural Family Planning Summit

28-Feb. 3 – Catholic Schools Week

FEBRUARY

2-4 – Winter Weekend Retreat for Young Adults

2 – Arise MKE Gala

3-4 – Catholic Stewardship Appeal Kickoff

4 – World Day for Consecrated Life

7-14 – National Marriage Week

8 – World Day of Prayer and Awareness against Human Trafficking

11 – World Day of the Sick

11 – World Marriage Day

14 – Ash Wednesday

15 – Archbishop’s Pallium Lecture

18 – Rite of Election (Cathedral)

19 – Presidents Day

22 – Catholic Charities Lenten Lunch (Greater Milwaukee)

27 – Catholic Charities Lenten Lunch (Quad Counties North)

29 – Catholic Charities Lenten Lunch (Tri Counties South)

MARCH

1 – Arise Family Adoration

1-3 – Marriage Prep Retreat

2 – Celebration of Catholic Scouting

3 – Rite of Election (Cathedral)

5 – Catholic Schools Dinner

7 – Catholic Charities Lenten Lunch (Lake Country)

9 – Men of Christ

9 – Hispanic Men’s Encuentro

15 – Wisconsin Catholic Youth Rally (Catholic School Edition)

16 – Wisconsin Catholic Youth Rally (High School and Middle School)

20 – Pray, Reconcile, Rejoice – Lenten Day of Reconciliation

24 – Palm Sunday

26 – Chrism Mass

28 – Holy Thursday

29 – Good Friday

30 – Easter Vigil

31 – Easter Sunday

APRIL

Child Abuse Prevention Month

5 – Arise Family Adoration

6 – Arise Worship Night

11-13 – Healing the Whole Person Conference

20 – Ordination to the Transitional Diaconate

21 – World Day of Prayer for Vocations

MAY

3 – Arise Family Adoration

9 – Blue Mass for those in Law Enforcement and First Responders

12 – Mother’s Day

12 – Ascension of the Lord

18 – Ordination to the Priesthood

19 – Pentecost Sunday

19 – Adult Confirmation

27 – Memorial Day

JUNE

1 – Archdiocesan Synod Ten-Year Anniversary Celebration

2 – Archdiocesan Synod Ten-Year Anniversary Mass

7 – World Day of Prayer for Priests

16 – Father’s Day

16 – Ballpark Day of Faith

17 – Saint Francis de Sales Seminary Pallium Scholarship Benefit

17-20 – Love Begins Here (Middle School 1)

19-26 – National Eucharistic Pilgrimage passes through Archdiocese of Milwaukee

22-29 – Religious Freedom Week

24-27 – Love Begins Here (Middle School 2)

JULY

4 – Independence Day

8-11 – Love Begins Here (Middle School 3)

13 – Arise Family Day

13 – Arise Worship Night

14-19 – Love Begins Here (High School)

17-21 – National Eucharistic Congress in Indianapolis

30 – Stewardship Workshop

AUGUST

15 – Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary

22-24 – Catechetical Conference

SEPTEMBER

1 – World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation

2 – Labor Day

6 – Arise Family Adoration

7 – Ordination to the Permanent Diaconate

8 – World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly

9 – Day of Prayer for Peace in Our Communities

16 – Catechetical Sunday

21 – Hispanic Catholic Conference

24 – Vatican II Awards

30 – Priesthood Sunday

30 – World Day of Migrants and Refugees

OCTOBER

Domestic Violence Awareness Month

Respect Life Month

4 – Saint Francis de Sales Seminary Dinner

4 – Arise Family Adoration

5 – Jubilee Mass for Married Couples

6 – Respect Life Sunday

8 – Red Mass – St. Thomas More Society

12 – Hispanic Youth Encuentro

17 – White Mass for those who work in Healthcare

19 – Catholic Schools Walk

20 – World Mission Sunday

NOVEMBER

Black Catholic History Month

1 – All Saints’ Day

1 – Arise Family Adoration

2 – All Souls’ Day

3-9 – Vocation Awareness Week

9 – Inheritance Conference

16 – Women of Christ

17 – World Day of the Poor

24 – Solemnity of our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe

28 – Thanksgiving Day

DECEMBER

1 – First Sunday of Advent

6 – Arise Family Adoration

8 – Feast of the Immaculate Conception

12 – Our Lady of Guadalupe

14 – Gema de Dios Women’s Conference

15-23 – Simbang Gabi

24 – Christmas Eve

25 – Christmas Day

31 – New Year’s Eve

Note: This is a sampling of events in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee for 2024. Dates are subject to change and events could be canceled.

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Christmas Greetings 2023 https://catholicherald.org/featured/christmas-greetings-2023/ Mon, 18 Dec 2023 14:10:00 +0000 https://catholicherald.org/?p=38839 “And this will be a sign for you: you will find an infant wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger.” Luke 2:12 It’s no accident that when Jesus was born, he was placed in a manger. Think of it – the Son of God, born among us in absolute poverty, and placed [...]

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“And this will be a sign for you: you will find an infant wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger.” Luke 2:12

It’s no accident that when Jesus was born, he was placed in a manger. Think of it – the Son of God, born among us in absolute poverty, and placed in a trough meant for animal food. He became our Bread of Life. “This King of Kings came to us as food, feeding a starving humanity ‘with his tender love,’” Pope Francis once said. How true, and that continues today with the ultimate gift we receive at every Mass – Jesus in the Eucharist.

This Christmas, we are in the second year of the Eucharistic Revival, a special time in our Church when we are called to renew our devotion to the Eucharist. Jesus is truly present, Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity, and is there to sustain us in all that we do. Come and receive Him at Mass, and never go hungry. Sit with Him in Adoration and find comfort in the love He has for you, today and always.

As we look to resolutions for the new year, I suggest you resolve to make this extra effort to deepen your relationship with Christ. What an amazing opportunity to focus on the Eucharist as the Source and Summit of our faith – for it is through the Eucharist that we are united with Christ and with one another.

May peace and joy be with you and your family this Christmas, and throughout the New Year.

Sincerely yours in Christ,

Most Reverend Jerome E. Listecki

Archbishop of Milwaukee

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December Events for Men Thinking About Priesthood https://catholicherald.org/featured/december-events-for-men-thinking-about-priesthood/ Tue, 28 Nov 2023 14:11:34 +0000 https://catholicherald.org/?p=38577 Are you a young man considering the priesthood, or do you know someone who is? The Archdiocese of Milwaukee Vocations Office is sponsoring an informal dinner and a silent retreat that can help with discernment and practical questions. The St. Andrew Dinner brings together men high school age and older for an evening of [...]

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Are you a young man considering the priesthood, or do you know someone who is?

The Archdiocese of Milwaukee Vocations Office is sponsoring an informal dinner and a silent retreat that can help with discernment and practical questions.

  • The St. Andrew Dinner brings together men high school age and older for an evening of fellowship. Mass celebrated by Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki is followed by dinner with Fr. John LoCoco, Vocation Director, and diocesan priests and seminarians. The men have a chance to ask questions in a relaxed atmosphere, learn more about life as a priest and hear vocation stories. The evening will start at 5 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 21, but online registrations are due by Thursday, Dec. 14.

The dinner is named after St. Andrew who, in the Gospel according to John, brought his brother Simon Peter to meet Jesus.

  • Duc In Altum is a weekend silent retreat for men ages 18-35 discerning the priesthood. Fr. LoCoco and collaborating vocation directors for other dioceses lead the retreat. In a world of great distractions, this retreat is an opportunity for young men who are discerning the priesthood to enter into silence and allow God to speak to their hearts. Duc in Altum will be held Dec. 15-17, with online registration due by Friday, Dec. 8.

Inspired by Luke’s Gospel, Duc In Altum means “put out into the deep,” in which Jesus tells Simon “Cast out into deep water and lower your nets for a catch.”

Online registration for both is at thinkpriest.org/events.

Both events are held at Saint Francis de Sales Seminary, St. Francis. Call 414-747-6437 with questions.

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For Love of God, Family, Country https://catholicherald.org/featured/for-love-of-god-family-country/ Tue, 07 Nov 2023 14:01:59 +0000 https://catholicherald.org/?p=38426 Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki was set to be featured in Time magazine during Operation Desert Storm, but the military conflict ended so quickly, he never deployed. (Photo courtesy of Penny Listecki) When Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki was an auxiliary bishop in Chicago, there was a weekend where he was serving with his U.S. [...]

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Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki was set to be featured in Time magazine during Operation Desert Storm, but the military conflict ended so quickly, he never deployed. (Photo courtesy of Penny Listecki)

When Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki was an auxiliary bishop in Chicago, there was a weekend where he was serving with his U.S. Army Reserve unit but had been excused to celebrate Mass at a local parish.

Seeing him in his combat boots and battle dress uniform, a woman approached him before the Mass and asked him if he was there to protect the bishop.

He replied, “No. I am the bishop.”

Archbishop Listecki’s life of devotion to God, family and country have occasionally caused these worlds to collide.

With Veterans Day approaching, Archbishop Listecki reflected on his time as a chaplain in the military from 1981 to 2004. It was during a mostly peaceful time in our nation’s history, with a few blips of seismic historical activity.

Aside from being in the reserves during 9/11, Archbishop Listecki had received orders to go to the Middle East to serve in Desert Storm during the early 1990s.

However, much like Abraham with Isaac, Archbishop Listecki was willing to make the sacrifice asked of him, but got pulled back at the last minute because the combat operations were over so quickly.

“I was set. I was ready to go. I was told I was going to Riyadh and Bahrain.”

TIME Magazine was set to follow Archbishop Listecki during his deployment, featuring a chaplain who goes to war. The story was scrapped, but he said he learned some valuable lessons about himself.

“I was ready to do what was required, what I was called to do. In my heart, there was no doubt. I was prepared.”

It kind of coincided with one of the things he learned about our men and women in uniform in more than two decades serving his country.

“The question is: Do our young people today have the fire in the belly?” Archbishop Listecki said. “We don’t doubt that when we see things written about the Greatest Generation. They hit the beaches at Normandy. My father and others hit the beaches at Iwo Jima and (other) islands.”

The answer he found out was emphatic.

“One of the things I found out is that, yeah, they do. It’s a different time and different demands but they have that sense of understanding what they’re representing and who they’re representing, and the need to protect the values we have. That was one of the great things I discovered.”

He also learned it about himself.

“I always wondered if I would have the fire in the belly to do that,” he said.

The values of God, family and country were instilled in Jerome Listecki from a young age.

He has always wanted to be a priest and went to the seminary at the earliest possible time.

He has spoken lovingly of the values his father and mother imparted in him growing on the South Side of Chicago, and he still maintains a close relationship with his sister Penny.

And serving the country for more than two decades shows his dedication in that regard.

“Coming from a traditional Catholic family, there’s always a sense of appreciation of what the country has meant to us,” Archbishop Listecki said. “I also have a law degree, and I am acutely aware of the freedoms that we enjoy. Being in other countries, you see how important it is that we maintain the aspect of respect for law, and how they protect the rights of individuals within our community. You need a strong defense of country in order to do that. There’s always been a tremendous respect I’ve had for those who’ve worn the uniform and have a willingness to put themselves on the line to be able to protect the values that we cherish.”

During the time he was in the seminary, many of Archbishop Listecki’s peers were drafted into the Army to go fight in Vietnam.

“I knew that if I had not been in the seminary, I probably would have volunteered or been drafted into the military. In the back of my mind, there was always a sense of being willing to serve.”

In 1981, his chance came when he was studying canon law and moral theology in Rome. A colonel approached him and asked him if he would be willing to help out the troops in Germany.

Much like the soldiers he counseled, celebrated Mass for and offered the sacraments, Archbishop Listecki has always given something of himself for the benefit of others.

“My orientation has always been following Christ. There has never been a sense in my mind of God holding back,” Archbishop Listecki said. “If there was a need, an obvious following the will of God, we did. I’m a person who is formed and fashioned by history. I come here as the archbishop of Milwaukee. I don’t forget in my mind, in my prayers, all the good things that so many people have done in order to make this a great archdiocese. Their names are not floated around, they’re not put on billboards, but day in, day out, they gave of themselves. I’m driven by that same aspect. We’re doing what Christ wants us to do. You may call it a sacrifice; I just call it a mission.”

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Send Us Your 2023 Catholic Life Photos, Please https://catholicherald.org/featured/send-us-your-2023-catholic-life-photos-please/ Mon, 06 Nov 2023 20:04:41 +0000 https://catholicherald.org/?p=38379 The Milwaukee Catholic Herald wants to share your photos of Catholic life in 2023. “We usually show our readers the Catholic community in Southeastern Wisconsin through our eyes,” Managing Editor Larry Hanson said. “This is a chance for them to see it through each other’s eyes.” Photos taken during 2023 can range from parish, [...]

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The Milwaukee Catholic Herald wants to share your photos of Catholic life in 2023.

“We usually show our readers the Catholic community in Southeastern Wisconsin through our eyes,” Managing Editor Larry Hanson said. “This is a chance for them to see it through each other’s eyes.”

Photos taken during 2023 can range from parish, Catholic school and faith formation events and activities, to personal family prayer time and time at church for a sacramental event such as Mass, Baptism, First Communion, Confirmation or a wedding.

Catholics are invited to send one or two photos to the Milwaukee Catholic Herald at catholicherald@archmil.org by Dec. 15.

Please note the following:

  • Photos with children must include two or more children. Ensure that the parent/guardian of any child pictured is aware the photo is being submitted for possible publication.
  • You must include a photo description, your full name, city and parish, to be published with your photo if it is selected. Please also include a phone number (not for publication) in case of questions.
  • Photos must be at least 200 KB and in a JPG, JPEG, PNG or HEIC format.
  • You must have taken the photo yourself or have the permission of the person who took it to submit it.

By submitting a photo, you acknowledge that selected photos will appear in our Dec. 28 issue and in an online gallery at our website at catholicherald.org. Not all photos submitted will appear.

We look forward to seeing your photos.

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Bishop Perry, Ordained in Milwaukee, Retires https://catholicherald.org/featured/bishop-perry-ordained-in-milwaukee-retires/ Tue, 31 Oct 2023 14:02:09 +0000 https://catholicherald.org/?p=38355 Archdiocese of Chicago Auxiliary Bishop Joseph N. Perry concelebrates the patronal feast day Mass at Saint Francis de Sales Seminary, St. Francis, in 2022. (Submitted photo) Bishop Joseph N. Perry’s 23 years in Milwaukee as a young priest laid the groundwork for his 25 years as an auxiliary bishop in the Archdiocese [...]

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Archdiocese of Chicago Auxiliary Bishop Joseph N. Perry concelebrates the patronal feast day Mass at Saint Francis de Sales Seminary, St. Francis, in 2022. (Submitted photo)

Bishop Joseph N. Perry’s 23 years in Milwaukee as a young priest laid the groundwork for his 25 years as an auxiliary bishop in the Archdiocese of Chicago.

“I consider Milwaukee my formative home,” Bishop Perry said in reflecting on his vocation following his retirement in September.

Bishop Perry attended St. Lawrence Seminary High School in Mount Calvary and Saint Francis de Sales Seminary. He was ordained in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee in 1975 and served in a variety of roles here until Pope John Paul II appointed him as a bishop in 1998.

Like Archdiocese of Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki, Bishop Perry grew up in Chicago.

In addition to their Milwaukee connections, the two are close in age and shared time as auxiliary bishops in Chicago from 2001 to 2005.

“I have the utmost and tremendous respect for Joe Perry, a true native son of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee,” Archbishop Listecki said recently. “He has served the Church with great intelligence, but (also) his great pastoral sensitivity.”

Archbishop Listecki recalled that they shared time in Chicago when Cardinal Frances George was archbishop there.

“Cardinal Francis George always depended on Bishop Perry to take over situations that were most difficult, and (Bishop Perry) would accept them gladly. He took those so the people of God and the Church would be served, and bring harmony and peace to those situations.”

Bishop Perry said he regards Archbishop Listecki as a good friend.

“We both served as auxiliary bishop of Chicago, we both are canonists, we both taught in seminary. I have felt genuine affirmation and encouragement from him over the years and deem him a brother bishop,” Bishop Perry said.

Bishop Perry, one of a handful of Black Catholic bishops, offered guidance when Archdiocese of Milwaukee Steering Committee representatives worked for two years to produce a 2019 Black Catholic Pastoral Plan.

Bishop Perry told the Catholic Herald that the biggest challenges of Black Catholics include being known as intricate members of the Catholic Church in the United States; having contributions of history, suffering and leadership acknowledged; and having sufficient priestly, religious and lay leadership numbers for the benefit of the whole church.

“The obstacle to this recognition by other Catholics is the uninformed perception by others of African Americans as simply a group on the margins or as recent converts, when Black Catholics have been a part of the Church from the very beginnings of Christianity.”

Bishop Perry’s accomplishments in Milwaukee following his ordination include:

  • Adjunct Professor, Canon Law Studies, Marquette University School of Law (1996-98) and Sacred Heart School of Theology, Hales Corners (1983-98).
  • Pastor, All Saints Parish (1995-98), which was one of two parishes formed in 1995 after the archdiocese closed or merged nine North Side parishes.
  • Chief Judicial Officer of the Tribunal for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee (1983-95), in addition to time at the Tribunal since 1976.
  • C.L. — Licentiate in Canon Law, The Catholic University of America, Washington D.C., (1981) — where he was a classmate of now-Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan, who later served as the archbishop of Milwaukee from 2002-09.
  • Associate pastor, St. Nicholas Parish, Milwaukee, Wisconsin (1975-76), which was merged with St. Albert and Holy Redeemer in 1992 to form Blessed Trinity, which later became part of St. Catherine on Center Street.

Bishop Perry has served as the Chicago archbishop’s representative for Vicariate VI, an area including south and southeast Cook County, since he became an auxiliary bishop in 1998. As vicar there, he acted as a day-to-day administrator on the cardinal’s behalf regarding the needs and concerns of the people there. In 2018, his area included 61 parishes, 27,000 registered families, 21 elementary schools and six secondary schools.

Bishop Perry’s national work has included serving as board vice president for the Black Catholic Congress; chairman for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) Committee on African American Catholics; and national chaplain for the Knights of St. Peter Claver and Ladies Auxiliary.

He chairs the USCCB Ad-Hoc Committee Against Racism and has served as a canon law studies instructor at St. Mary of the Lake Seminary, Mundelein, Illinois, since 1997. He also has served on many other USCCB committees.

Bishop Perry recalled that the Capuchin Franciscans recruited him to attend St. Lawrence Seminary High School near Fond du Lac and he described his years there as “remarkable.”

“The Capuchin fathers run the seminary and it is one of the very few such high school seminaries remaining in the country right now. I consider the seminary as having set me on a solid path to explore my priestly vocation and it provided the young seminarians a ministerial worldview suitable for the times,” Bishop Perry said.

“The Capuchins were working in African-American parishes in Milwaukee, Detroit, Indigenous reservations in Montana, and Central American areas, including Bluefields, Nicaragua. We students were formed with a social-justice vision in hearing from and by witnessing their friars’ dedicated service to these mission and parish outposts,” he said.

After earning his undergraduate degree in Indiana, Bishop Perry eventually was received in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee in his second year of theology at Saint Francis de Sales Seminary.

“Fr. Thomas Suriano encouraged me to apply.  Milwaukee is a great local church and I was humbled by what they asked me to do following ordination — as an associate pastor at St. Nicholas Parish, working with the Catholic Family Life Program that oversaw the ministry to the separated and divorced, then asked by Archbishop (William E.) Cousins to come in to the Tribunal Offices, which entailed degreed canon law studies in between at Catholic University in Washington, D.C., working in various capacities in the tribunal inclusive of Judicial Vicar, then to pastor the newly-formed All Saints Parish in Milwaukee.”

“These opportunities brought me to greater self-knowledge and development of talents I never thought I had. I’ve had a fulfilling priesthood and episcopal service these 48 years.”

In addition to continuing work on the sainthood cause for the Venerable Augustus Tolton, Bishop Perry plans to continuing teaching canon law at St. Mary of the Lake Seminary at Mundelein, read more books and visit elderly relatives in his retirement.

Perry Continues as Tolton Sainthood Advocate

Archdiocese of Chicago Auxiliary Bishop Emeritus Joseph N. Perry will continue in his role as liaison to the Vatican regarding the cause for sainthood for an African-American priest.

“I am particularly pleased that Bishop Perry will continue in his pivotal role as diocesan postulator for the canonization cause of Venerable Augustus Tolton,” said Cardinal Blase J. Cupich, Archbishop of Chicago, upon Bishop Perry’s retirement in September.

A postulator guides a cause for someone put forth for beatification or canonization. The judicial processes required by the Church include conducting thorough investigations into the life of the candidate.

Born in 1854, the Venerable Augustus Tolton overcame numerous challenges — birth into slavery, his father’s death, poverty and a lack of access to education — to become the first priest of acknowledged African-American descent.

Fr. Tolton ministered on the south side of Chicago until his death at age 43 in 1897. His path to sainthood was opened by the Church in 2010, and he was declared venerable, the first stage of canonization, in 2019.

“His virtuous life provides a model of how to be Christian and Catholic while navigating the choppy waters of racial acceptance,” said Bishop Perry, who was ordained in and served with the Archdiocese of Milwaukee until he became a bishop in 1998.

In the Archdiocese of Milwaukee in October 2021, Bishop Perry led a pilgrimage at the Basilica and National Shrine of Mary Help of Christians in Hubertus to celebrate the Venerable Augustus Tolton’s sainthood cause.

The Archdiocese of Milwaukee Tolton Catholic Scholars program is inspired by its namesake. The program’s aim is to help active Catholics of all ages in local urban parishes who might struggle to bridge the gap when other funding does not pay all postsecondary school costs. Find out more about applying to or donating to the Tolton Catholic Scholars program at https://www.archmil.org/Tolton-Catholic-Scholars.

Bishop Joseph N. Perry

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Holy Land Trip Coincides With Outbreak of Violence https://catholicherald.org/featured/holy-land-trip-coincides-with-outbreak-of-violence/ Thu, 19 Oct 2023 13:36:01 +0000 https://catholicherald.org/?p=38322 Parishioners from St. Mark and St. Mary parishes, Kenosha, were on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land when Hamas launched its Oct. 7 attack on Israel. After several fraught days, the 33 pilgrims were able to make it home safely. (Submitted photos) For 33 Catholic pilgrims from Kenosha, the trip of a lifetime [...]

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Parishioners from St. Mark and St. Mary parishes, Kenosha, were on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land when Hamas launched its Oct. 7 attack on Israel. After several fraught days, the 33 pilgrims were able to make it home safely. (Submitted photos)

For 33 Catholic pilgrims from Kenosha, the trip of a lifetime turned into something memorable for all of the wrong reasons.

Fr. Roman Stikel, Pastor of St. Mary Parish, Kenosha, was leading 31 parishioners from St. Mary and St. Mark Parish, Kenosha, along with Fr. Carlos Florez on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land when Hamas launched its Oct. 7 attack on Israel.

The pilgrims made it home Friday, Oct. 13, after several harrowing days.

Fr. Stikel said he is grateful to be home but can’t get those who were not as lucky out of his mind.

The group had arrived in Aman, Jordan, just two days prior.

“We flew from Chicago to Aman and took the bus to the desert in Jordan. The next day, we went to Petra, which was supposed to be at the end of the trip, but it got moved,” said Fr. Stikel. “Afterward, we went to our hotel in Aman, got on a bus and took the bus to the Jordanian-Israeli border, crossed the border, got on another bus, and went to Bethlehem on Friday night, Oct. 6. We arrived late — around 7:30 p.m. — had dinner and went to bed.”

The next day, Saturday, the group planned to go to Jerusalem. The pilgrims were in the parking lot when they began to hear the concussions from rockets.

“The tour guides told us not to worry because it happens all the time,” said Fr. Stikel. “Lilly, our tour guide, said the Palestinians make rockets in their kitchens and fire them, but they are not accurate. I heard more concussions and went outside. I looked up and saw contrails from the rockets. I knew these weren’t kitchen rockets.”

The group tried to get to Jerusalem, and the bus driver talked to others about traveling a different route. All the checkpoints were closed, and the group was unable to leave Bethlehem. All around them was smoke, people in the streets, and those who were honking the horns in their cars.

“We came back to the hotel, and in the afternoon, we went to visit the Church of the Nativity,” said Fr. Stikel. “After that, we came back to the hotel and didn’t do anything else. I began looking at cable TV and saw CNN and, for the first time, began to hear of the atrocities. I knew they were not kitchen rockets, but there was a lot more happening.”

The pilgrims sat in the hotel lobby and one by one they began getting text messages from family members telling them to get out of Israel now. Unfortunately, there was no way out. There was no airport in Bethlehem and no way to get out that day or the next day. They tried to make the best of it by touring an orphanage, and celebrating Mass, all while still hearing the concussions from the rockets.

“We made a stop for lunch and came back to our hotel and stayed here. The next day, we were still in Bethlehem as there was a general strike going on and everything was closed,” Fr. Stikel said.

On Monday, Oct. 9, the group planned to find a checkpoint to get through, but they visited several checkpoints and all were closed. Finally, they found an open one. A rather animated Israeli soldier came onto the bus to check passports, saying, “Welcome to Israel. I hope you enjoyed your stay and I hope you come back.”

The pilgrims drove north toward the Sea of Galilee as the tour operator figured they would be safe if they went that way.

“Our two tour guides were Palestinian Christians and drove by Jerusalem and Tel Aviv and arrived in Nazareth. They got off the bus for 10 minutes with the local guide and bus driver, when Fr. Carlos got a call and the person said to get out now. The U.S. Embassy and Israelian authorities said we needed to leave,” Fr. Stikel said. “We were in Nazareth for 10 minutes and drove back to the Jordanian border and stood there for a long time. There were tons of groups there from Japan, Australia, Poland, UK, Bolivia, as well as groups from the U.S.”

They were not allowed to pass through the border until they had a tour guide, and their two Palestinian Christian guides were not allowed to cross. Finally, early in the evening, a tour guide arrived with a bus, and they went through immigration and customs, and made it back to Jordan.

“If we had not gotten out of Nazareth when we did, I don’t think we’d be having this conversation,” Fr. Stikel said. “There was so much going on and so quickly. I can’t help but think about those who were not able to get out. We had a young lady who joined us. Her name was Halina; she was there with a group of 26, and she had made it out of Israel, but the other 25 didn’t. I don’t know if they made it out or what happened. I pray they did.”

While in Jordan, the tour operator gave the group a couple of trips while they were there. They visited the ruins in Jerash, visited the Jordan River and the Dead Sea —it was on the Jordanian side, and not the Israeli side. The pilgrims were able to fulfill about a quarter of their itinerary.

Throughout their ordeal, Fr. Stikel kept worried family and friends apprised of their situation with daily robocalls, thanking them for their prayers. The updates were posted on the parish’s Facebook page.

As to whether he would attempt a return trip, Fr. Stikel quickly replied yes, but as for his fellow pilgrims, ranging in age from 40 to 65, he isn’t too certain.

“I couldn’t say if some would go again; it was quite frightening for some. We were all concerned we wouldn’t make it home, but grateful we did,” he said. “I think some of the more adventurous ones would try again.”

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2023 Vatican II Award Recipients https://catholicherald.org/featured/2023-vatican-ii-award-recipients/ Tue, 10 Oct 2023 13:00:54 +0000 https://catholicherald.org/?p=38028 The Archdiocese of Milwaukee established the Vatican II Awards in 1991 to honor men, women and young adults who exemplify the Catholic Church’s vision set forth in the Second Vatican Council. On Thursday, Oct. 12, various individuals will receive the Archbishop’s Vatican II Award for Distinguished Service for outstanding contributions to the Church and [...]

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The Archdiocese of Milwaukee established the Vatican II Awards in 1991 to honor men, women and young adults who exemplify the Catholic Church’s vision set forth in the Second Vatican Council.

On Thursday, Oct. 12, various individuals will receive the Archbishop’s Vatican II Award for Distinguished Service for outstanding contributions to the Church and society. A prayer service and awards ceremony will take place at 7 p.m. at the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist, Milwaukee, followed by a dessert reception in the Cathedral Atrium. All are welcome to attend.

Leadership in Administration

Lori Lemke

Lori Lemke’s smiling face and soothing voice are often the first introduction an individual receives when visiting Our Lady of the Holyland Parish office in Mt. Calvary.

As the parish administrator for the past 20 years, Lemke said she works closely with her pastor, Fr. Paul Koenig, O.F.M. Cap., and the parishioners. Lemke and her husband, Norm, have three children and three grandchildren.

“I do whatever anyone needs and am never too busy for anyone,” she said.

In addition to listening attentively to parishioner requests, Lemke creates an attractive and informative weekly bulletin that highlights the various parish activities. She also assists in setting up for funeral liturgies, the parish outdoor Mass, memorial Masses, parish events and visits to some of the parish’s homebound.

Lemke’s day does not end when she leaves the office — she is available day and night to respond to the needs of parishioners and does so cheerfully and with kindness.

“The most important part of my job is ministering to the people of our parish who rely on me to take care of whatever their needs are,” she said. “Mark 11:24 says, ‘Therefore I tell you, all that you ask for in prayer, believe that that you will receive and it shall be yours.’ This is one of my favorites; even though I am not great at always believing it, I am hoping for the day when I am better at it.”

Lemke credits her grandmothers and her mother, who taught her compassion and kindness, inspiring her to be a good person and good to others.

“I am truly grateful for this life that God has given me, grateful for my health that I can be at this job for 20 years, grateful for the parishioners, my co-workers and bosses, past and present, who have become an amazing part of my life,” she said. “I am mostly grateful for the wonderful family God has given me in this lifetime. I am truly blessed.”

Leadership in the Church

Martha Cucco

Martha Cucco is a woman of many hats. She has served as head of stewardship and for seven years as a parish trustee at St. Francis de Sales in Lake Geneva. She also helped to guide the parish through three pastors in the past seven years, and oversees faith formation, building and grounds, and parish rental properties. She has also assisted with liturgical celebrations, handles the parish social media accounts, and sings as a cantor and in the parish choral.

In addition to her parish activities, Cucco is a real estate broker, and she and her husband Richard have two adult daughters and two grandchildren.

“In the past 30 years, I have served on many boards and committees of our parish school and church, which has given me a wonderful perspective of the ‘big picture’ of parish life,” she said. “I helped (our former pastor), Fr. Jim (Bishop James) Schuermann to coordinate a major renovation of our church in 2017 in celebration of the parish’s 175th anniversary. This beautiful update of our historical church was completed on time and fundraised with no debt.”

In January, Cucco traveled to Tanzania, Africa, with a group to visit her parish’s sister parish, St. John the Baptist in the Pare Mountains.

“To see all that Fr. Beda and the Partners for Hope/Tanzania have accomplished in the fields of evangelization, healthcare and education was truly remarkable,” she said. “We witnessed the joy of everyday life of the villagers in this beautiful part of the world.”

Cucco said she was influenced to live a Christ-like life by her high school teachers, who belonged to the order of the Daughters of Charity.

“They were examples of serving others with humility and humor,” she said.

Cucco enjoys parish life in beautiful Lake Geneva, which more than 1,000 parish families call home.

“We also have many visitors who vacation in our area or attend a destination wedding,” she said. “We get a lot of very positive feedback from people coming from all over the world that our liturgies have given them a meaningful experience in our lovely church environment.”

Leadership in the Permanent Diaconate

Dcn. John Ebel

Ordained to the permanent diaconate in 1996, Dcn. John Ebel’s career has been distinguished by service both in pastoral ministry and diaconal and lay formation. As someone who considered becoming a doctor in his youth, Dcn. Ebel has always felt a call to “help people,” and it’s that ministry of support and fellowship that has most defined his work in the church.

“It was that privilege of being present to people that has been my greatest satisfaction,” said Dcn. Ebel.

Originally from the New Jersey shore, Dcn. Ebel has called the Milwaukee area home for more than four decades. He and wife Maryann have been married for 45 years, and share two sons and three grandchildren. Prior to his ordination, he spent 20 years as an industrial microbiologist.

He began diaconal formation in 1992, and in 1995 he left his secular career to become the pastoral associate of St. Bernadette Parish in Milwaukee. In 2001, he became the director of diaconal formation for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, and he completed a master’s degree in pastoral studies at Saint Francis de Sales Seminary. Other parish assignments include St. John Vianney in Brookfield and Christ King in Wauwatosa.

In 2001, Dcn. Ebel joined St. Francis de Sales Seminary as the associate director of the certificate division, responsible for both lay ministry and diaconate formation. In 2007, he became the director of the Office of Diaconate Formation and was tasked with bringing the program into compliance with national standards. During his years in that position, Dcn. Ebel was responsible for the recruitment, selection, admission and formation of deacons for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee.

“It was always a real pleasure at ordination to be able to hug each guy and say, ‘Welcome, brother deacon,’” he said. “It always brought me to tears.”

Dcn. Ebel is now retired and is a member of St. John XXIII Parish in Port Washington.

“What’s given me great pleasure and carried me through ministry was being with people,” he said. “Being in their happy moments, their tragic moments and everything in between.”

Leadership in Education

Sr. Eileen Kazmierowicz, O.S.F.

For nearly 30 years, Sr. Eileen Kazmierowicz, O.S.F., has served the Archdiocese of Milwaukee in various capacities. Since 1995, she has served her parish, St. Alphonsus, Greendale, as the adult formation minister. Additionally, she led many adults and children into full communion with the Church through RCIA and RCIC programs.

Her other volunteer efforts include small faith communities, family spirituality, retreats, parish missions, adult learning programs, leadership, stewardship development-council, committee formation, ecumenical relationships, coordinating pastoral care, offering spiritual direction and helping with administrative tasks.

“I have also served as a supervisor for field ed seminarians at Sacred Heart School of Theology,” said Sr. Kazmierowicz. “I am honored to accompany adults on their faith journeys to know Jesus more deeply through embracing the Catholic way of life, and continuing to connect with them as they live out their faith commitment in a parish community, as well as everyday life.”

One of Sr. Kazmierowicz’s favorite scripture passages is the story of Nicodemus in John’s Gospel, when he came to Jesus to seek enlightenment and ended up becoming one of his disciples.

“He was willing to step forward with Joseph of Arimathea to bury the body of Jesus,” she said. “In this story, we see a person raising his faith questions, pondering Jesus’ responses and becoming a steadfast follower of Jesus the Christ. I think it’s important that inquirers and longtime Catholics, as well, realize the value of faith questions as a way of growing in their faith.”

Sr. Kazmierowicz is inspired by the great witness of her ancestors who faithfully lived through life’s challenges and continued to devote themselves to the Church and live sacramental lives.

“I am also inspired by my spiritual mentors and my Franciscan community relationships, as well as the Franciscan approach to life. I am also committed to Ignatian spirituality and have made the spiritual exercises and regular directed retreats,” she said. “I am inspired by many faithful parishioners who offer ‘hidden’ service to their family members and the community at large. St. Al’s Food Pantry team of volunteers steadfastly worked through the pandemic and continues to provide poor families with sustenance and supportive relationships. St. Al’s folks have a spirit of ‘pitching in’ when help is needed.”

Leadership in Families

Cindi Petre

Cindi Petre has moved around a lot for her husband’s job; from Atlanta to Oklahoma City and Little Rock to Albuquerque, the mom of six has called a lot of places home. But wherever she put down roots over the years, Petre could be counted on to engage in meaningful ministry in the Church.

When the family returned to their native Wisconsin 23 years ago, it was inevitable that Petre would find a way to serve the people of God — and she has, first for over 18 years at St. Anthony on the Lake Parish in Pewaukee and now as Catholic Memorial High School’s campus minister.

“Every morning, I ask Jesus to show me where I should be, what I should do and to help me get it done,” said Petre. “My constant prayer is, ‘Jesus, I trust in you.’”

Raised in Greendale, Petre has a background in elementary education and high school special education. Her first ministry in the Church involved creating a sacrament program for children with special needs, and though the family moved before she could see the program brought to fruition, “it started my interest in parish work and ministry,” she said. She continued ministry as a catechist, scripture study leader and NFP speaker, while also working in pro-life ministry, Elizabeth Ministry and in marriage preparation before falling in love with high school ministry.

She and husband Mark are high school sweethearts who have been together for more than 45 years. In addition to their six children, they have 15 grandchildren.

Petre joined the staff at St. Anthony on the Lake as the youth ministry coordinator, eventually taking over the role of director of youth and family high school ministry, where she was especially passionate about the family program for multigenerational catechesis, retreats and mission trips. After obtaining her master’s degree from Sacred Heart Seminary and School of Theology through the Cor Unum program, she came to Catholic Memorial High School.

“I found my niche and CMH feels like home,” said Petre. “My greatest joy is seeing teens grow in their faith. The hope is that that experience of Christ grows into a deeper, lifelong and life-giving relationship.”

Leadership in Liturgy and Worship

Janat Davis

Despite her Midwestern upbringing, Janat Davis’ roots are pure Creole Catholic, stretching back more than three centuries to a time when Black Catholics had to fight for their lives and their faith.

Her seventh great-grandmother, Marie Thérèse “Coincoin,” was born in slavery and later had children with a French landowner. “She insisted that her children be baptized Catholic and were raised Catholic,” said Davis. “For Black Catholics, there was no place to pray and worship. My family — my ancestors — gave the land and built the church where we could pray and worship, St. Augustine Catholic Church on Cane River in Isle Brevelle, Louisiana.”

Two hundred years later, the embers of faith enkindled by Marie Thérèse burn brightly in Davis and her ministry. Raised by devout Catholic parents at St. Boniface Parish in Milwaukee, Davis drifted from the practice of her faith as a young adult, but her mother’s invitation to return to Mass at St. Agnes made a difference. “I was like, ‘Oh, wow. I think I belong here,’” recalled Davis. The rest is history: she became involved as a lector, a Eucharistic minister and member of various committees, and eventually enrolled in the Julia and Lincoln Valle Lay Leadership Program and earned a certificate in pastoral studies from Saint Francis de Sales Seminary.

She has planned countless prayer services and liturgies for various communities, including the Prayer of Lament at the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist following the murder of George Floyd in 2020. She has served on the Black Catholic Ministry Commission for more than a decade and is the current secretary.

A member of All Saints and St. Martin de Porres parishes, Davis is a caretaker for her father and is the proud aunt of four nieces and nephews and nine great-nieces and nephews.

Davis said that she is inspired by the words of Servant of God Thea Bowman: “I come to my Church fully functioning. I bring myself, my Black self, all that I am, all that I have, all that I hope to become. I bring my whole history, my traditions, my experience, my culture, my African American song and dance and gesture and movement and teaching and preaching and healing and responsibility as a gift to the Church.”

“This is true for me whenever I prepare or lead prayer,” said Davis. “I bring myself — my full self — into every experience.”

Leadership in the Priesthood

Fr. Dennis R. Ackeret

Fr. Dennis Ackeret can first recall the stirrings of a priestly vocation in the fifth grade, as he observed the joyfulness of the associate priests serving at St. Monica Parish in his native Whitefish Bay.

One of five children in a devout Catholic family, Fr. Ackeret also names his parents as profound influences on his early faith.

“My parents’ example by living their faith gave me a foundation for and inspired me to live and love my own faith,” he said. “Their support and the support of my four siblings was essential in my pursuit of my vocation as a priest.”

Fr. Ackeret enrolled in Saint Francis de Sales Minor Seminary as a freshman in high school and was ordained to the priesthood May 18, 1968. His parish assignments have included St. Lucy in Racine, St. Mary in Menomonee Falls, Christ King in Wauwatosa and St. Theresa of Avila in Eagle; additionally, he spent 20 years as a faculty member and chaplain at Catholic Memorial High School, from 1969-89. During his time at Christ King Parish, he served as the dean of the district.

“My greatest joy as a priest is first and foremost presiding at the Eucharist and preaching, and then offering the Sacrament of Reconciliation,” said Fr. Ackeret. “I also found great satisfaction as a staff member at CMH being able to share my love of the Catholic faith with the students in my classes.”

He retired in June 2012, and assists at various parishes and serves on the Archbishop’s College of Consultors. His hobbies include reading, traveling and doing yard work. He is also an enthusiastic cook, creating dinners for friends and donating dinners for Life’s Connection auctions and other church-related fundraisers.

“It’s an honor to join with my brother priests who have previously received this award, and I am humbled to be listed with all the others who have been and are being recognized for their service in the Lord’s vineyard,” said Fr. Ackeret.

Leadership in the Priesthood

Fr. Dave Filut

It’s a full-circle moment for Fr. Dave Filut to receive an award recognizing leadership in the priesthood, as his own vocation has been positively shaped — since its earliest stages — by the influence of his ordained brethren.

When Fr. Filut entered Saint Francis de Sales Minor Seminary in the mid-1950s as a high school freshman, he did so with the express desire of becoming a priest, following the example of the men who served his home parish of St. Anthony on Historic Mitchell Street.

“I wanted to be a priest since the seventh or eighth grade. My parents were very Catholic, and the priests at St. Anthony’s were really influential in my life,” said Fr. Filut. “They certainly affected me.”

After his ordination in 1968, Fr. Filut was assigned to be the associate pastor of Sacred Heart Parish in Racine, where the mentorship of his pastor was an invaluable aid to his development, he said. “Especially in terms of parish management and financial managers, he was very good at that,” said Fr. Filut.

As an associate pastor, Fr. Filut would also spend time at Blessed Sacrament Parish in Milwaukee and St. Anthony Parish in Menomonee Falls. His early experience at Sacred Heart came in handy during his tenure as pastor at St. William in Waukesha, where he oversaw the building of the current church in 1992. “That was very thrilling for me,” he said.

He later served the community of Holy Apostles in New Berlin as pastor, retiring 12 years ago. Fr. Filut currently lives in Muskego and is a help-out priest at St. Mary’s Visitation in Elm Grove and a variety of other parishes and retirement communities in the area.

“I’m very honored,” he said of being recognized with the Vatican II Award for Leadership in the Priesthood, though he insists it is the people he serves who have inspired him during his time as a priest. “Over the years, it has struck me how faithful they are in spite of their troubles and their difficulties. People are so good.”

St. John XXIII Award for Spirit of the Council

Randy Nohl

At one time, Randy Nohl had thoughts of becoming a priest — he holds a bachelor’s degree in theology, and was two years into the graduate program at Saint Francis de Sales Seminary when he sensed that God had other plans for him.

“Parish ministers have always been an inspiration to me,” said Nohl, who grew up in Sheboygan at St. Dominic and Holy Name Parishes. “They are being of direct service to people who are striving to grow in their faith and to find balance in their lives and their families’ lives.”

Nohl completed his master’s of theology degree while working in parish ministry, first as a director of religious education as well as youth and young adult minister in parishes in Racine, Whitefish Bay, Waukesha and Milwaukee. In 1987, he became the associate director for engaged and marriage ministry for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, a role that eventually came to encompass family ministry, ministry to separated and divorced Catholics, adult formation and bereavement ministry.

A defining moment of Nohl’s ministry was the Archdiocesan Synod called by Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki, which took place on Pentecost weekend in 2014 and which Nohl helped to oversee.

“The Synod remains as one of the most spirit-filled events that I was part of in my ministry, and set a tone and plan for the archdiocese, which is still interwoven into archdiocesan ministry today,” said Nohl. As director of Synod Implementation, Nohl assisted parishes throughout the archdiocese to embrace and realize the priorities identified at the synod. He retired from that role in 2021.

Nohl and his wife Laura Leonard have been married since 1987 and currently reside in Bay View.

“One of the greatest joys about my work with the archdiocese was seeing the people who were touched by the vast number of programs and services being offered,” he said. “I am extremely humbled to receive this Vatican II award and know that it is because of so many other people who have surrounded me and supported me that I was able to be a part of the Church’s ministry for over 40 years.”

St. Paul VI Award for Leadership in Justice and Peace

Anne Haines

Believing that the Sermon on the Mount is the heart of the Gospel message, Anne Haines said, “Jesus radically challenges us with a clear vision of the life we are called to live.”

Taking Jesus’ message to heart, Haines opened St. Bakhita Catholic Worker House to provide a loving home for women who are survivors of human trafficking. Inspired by Dorothy Day, who served the poor, and St. Bakhita, the patron saint of human trafficking, Haines, the mother to six adult children and a grandmother to one, continues her mothering role by living in the residence.

“We also have made education part of our mission. We hope to become a place where youth and adults can come learn about the Catholic faith, considering the Gospel and the social teachings of the Church,” she said. “We would like to emphasize both/and the message that Dorothy Day’s witness exemplified. She was a devout Catholic, a daily communicant, who also stood up for and served those on the margins by boldly and consistently advocating for those in poverty and for the life and dignity of all people — no exceptions.”

Haines is a member of St. Martin de Porres Parish. She served as director of urban ministry/episcopal representative for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, and as an educator/faith formation director/campus minister in archdiocesan Catholic schools (Messmer, Pius XI, St. Francis Borgia) and public-school educator at Malcolm X Academy (where she aided in their transition to being the only African American immersion middle school in the nation). She also developed the Catholic social action movement called the Tablesetters, which brings Catholic Social Teaching in theory and practice to students from K5-12.

“I believe that my work in formal education and through sharing the witness of the Catholic worker movement have both served to inform, inspire and send forth disciples,” she said. “In both instances, there is an intentional effort to encourage encounters with Jesus Christ, through the Eucharist, and then to go forth together, as the mystical Body of Christ, to build the kingdom.”

St. John Paul II Award for Youth and Young Adult Leadership

Elliana Baudry

From volunteering at parish events, participating in lay ministry and staffing the parish thrift shop and Vacation Bible School, there are few areas of church life that Elliana Baudry has not had some involvement in.

Baudry said she is passionate about volunteering because, “I love that I am using my abilities to support someone who needs it or a vulnerable community that is deserving of the work we are providing.”

“I love the smiles and laughs and genuine conversations I have with the people I serve,” she said. “Seeing how grateful people are for something as simple as a meal or clothes teaches me in my life to appreciate and be grateful for the many gifts God has blessed me with.”

A resident of Wauwatosa, Baudry is entering her senior year at Pius XI High School in Milwaukee. She belongs to St. Jude Parish in Wauwatosa and St. John Vianney Parish in Brookfield. Her hobbies include softball, volleyball and camping.

In addition to serving at Mass, volunteering at the St. Jude Thrift Shop and leading VBS crews, Baudry has participated in parish mission trips, serving communities locally and across the globe. A ministry particularly close to her heart is the St. John Vianney sister parish in Piura, Peru, where she visited last summer.

“It was a wonderful, eye-opening experience that changed my perspective on my life, and gave me a deeper understanding of my faith,” she said. “I saw God in the face of all of the beautiful people that we worked with.”

Baudry is still finalizing her college plans but has an interest in studying medicine, education or a related STEM field. Whatever career she chooses, she hopes it will include a service element.

“Service has always been an important part of my life and I plan to continue with that,” she said. “I have been so incredibly blessed in my life, so having the ability to give back to my community in a way of volunteering is something I will so passionately continue doing.”

St. John Paul II Award for Youth and Young Adult Leadership

Michael Vazquez

At just 22, Michael D. Vázquez Muñiz has already served in all the lay ministries his parish, St. Patrick’s in Milwaukee, has to offer.

Beginning at 8 years old, he volunteered as an altar server for 10 years, later volunteering as a lector, Extraordinary Minister of Holy Communion and First Holy Communion catechist.

He then volunteered with St. Patrick’s and Our Lady of Guadalupe’s Summer Camp for children, later moving up to co-director.

“For the past six years, I have been the Confirmation catechist for our 15- and 16-year-olds, who are preparing themselves to receive the Sacrament of Confirmation,” he said. “My involvement with the Confirmation class holds great importance to me. My passion for serving the youth and guiding them in their faith journey has led me to find a sincere desire to teach, walk and work with the youth of Milwaukee. Through my role as a catechist, I have found that our young people have so much to offer. Our young people offer insights and an innate desire to know more about the ‘whys’ of the Church and faith. Ultimately, I have come to see that with guidance and a genuine commitment toward young people, their talents can be shared with the wider Milwaukee community.”

Currently a college counselor for Cristo Rey Jesuit High School, Vázquez Muñiz said he learned while he was a student at Marquette University to serve and not to be served. (Mark 10:45)

Inspired by his mom, Ellist, and Fr. Jose Moreno, S.J., to live a Christ-like life, Vázquez Muñiz said “journeying with the youth” is one of the Universal Apostolic Preferences presented by the Jesuits that he has taken to heart in his work with young people.

“My work has demonstrated the importance of encouraging others to be servant leaders,” he said. “Much of the time, we may get caught up with daily activities that may stray us from placing God at the center, and the work of serving others in Church and beyond has allowed me to grow closer to him and my community.”

Pope Benedict XVI Award for Leadership in Scholarship and Academia

Dr. Dan Scholz

Dr. Dan Scholz’s leadership in education in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee has spanned nearly four decades, and his instruction has helped to form generations of priests, lay ministers and fellow teachers.

“Serving others is a visible and concrete way for me to live out the Gospel values and help in building the Kingdom of God,” said Dr. Scholz.

Growing up in West Allis at St. Aloysius Parish, religion and Catholic identity “was always a part of my life,” said Dr. Scholz. “My mom in particular was a huge fan of Vatican II.” Dr. Scholz received his Ph.D. from Marquette University in 1997 in biblical theology and for several years taught biblical studies at Saint Francis de Sales Seminary. In 2004, he joined the faculty of Cardinal Stritch University, eventually becoming chair of the religious studies department and helping to form the St. Clare Center, where he was the executive director until 2011. He served as dean of the College of Arts and Sciences from 2011-17 and as vice president of academic affairs from 2018-20.

Dr. Scholz has published three books with Anselm Academic: “Jesus in the Gospels and Acts” (2009; revised edition, 2013), “The Pauline Letters” (2013), and most recently, “The Catholic Epistles, Hebrews, and Revelation” (2016), and he has co-authored five workbooks for Liturgy Training Publications. He has written weekly pieces for Liturgical Publications, Inc. since 2004.

A parishioner of Christ King Parish in Wauwatosa, Dr. Scholz regularly conducts “Between the Masses” scriptural presentations, typically during the seasons of Advent and Lent.

In his free time, Dr. Scholz enjoys reading and golfing, and he and his wife Bonnie are the parents of three adult children.

“Faith is central to our family life,” said Dr. Scholz. “We tend to view the ups and downs of family life through the lens of faith.”

Pope Francis Award for Missionary Leadership

Lidia Bonilla

Lidia Bonilla began her work in the Church as a young girl, helping at her parish in Panama. “I participated in youth mission trips that would go from place to place evangelizing and serving others,” she recalled. “I have been involved in religious education and formation for as long as I can remember.”

After achieving a degree in mathematics at the Panama National University C.R.U.V. in Veraguas, Bonilla came to the United States in 1994 as a Fulbright scholar to study a course of English at Southern Illinois University. She later received a master’s degree in mathematics from Marquette University and a Ph.D. in engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, where she also taught for several years.

Bonilla is the current director of religious education at St. Adalbert, and the head of public relations at Radio Católica Internacional. Her radio show, “The Hour of Divine Mercy,” has aired on several radio stations in Latin America.

Bonilla is frequently invited to give talks, and travels across Wisconsin to provide formation for youth and family ministries. The greatest joy of her life, she said, is motherhood — she has three children.

“Teaching them about the Catholic faith brings me joy that nothing else does,” she said. With her children, she is active in a youth ministry program, Apóstoles En Acción. “We want all kids out there to know that Jesus loves them and that there is hope. Through music and service, they can be the difference that is so much needed in this world.”

“I love serving others because it gives me the opportunity to be an instrument of Christ helping people to realize that he is alive — ‘Él está vivo’ — and that he wants to bring meaning to our lives,” she said. “So many have lost hope because their eyes are not fixed on God anymore. I love most seeing God working in somebody’s life. I have witnessed so many marvelous things over the years. Jesus is alive, healing his people and bringing hope to those who open their hearts to him.”

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Hamas-Israel Violence Touches Archdiocese https://catholicherald.org/featured/hamas-israel-violence-touches-archdiocese/ Mon, 09 Oct 2023 17:45:15 +0000 https://catholicherald.org/?p=37999 Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki Following an escalation in violence between Hamas and Israel, started on Oct. 7, Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki issued a statement on Monday, Oct. 9. “I’m asking all Catholics and people of goodwill to join me in praying for an end to the violence in Israel, for the souls of [...]

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Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki

Following an escalation in violence between Hamas and Israel, started on Oct. 7, Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki issued a statement on Monday, Oct. 9.

“I’m asking all Catholics and people of goodwill to join me in praying for an end to the violence in Israel, for the souls of all those who have been killed, and for their families. We are also praying for the safe return of those who are in the area on pilgrimages to the Holy Land, including some from Archdiocese of Milwaukee parishes,” the archbishop’s statement read.

There are 33 people from two Kenosha Catholic parishes, including their pastors, who are currently in the area on pilgrimage to the Holy Land. The pastors are Fr. Roman Stikel, pastor of St. Mary Catholic Church, and Fr. Carlos Florez of St. Mark Parish.

On Monday, Oct. 9, Fr. Stikel posted a message on the St. Mary, Kenosha, Facebook page.

“Fr. Roman calling from Nazareth. I want all of you to know that for our own safety, we are on our way to Jordan and back to the United States. The U.S. Embassy, as well as other authorities, have said that we should at this time leave the country and make our way back to our home country. So, that is where we are at. When we get to Jordan, I will send another robocall with another update and when our flight will be back to Chicago. Everyone is safe. Peace and Blessings, Father Roman from Nazareth.”

In an accompanying phone call, Fr, Stikel said, “We made it out of Israel this morning. It was quite an adventure to get across the border in Jordan; (it) took a very long time. We’re looking forward to a quiet night at our hotel this evening.”

On Sunday, Oct. 8, Pope Francis invited everyone to pray for peace in Israel and Palestine, saying, “Every war is a defeat.”


Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist Mass, Holy Hour for Peace, set for October 16

In light of the violence in the Middle East, the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist will host a Mass celebrated by Fr. Tim Kitzke followed by a Holy Hour for Peace on Monday, October 16. Mass will begin at 5:15 p.m., followed by Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament at 6 p.m., intercessory prayer and recitation of the Rosary, and will conclude with Benediction at 7 p.m. led by Archbishop Jerome Listecki. You are invited to this special time of prayer as we gather as a unified Church to pray for peace in our world, our country and our community. More information can be found on the Cathedral’s website at www.stjohncathedral.org.

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