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Honey is like a taste of heaven for Vermont priest

WEST RUTLAND, Vt. – When Father Adam Krempa sits down for a light meal, he enjoys a bowl of cottage cheese drizzled with honey, seeded rye bread lightly toasted with butter not margarine and a cup of coffee with a heaping teaspoon of honey. “It’s like dying and having lunch with the Lord,” said the pastor of St. Raphael Church in Poultney. It’s not the toast or even the butter that makes the meal special; it’s the honey. For 40 years Father Krempa has been keeping bees at his family homestead on Valley View Lane in West Rutland, and the honey they produce and he processes and sells is pure. He also likes honey drizzled on his cornflakes, oatmeal or Cream of Wheat cereal. “You know you’re living” when you taste the honey, he told The Vermont Catholic Tribune, newspaper of the Burlington Diocese. Father Krempa has five hives on the south side of his two-car garage, protected from the strong winter winds that sweep across the hillside property. “This is where I find my relaxation,” he said, noting that he often sits in the yard and watches the bees busily flying to and from the hives. “It’s God’s creation.”

N.Y. Cardinal’s Scholarship Fund gets $22.5 million donation

NEW YORK – A New York philanthropist has donated $22.5 million to the Archdiocese of New York for its inner-city scholarship program, the archdiocese announced May 23. The donation, from former Wall Street investor Robert Wilson, will enable 3,000 children to attend Catholic schools in New York City through the scholarship program launched two years ago to provide needy students with partial- or full-tuition grants. Wilson, an 80-year-old atheist, told reporters after the donation was announced that he had no problem supporting a fund for Catholic school students. “Shunning religious organizations would be abhorrent,” he told Bloomberg News. “Keep in mind, I’m helping to pay tuition. The money isn’t going directly to the schools.”

Woman charged with stealing $525,000 from school

CLEVELAND – Colleen Kempf of Olmsted Falls has been charged with stealing $525,000 from St. Joseph Academy, an all-girls Catholic high school in Cleveland where she worked until last fall. Kempf, 46, was charged with one count of theft and arraigned May 15 before Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Judge Joseph D. Russo. Mary Ann Corrigan-Davis, St. Joseph Academy president, said the charges came about after the school’s director of finance, Moira McGreer, discovered irregularities in financial records last fall. The school immediately called in fraud examiners who worked with school officials. During the investigation Kempf admitted altering the ledgers, but at the time of arraignment it was not known whether she would face trial or reach a plea agreement. If found guilty, she could face up to five years in prison.

Bishop Wenski testifies on immigration reform

WASHINGTON – The problem that must be solved by immigration reform “is not the immigrants” but “the broken system,” the former chairman of the U.S. bishops’ Committee on Migration told a House subcommittee. In testimony May 22 before the House Subcommittee on Immigration, Citizenship, Refugees, Border Security and International Law, Bishop Thomas G. Wenski of Orlando, Fla., urged lawmakers to produce legislation that would reform the current immigration system and respect the dignity and rights of immigrants and migrant workers. He spoke on behalf of the U.S. bishops about comprehensive immigration reform, joining representatives of other religious denominations in giving testimony to the subcommittee.

Catholic Charities dedicates $15 million resource center

As a bagpiper played “Amazing Grace” in the halls of the new Our Daily Bread Employment Center May 24, hundreds of citizens followed the musician like the Pied Piper to tour Baltimore’s first full-service resource center for the poor. The symbolic jaunt through the $15 million, 52,000-square-foot facility followed a lavish dedication ceremony of the Catholic Charities project which was nine years in the making. In attendance were state and city politicians, leaders of the Archdiocese of Baltimore, volunteers and recipients of the philanthropic programs that will now be housed in the new building. While dedicating the facility that is expected to feed 700 of the city’s homeless and poor daily, Catholic Charities Executive Director Harold A. Smith said the new building would allow the most vulnerable citizens to “find dignity, peace and opportunity.”

Moms find creative ways for summer fun to flourish

With four children and another one on the way, Sacred Heart, Glyndon, parishioner Denise Blair-Nellies is no stranger to creativity during the months of summer. The Reisterstown resident said she loves summer and noted one of her children’s favorite pastimes is reading. “We love to read books and share what we’re reading with each other in the morning or evenings,” she said. She and the children, who range in age from 2 to 10, also enjoy outdoor picnics, visiting the local playground, going to the pool and taking inexpensive day trips to places such as the zoo. No matter how many children one has, coming up with creative ways to pass the hazy days of summer can be sticky. Therese Borchard, a 36-year-old Catholic News Service columnist and Annapolis mother of two, said that when the camp brochures arrive in March, she is often tempted to sign the kids up for weeks one through eight, “starting with a week of arts and crafts based on the theme of the solar system, ending with a tea party with Miss Spider.”

Arkansas parish tackles ‘Catholic Extreme Makeover’

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. – Call it a “Catholic Extreme Makeover.” When parishioners at Christ the King Church in Little Rock heard about Father Udochukwu “Udo” Vincent Ogbuji’s paralysis following a car wreck, they prayed for the priest’s recovery. And when their pastor, Monsignor Francis I. Malone, challenged them to renovate a house in less than two weeks for the former Searcy pastor, they immediately jumped to work. “They really stepped up with incredible donations,” said Sandy DeCoursey, the parish life/outreach director who oversaw the renovation of the vacant, parish-owned, two-story home. “The Holy Spirit is guiding this,” she said. “The Holy Spirit is the project manager.” Before Father Ogbuji, 38, was released from Baptist Rehabilitation Institute, Monsignor J. Gaston Hebert, administrator of the Little Rock Diocese, and Monsignor Malone agreed that the priest needed a home close to his therapists and doctors while at the same time being able to put his priestly vocation to work. The parish house, however, needed major renovations to accommodate a person in a motorized wheelchair as well as a fresh coat of paint and furnishings.

Bishop discusses finding Jesus in HIV/AIDS care

KAMPALA, Uganda – Although no easy answers can be found in the suffering of people affected by HIV/AIDS, God is with them and their caregivers, said a South African bishop. “There are no easy answers to the suffering of the people, and those who tell the poor and the sick that there is a cure are hiding the truth,” said Bishop Kevin Dowling of Rustensburg, South Africa. “But the truth is that God is with us in all these suffering (people). “I am not a specialist in HIV/AIDS, but I am simply sharing my story – the story of my people,” Bishop Dowling said during a series of talks on HIV/AIDS care sponsored by Hospice Africa in Uganda, a home-care organization. “I want to share with you how I have found the God of love in this ministry, because I truly believe God is with us to help us do his work.”

Forget gold stars; in Mali, top students get vegetable oil

Not long ago, Aminata Yattara sat at home on a stool in the dirt, pounding millet and dreaming about the day she could toss the pestle and pick up a pencil. School dominated her thoughts on her way to pull water from the well. She thought about it when she helped her mom wash dishes. But with four siblings and a poor family, Aminata’s chances for school seemed slim. And in this hot, dusty district in Mali where only about a third of girls go to school, the deck was stacked against her. So she pumped water and pounded millet, day after day, always jealous of her older brother who attended school. But Aminata was lucky. Her father, a rice and millet farmer, had once been to school, but quit. Fortunately, this 40-something father of five remembered the value of education. “Today, I regret that,” Haba Yattara says. “At that time, I did not know the importance, and I didn’t have someone behind me to make me go. So I dropped out. I want my girls to go to school so that they don’t take the same path as me.”

God part of vacation at Deep Creek Lake

Each summer, thousands of vacationers descend on Deep Creek Lake to enjoy boating, skiing and fishing for bass or pickerel. They are also able to worship at special outdoor liturgies thanks to a ministry of St. Peter in Oakland that helps make sure God is a part of their vacation. “They come to Mass by car and by boat, and most bring their own chairs or blankets for the grass,” said Father Donald Parson, pastor of St. Peter, noting that an altar is set up in a the bandstand area of a patio for Mass at “St. Peter at the Lake.” When it’s too cold to be outside, the liturgy moves indoors to a local tavern. “The vistas are just breathtaking,” the priest said. “It’s an incredibly beautiful area.” Deep Creek Lake was built by the Youghiogheny Hydro-Electric Corporation when the Pennsylvania-based company acquired rights to build dams across Deep Creek and the Youghiogheny River.

Relative hopes people will remember Blessed Preca’s life, virtues

OTTAWA – Tony Vella, the great-nephew of Father George Preca, said he hopes the charismatic Maltese priest’s life and virtues will be remembered long after his June 3 canonization. Vella called his mother’s uncle, whom he knows as “Dun Gorg,” a “pioneer of the lay apostolate.” Vella, 64, of Kingston, Ontario, served Blessed Preca as an altar boy in his native town of Hamrun, Malta, and “used to see him pretty well every day,” Vella said in a May telephone interview from Kingston. When Blessed Preca began his ministry, Malta, an island nation off the coast of Italy, was largely illiterate. Although Malta is Catholic, the faith there was mingled with superstition. As a deacon, Blessed Preca started “religious discussions” with sailors in the Grand Harbor area and began building relationships with local youths.

Bush invited to meet with Sant’Egidio Community in Rome

ROME – U.S. President George W. Bush has been invited to visit the Sant’Egidio Community, a Catholic lay community known for leading high-profile peace negotiations as well as being active in the fight against the death penalty and HIV/AIDS. The White House received the invitation but as of May 23 still had to decide if the president would visit with the community’s leaders, sources in Rome told Catholic News Service. Bush is scheduled to be in Rome June 8-9. Sant’Egidio spokesman Mario Marazziti told CNS that until the president’s schedule was finalized there was no comment on the proposed visit.

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