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January 21, 2008   •   VOL. 46, NO. 2   •   Oakland, CA

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Livermore’s St. Michael Parish builds homes for Salvador flood victims

The paradox of marriage probed around pool table pulpit

Retablo folk art on exhibit at St. Mary’s College

De La Salle High starts aid program for students of low-income families

Four urban schools join Catholic Schools Consortium

Heavenly Harmony to join Pueri Cantores festival

Schools to conclude Catholic Schools Week with picnic lunch near new cathedral center

Diocesan pastoral ministry schools honor 37 new graduates at a liturgy on Feb. 24

Schools host founder of Zimbabwe AIDS orphanage

Teachers to learn new techniques at faire

States reject funds for abstinence ed

Comic books aim to protect students from sexual abuse

Bishops approve curriculum framework for catechesis of high school students

Vatican sizes up today’s Catholic schools as partnership between religious, laity

Diocese will mark 100th anniversary of Christian Unity week

College students track sex trafficking in San Francisco

Retired bishop apologizes to Indians for Church’s treatment

Mexican Church leaders criticize NAFTA changes

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Retired bishop apologizes to Indians
for Church’s treatment
 


Bishop Francis A. Quinn

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (CNS) — Retired Bishop Francis A. Quinn of Sacramento, during a Dec. 15 Mass at the Church of St. Raphael in San Rafael, apologized to the Coast Miwok Indians for the Church’s mistreatment of them two centuries ago.

The Mass was held to commemorate the 190th anniversary of the founding of Mission San Rafael Arcangel.

The Miwok Indians once occupied the lands from the Golden Gate to north of Bodega Bay and helped Spanish priests build and maintain the mission in 1817.

The bishop conceded that the Indians were repaid by Church authorities with the destruction of their own spiritual practices and cruel punishment for any disobedience.

“I’ve studied the Coast Miwok tribe and found that some of the Church missionaries treated them rather roughly in insisting that they accept a European Catholicism and disciplined them for not following what they taught them,” Bishop Quinn told The Herald, Sacramento’s diocesan newspaper, in an interview.

“I felt I should express regret that the Miwok were treated unfairly in many ways, although the missionaries were well-intentioned but mistaken and doing only what they had been taught to do in bringing the faith to the Indians,” Bishop Quinn added.

“They probably didn’t expect an apology, so some of the Indians even wept. I look on it as a time of reconciliation and understanding between the Miwoks and Church representatives.”

Greg Sarris, head of the Miwok tribal council, officially called the Federal Indians of Graton Rancheria, told The Associated Press that Bishop Quinn’s remarks were historic.

“I have not heard this happening anywhere else in this country,” he said.


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