Father Pierre Ducharme led a Zoom video conference with over 100 Canadian priests Aug. 14 to discuss how to develop synodal and missionary Catholic churches from coast to coast. (Willan Leung photo)

‘It is not at all about us’: Richmond pastor leads Canadian priests in synodal discussions

Over 100 Canadian priests convened for a Zoom video conference Aug. 14 to discuss how to develop synodal and missionary Catholic churches from coast to coast. Participants pondered the same questions posed to their clerical colleagues from around the world who attended the Parish Priests for the Synod International Meeting from April 28 to May...

Ashley (right), a Grade 3 student from Queen of All Saints Elementary, proudly holds up a letter from her Holy Cross Elementary pen pal Zavier (left). The photo was taken during an end-of-year field trip where students from both schools met for the first time in person after a year of writing letters to each other. (Gema Chavez photos) The joy of writing and receiving letters might be the most tragic victim of the digital age. Clicking open an email doesn’t have the same magic as unfolding a handwritten letter from a loved one. Now, in the age of instant messaging, two Catholic school teachers are trying to bring pen pals back in fashion. Grade 3 teachers Gema Chavez (Queen of All Saints Elementary in Coquitlam) and Elena Mobilio (Holy Cross Elementary in Burnaby) came up with the idea to give their students pen pals while they were discussing school experiences that can help students proclaim their faith. Decades ago, the idea of local Catholic students having “pen pals” was ordinary, but for the teachers, the tradition is more than just a nostalgic anachronism. Queen of All Saints student Nicole reads a letter from her pen pal. Her teacher, Gema Chavez, said students always felt special when receiving their letters. Students were just as excited to write to their pen pals as they were to receive letters in return. Chavez says giving students pen pals opens up a world of educational possibilities, and the letters were a perfect way to start conversations with students about how God gives us gifts and talents to serve others. “Students spent time praying for one another, sharing their life and faith experiences,” she said. They were also an opportunity to send each other small gifts. “In today’s world, people are used to receiving messages via technology,” Chavez said. “For the students to receive their own mail and open their own letter was incredibly special to witness. They were equally excited to write and seal their own letters to their pen pals.” Queen of All Saints student Kyle Wong said, “It was a great experience getting to know someone from a different school.” He was especially excited when he got to meet his pen pal, Yohan, at a mid-year track meet. Grade 3 teachers Gema Chavez and Elena Mobilio said they were inspired to start the pen pal project after reflecting on their experiences with pen pals as children. Teachers Chavez and Mobilio, who have known each other since they were both students at Notre Dame Regional Secondary in Vancouver, have fond memories of writing to pen pals and thought the experience would be a great way to engage their students. “Students learned that you can get to know new people and grow in kindness by being models of Christ,” said Chavez. “They were able to share their experiences throughout the year and their different faith traditions from their school as well as their family. It made their letters extremely heartfelt and personal.” There were academic benefits as well; students practised editing, draft writing, and building their literacy skills. Writing letters also touched on critical thinking skills including asking questions and making connections. At the end of the year, students from both schools went on a field trip to meet each other in person. Despite some inclement weather, the students were overjoyed to finally meet the person they had been writing to, Chavez said. The students arrived with huge smiles, and as they met each other in person their faces “were full of joy and wonder,” she said. After a year of exchanging letters, Queen of All Saints and Holy Cross Elementary students were able to meet in person during an end-of-year field trip. “They were able to share, in person, how much their correspondence meant to them this year. They laughed, played, explored, and prayed together,” she said. “The instant bonds that we got to witness first-hand was a beautiful moment.” Queen of All Saints student Anthony Lemire hopes to stay in touch with his pen pal. “Having a pen pal is a new experience for me and I learned that friendship is an important thing, even if we don’t go to the same school,” he said. Chavez and Mobilio are thankful to school administrators and parents for helping to make the experience a success, and they want to use it again in September as Catholic schools start the 2024/2025 school year with the theme “Celebrating, and Proclaiming our Faith.” Your voice matters! Join the conversation by submitting a Letter to the Editor here.

Dear Pen Pal: Writing project links students by ink, not email

The joy of writing and receiving letters might be the most tragic victim of the digital age. Clicking open an email doesn’t have the same magic as unfolding a handwritten letter from a loved one. Now, in the age of instant messaging, two Catholic school teachers are trying to bring pen pals back in fashion....

Jordan Berry, Danny Castello, Jason Penner, and Jason Kirupakaran in the Luke 15 House Chapel. All four became Catholic as a result of their time at the recovery house.(Nicholas Elbers photos)

‘I thank God he brought me here’: Recovery house was a centre of healing that drew 4 men to Christ

Christ is present everywhere, but he might spend more time in some places than others. That’s what it feels like talking to some of the clients at Luke 15 Recovery House in Surrey. Despite its legal definition as a “recovery house,” program manager Clark Umengan prefers to think of the centre, which opened in 1992,...

I hadn’t expected Archbishop Ivan Jurkovič to be as forthright as he was. He described the shock of arriving in Canada during the residential school crisis and finding flags at half-mast for months and irresponsible statements being made. My interview with Canada’s Apostolic nuncio appears here. For him, the key to preventing what we’ve seen...

Vancouver’s St. Paul’s Hospital’s policy of not allowing euthanasia onsite is the subject of a lawsuit by the parents of a terminally ill woman who was transferred to another facility to be euthanized. (Terry O’Neill photo)

Family sues over Vancouver Catholic hospital’s religious exemption for euthanasia

The parents of a terminally ill woman who was transferred to another facility to be euthanized after St. Paul’s Hospital refused to allow the procedure on its premises are suing the provincial government and Providence Health Care, the Catholic health-care provider that operates St. Paul’s. The couple’s lawsuit says their daughter’s Charter of Rights and...

Parishioners pray before the pilgrim Our Lady of Fatima statue at St. James Church in Abbotsford. The World Apostolate of Fatima wants to revive devotion to Our Lady of Fatima in Canada. (Paul Schratz photo)

Our Lady of Fatima’s visit to Vancouver: a decade-long journey

For Ethelyn David, Catholic event organizing seems to be second nature. From Marian conferences to parish missions, she has been promoting and coordinating celebrations of faith and devotion across the Archdiocese of Vancouver through her Mediatrix Conferences organization. But she hadn’t intended to be front and centre in Our Lady of Fatima’s visit to Vancouver....

A message to Vancouver Archbishop J. Michael Miller conveys greetings and a blessing for participants of the reconciliation event in Kamloops on Easter Sunday. (Archdiocese of Vancouver)

Pope Francis sends prayers for Sacred Covenant between Kamloops First Nation and Church

Pope Francis has sent prayers and greetings to the Kamloops First Nation, the Archdiocese of Vancouver and the Diocese of Kamloops to mark the signing of their Sacred Covenant on Easter Sunday. In a message to Vancouver Archbishop J. Michael Miller, the Vatican’s Secretary of State, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, said, “His Holiness Pope Francis sends...

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