Catholic Register Staff
King’s University appoints new academic dean
Effective July 1, the appointment follows an intense international search and a broad consultative process within the King’s community.
“It is a great privilege to serve as a leader in an academic community that is recognized for the quality of its degree programs, the teaching ability and scholarship of its faculty, its Christian values and the services it provides its students,” said Camiletti.
Move to Canada awakens a pair of vocation calls
Born in Calcutta, India, in 1971, Shroff was raised in the Zoroastrian religion. When he came to Canada to attend McGill University in Montreal, he discovered the first of those vocations, a conversion to the Catholic faith.
While exploring his faith and the possibility of becoming a religious brother, Shroff was sent to Cebu in the Philippines to do missionary work. It was there he found his second and deeper vocation, a call to the priesthood.
“Father doesn’t have time for us,” said the youth of Cebu, according to Shroff. “Father is too busy running the parish.”
Easter Contest 2011
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Ages 6-8 Part 1
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Ages 6-8 Part 2
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Passion was for the Lord, not an engineering career
“The Lord was slowly opening my heart to the reality of the priesthood,” he said.
“I had no idea at the time, but that’s the case.”
God continued to gently lure MacDonald to the priesthood throughout his youth, when he attended a number of retreats in Prince Edward Island, where he was born and raised. Attending public school in a Protestant community, MacDonald was “blown away” by being with so many other passionate Catholics.
While studying law in university, Mah was invited by his friend to a Lenten reconciliation service, where he had his first Confession in 15 years.
“After hearing the words of absolution, I remember feeling this huge weight lifted in my heart,” said Mah.
He was later asked by another friend to visit the seminary
Parents ground him in faith
Market’s parents and their Croatian heritage, he says, gave him a solid grounding in the faith at a young age. His mother died only three years after his father did, when Market was 18. He says their influence and prayers are why he felt the call to the priesthood.
“(My mother) never shared with me who she was always praying for,” said Market. “I am convinced that the silent prayer of my mother is the reason why, God willing, I will be a priest.”
Pain leads to path to formation
“In the midst of this world of suffering and pain, my vocation, my path in life was formed,” he said.
“I was schooled in what I think is the most important lesson in life — the lesson of what it means to truly love and the lesson of what it means to suffer with others.”
But until he was 17, Markus was unaware of this call. After spending a number of years in foster care and being uninvolved in the faith outside of First Communion and Confirmation, Markus began “searching for a greater meaning in life, something beyond drinking and partying and going out with friends.”
Misery came in accounting, leading to his joyful call
When Allyn Rose was younger, he was always under the impression that life as a priest would be miserable.
That thinking changed so much over the years that now he is about to enter the priesthood.
Born in Orangeville, Ont., Rose was the middle of three children. He studied accounting at Sheridan College and the University of Windsor. All along, however, Rose volunteered in various capacities, including youth ministry, at St. Timothy’s parish in his hometown.
“Over time I was finding more happiness and fulfilment working as a volunteer in parish ministries,” said Rose, “and I was even more miserable working for a good salary at the chartered accountant firm.”
Kusyk’s call to serve was first heard at age 13
“I was only six weeks old, still in my mother’s womb, when my mother’s doctor informed her that her body was rejecting me and that the only alternative that made any sense was for her to abort me,” said Kusyk.
His parents returned from that visit to the doctor and prayed for the intercession of St. Joseph. A month later, they consulted another doctor, and to their surprise, their son was doing fine.
Kusyk was born healthy in Bamberg, Germany, and spent his childhood in London, Ont. At 13, he remembers feeling a call to the priesthood in the most unlikely of cicrumstances.
St. Jerome’s, union reach settlement
The union contract will see St. Jerome’s faculty keep pace with colleagues at the University of Waterloo in terms of salary and benefits. St. Jerome’s is the Catholic college federated with the University of Waterloo.
It was how the school is governed, rather than money, that inspired the professors and librarians to seek union protection. But in the end, governance issues were not part of union negotiations.
A separate working group with representatives from the board of governors, administration and academic staff was struck to report on possible reforms to how St. Jerome’s runs itself.