Showing posts with label Gamaliel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gamaliel. Show all posts

Milwaukee Archdiocese relationship with Wisdom

Got this email forwarded:
The message below makes official the symbiotic relationship between Wisdom and the Archdiocese of Milwaukee. One minute Wisdom is running an anti-Walker newspaper ad signed by dozens of priests and nuns, and the next minute the Archdiocese is proclaiming a grand new partnership with them. One minute Wisdom (through Racine Interfaith Coalition) is mobilizing voters to elect pro-abortion Tom Barrett and Tom Lehman, and the next minute its affiliates "may be contacting your parish to host an educational forum". Oh, and I forgot to mention that Wisdom still has representation on the board of the pro-abortion Citizen Action of Wisconsin, even after removing their name as a "member" from the CAW website. http://citizenactionwi.org/board/citizen-action-of-wisconsin-board-of-directors.html

Please let Archbishop Listecki know what you think about this.
EMAIL FROM ARCHDIOCESE SOCIAL JUSTICE DIRECTOR TO "HUMAN CONCERNS CONTACTS"
Dear Human Concerns Contacts,

I hope that each of you is enjoying the feast day of St. Barnabas and a slightly cooler summer day.

This email is an introduction to WISDOM’s 11X15 Campaign, which seeks to decrease the number of incarcerated people in Wisconsin and promote alternatives to incarceration. (The campaign website is http://prayforjusticeinwi.org/).

As you know the Catholic Church has long been involved in ministering to crime victims and people in jail and prison. These ministries have included advocating for criminal justice reform. In 1999, the Catholic bishops in Wisconsin issued “Public Safety, the Common Good, and the Church: A Statement on Crime and Punishment in Wisconsin.” The statement set forth five guiding principles:
Corrections policies must convey respect for the human person.
Policies must serve the common good.
Policies must exercise an option for the poor and marginalized.
Policies, even those that enforce strict punishment, must serve the end of restoration.
Policies must foster the principle of solidarity among all in the community.

In light of these guiding principles, our current Wisconsin bishops agreed that WISDOM’s effort to encourage the state to reduce its prison population from a current level of 22,000 to 11,000 by 2015 (hence the 11X15 name) is consistent with Church teaching. [How could an arbitrary number like that be remotely plausible?]

For the purposes of this 11X15 initiative, the Bishops invite individual parishes to collaborate with WISDOM on this campaign, but parish should not become official corporate sponsors of 11X15. That is to say, education of parishioners may take place but parish funds should not be donated to WISDOM for the campaign.

For those of you unfamiliar with WISDOM, it is an affiliate of the Gamaliel Foundation and an umbrella which includes nine congregation-based community organizations. Within the Archdiocese, there are four groups: MICAH Milwaukee County, RIC Racine County, CUSH Kenosha County, and SOPHIA Waukesha County. In the near future, one of these groups may be contacting your parish to host an educational forum.

For further information please contact me.

Take care and God bless,

Robert Shelledy
Coordinator Social Justice Ministry
Archdiocese of Milwaukee

CCHD endorsed WISDOM accused of election law violation in Racine

From Dad29
So--because the Racine County Clerk did not SEE it happen--there will be no prosecutions.

Mmmmmmkay.

A Racine area organization with ties to both the Democratic Party and a Chicago-based community-organizing group may have violated Wisconsin election law late last week. Two churches that are part of the liberal-leaning Racine Interfaith Coalition hosted early voting events in which food was offered in an apparent inducement to encourage voters to cast early ballots for the June 5 recall election. A third church told Media Trackers that it was coordinating voter turnout efforts with the Democratic Party.

The Racine Interfaith Coalition is an association of some faith communities in the Racine area. It is directly tied to WISDOM, a statewide community-organizing group, and the Gamaliel Foundation in Chicago, which formerly employed President Barack Obama as an organizer. Jane Witt, the chairperson of the Democratic Party of Racine County sits on the coalition’s board.


You can read the rest.

Some Catholic parishes are part of the group:

Cristo Rey, Sacred Heart, St Patrick, and St. Richard of Chichester, run by (respectively) Frs. A. Thomas, R. Crewe, A. Thomas (he has two parishes) and R. Gramza.

The Archbishop of Milwaukee had plenty of warnings about Gamaliel and WISDOM, going back to when Abp. Dolan was here.  Aiding and abetting criminal voting enterprises is NOT something that the Archbishop of Milwaukee needs at this time.

Get those parishes out of WISDOM, Abp. Listecki.  Now would be a good time.

New Gamaliel Foundation director says "I'm too Catholic to be liberal"

In January, Garcia-Ashley was promoted to executive director of the Chicago-based Gamaliel Foundation. She's only the second person to hold that job in the 25-year history of the organization that once served as a training ground for a young Chicago community organizer named Barack Obama.

The job has put her organization on the radar screen of conservative critics of Obama, one of whom recently referred to Gamaliel as a "radical left-wing" foundation that "uses the tactics espoused by community organizing guru Saul Alinsky to incite church members to agitate for socialism."

She calls the socialism claim "very misguided, defamatory and untrue."

"We talk about social justice, not socialism," she says.

As for herself, she says she's not even a liberal. "I'm too Catholic to be liberal," she says.

In the face of such criticism, she's tasked with carrying out the new strategic plan for the group - getting networks going in all 19 states where the foundation operates. There's one already in operation, called WISDOM, in Wisconsin - that she helped create.
The rest at JSOnline

HT V

It just so happens that Gamaliel is also supporting pro-abort public sector unions in Wisconsin and their unlimited entitlement to bargain for benefits that are bankrupting the state.  And of course they support taxpayer funded abortions of Obamacare. 

FSPA "Spirituality" Center celebrates 25 years of Buddhism

From Sunday's La Crosse Tribune
Inside these brick walls a businessman found life was about more than his career. A mother found balance amid a race to meet the demands of her kids, workplace and home. People for 25 years have found peace.

"From the minute you walk in the door there is a sense of calmness and a sense of people being present to what is happening at the moment - it seems like your blood pressure drops several points immediately," said Brad Sturm, president of Coulee Bank and chairman of the spirituality center board.

The Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration[who publicly supported taxpayer funded abortion] founded the Franciscan Spirituality Center [which has nothing to do with Franciscan spirituality] 25 years ago[that would put this at 1985..] in part of St. Rose Convent. Since then 246,000 people[almost 200 per week] have come through the doors, whether for retreats, relaxation, spiritual guidance, training to become spiritual directors or other programs hosted at the center. The center welcomed nearly 15,000 people last year - the most guests in a single year.

"They started it and said the Holy Spirit will guide us - and that's what happened," said Vince Hatt, director of the center. [Apparently He wasn't good enough.  They are now guided by their Reiki "spirit guide"]

The start

The Franciscan Sisters had a history of responding to needs in the community. In the late 1800s, they saw needs for health care and education and founded a hospital, which became Franciscan Skemp, and a school, which became Viterbo University. In the years leading up to 1985, they saw a need for spiritual formation, or the development of the whole person by tapping into one's spiritual needs. They needed a retreat center where they could train spiritual directors to guide people on a path to wholeness.  [History has shown the FSPA has done an incredible amount of good for this city and diocese.  The Spirituality Center could have filled a great need, but indeed is far from it]

People tend to think they are done with spirituality at confirmation, Hatt said. But as we grow older, we become more aware of our incompleteness and search for answers.[True]

"There is something incomplete about the human condition," Hatt said. "We believe that one is not complete until they have a relationship with a higher power[read Reiki] or the holy." [....right, so this must be a direct quote from St Francis while receiving the sacred stigmata]

The spiritual journey

The spirituality center helped Stephanie Swartz, mother and senior nursing consultant at Gundersen Lutheran, move out of the "fast lane" at a time when that style of living became a health crisis, she said.

Swartz said her life was tipping heavily out of balance. She drove her kids to activities, worked, cleaned the house and mowed the lawn, but never took a moment to slow down and be present.

"I come from a long line of women that take care of everyone and not themselves," she said.

She was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2002. It was a wake-up call and Swartz decided her journey to health would not only be medical, but spiritual. The center allowed her to take that journey with a community of like-minded people, she said. [Another great example of a person seeking the True Spirituality,  which the Franciscan Spirituality Center denied her]

The spirituality center is a place she can be "more of a human being rather than a human doing," she said.

"The spirituality center has been the beacon in the fog," she said. [too bad nobody turned the light on]

Now Swartz sets aside time for meditation and contemplation every day.  She is cancer free and is a resource to other women going through similar health challenges.

"I look at my life as a keel of a boat. If you are centered[centering prayer], so are the people you work with and your family," she said. "That is what transitions into being a good parent, wife, employee and leader."

Serving all

The spirituality center is dedicated to helping anyone find wholeness. Its broad vision has helped the center respond to the needs of the community as they arise, said Mary Kathryn Fogarty, FSPA, a former center director of 12 years.

"We are not sitting in an ivory tower thinking up something by ourselves," she said. "What is out there is inviting us to respond."

For example, the center has coordinated programs for people who are unemployed, experiencing depression and/or searching for their purpose in life. It has offered programs parishes typically don't, like classes on meditation[this is not Lexio Divina], yoga and weekend retreats. [St. Rose of Viterbo was well versed in yoga before her death at age 17]

"We had yoga[what this is all about] almost from the beginning and other things that some people are disturbed about and question today[we are called Christians, thank you very much], but they are programs we've found helpful," said Kathleen Kenkel, FSPA, the center's first director. "The focus is not only on Catholics or deeply religious people, but anyone that wants growth with a spiritual direction." [...Doesn't matter if that spiritual growth is positive or negative I guess]

[The kingdom of heaven is like unto a treasure hidden in a field. Which a man having found, hid it, and for joy thereof goeth, and selleth all that he hath, and buyeth that field. Again the kingdom of heaven is like to a merchant seeking good pearls. Who when he had found one pearl of great price, went his way, and sold all that he had, and bought it. -Matt 13 44-46 

Beth Erickson, a center board member, was initially attracted to the La Crosse women's writer's group at the center.

"This is a group of women who get together every two weeks and check their egos at the door," she said. "The atmosphere is transformational."

The writers' group has evolved to one that held its own conference, featuring author Kathleen Norris in March 2009. The conference, aimed at getting people to write for personal healing, drew more than 300 people from across the country, said Theresa Washburn, director of communications for the spirituality center.

"It's a place where we've grown, not just in writing skills, but in who we are and our confidence as women, writers and people," Erickson said.

Reaching out

The spirituality center today continues to be a mission of the FSPA[Hello Apostolic Visitation]. But it has evolved to include a broad cross section of the community extending well outside the convent walls. The board, originally all Franciscan Sisters, is now made up of 12 laypeople and three FSPA. [perhaps the FSPA is having some vocational troubles]

The center's spiritual direction preparation program - which initially trained a class of primarily Franciscan Sisters - now has 27 participants from all religious denominations and none are Franciscan Sisters, Hatt said. It's an in increasingly diverse, interfaith community of participants, he said.  [Ecumenicism at its best!]

"It is very much interfaith, which I love," Swartz said. "Although I grew up Catholic, I've learned a lot about spirituality in a global sense." [LOL, thee most telling statement in the article]

The center has reached out to more people. In the late 1990s, the center started a certificate in servant leadership to bring community leaders spiritual and psychological grounding. In 2008 the center, in collaboration with a local coalition of congregations working on justice issues, AMOS Inc., started a program to provide more supportive relationships for people recently released from jail.  [That is the same AMOS that partners with pro-abortion Center for Community Change and Gamaliel]

So, what will the center look like 10 years from now? "We don't know," Hatt said.  [Maybe add some Wicca spirituality? ]

"That's the beauty when you are open to possibilities," Fogarty said. "We can carry on the history of the Franciscan Sisters.[Hardly] We can respond to what we see as the needs of this time." [Responded to a real need, but a glass of sand will not quench anyones thirst, Buddist or Catholic]

-end of article

The USCCB findings after studying Reiki is crystal clear.  (Obviously the FSPA has already shown it does not acknowledge the authority of any bishop over their order)
Since Reiki therapy is not compatible with either Christian teaching or scientific evidence, it would be inappropriate for Catholic institutions, such as Catholic health care facilities and retreat centers, or persons representing the Church, such as Catholic chaplains, to promote or to provide support for Reiki therapy.
-USCCB Guidelines on Reiki (pdf)

Gamaliel says Bp Ricken does *not* have concerns with their policies

Ran across the Gamaliel blog and they posted something interesting a few days ago.  Gamaliel is an umbrella organization which has many subsidies cooperating with parishes in the Green Bay diocese.  Gamaliel  supports taxpayer funded abortion and same sex "marriage."   
As of this writing, Wisconsin Bishop Ricken has made it clear that the actions and positions of JOSHUA, ESTHER, WISDOM and the Gamaliel Foundation are consistent with the Roman Catholic Church’s teaching.  His concerns are NOT related to anything WISDOM, the local organizations, or Gamaliel have done.
The Bishop’s concerns seem to have more to do with process and structure, and the form of our relationship with the Diocese.  It seems that his concern has to do with accountability in the event that anything were to go wrong in the future.

The Bishop has established a Task Force, which is mostly comprised of Catholic members of ESTHER and JOSHUA, to look at the concern the Bishop has expressed, and to try to find some solutions.  In the meantime, Gamaliel Executive Director Greg Galluzzo and WISDOM Organizer David Liners have both offered to meet with the Bishop and other diocesan personnel to help to find some good resolution to the Bishop’s concerns.
We all send our prayers and blessings that this situation will be resolved amicably for all involved.
Some background on Gamaliel.

On Feb 26th, 2010, Bishop Ricken wrote the following
After prayer, study, and reflection, it is clear to me that principles of the Gamaliel Foundation are inconsistent with the tenets of our Catholic Social Teaching. It is not fitting for a Catholic entity to enter into a formal association with another organization when there is such a conflict of principles. JOSHUA and ESTHER, through their affiliation with WISDOM, are also affiliated with the Gamaliel Foundation.
I can't find anything on the Diocese of Green Bay stating that Bishop Ricken has changed his stance here.  Is this the koolaid that Gamaliel members drink?

Bishop Ricken of Green Bay takes on CCHD reform

Bishop David Ricken the shepherd of Green Bay WI has taken it upon himself to clean up the mess the CCHD has created in his diocese.  He hopes to prevent his flock from funding abortion and homosexual "marriage" through Sunday collections.
Last Fall, Bishop David L. Ricken became aware of some inconsistencies between the principles of the Gamaliel Foundation and the teachings of the Catholic Church. The Gamaliel Foundation's affiliate organization in Wisconsin is WISDOM; two local affiliates of WISDOM are JOSHUA in Green Bay and ESTHER in the Fox Cities. About 18 Catholic parishes belong to either JOSHUA or ESTHER.
Read the letter posted by The Compass (GB diocesan newspaper) 

Last November Bp Robert Morlino, Madison(another Wisconsin bishop) has also decided to withhold any funds from CCHD until his own investigation can be made to understand what went wrong.

LifeSiteNews.com also picked up on the story.

I have also blogged on some of the previous developments. 

Quite frankly I do not understand the usefulness of the CCHD at all.

Dad29 has more on the latest findings   We are talking about alot of money here coming out of the collection plate.  Will Milwaukee, Superior and La Crosse follow suite?

CCHD in Wisconsin - even more

Two groups who are funded by the CCHD in Wisconsin, ESTER and JOSHUA, have discontinued their partnership with the pro abortion group Gamaliel.  

From the Diocese of Green Bay newspaper, The Compass
In an interview with The Compass Nov. 13, Stephanie Gyldenvand, ESTHER organizer and spokesperson, said she and other ESTHER and JOSHUA officials were upset to learn about HCAN's abortion stance.
"When we started with HCAN, there was an agreed set of principles" on health care reform, she said. "But the position they decided to take (on abortion), without notifying anyone, made it clear that our partnership could no longer continue."
Good article also goes into the email that is circulating and the corrective actions the groups took.

The Diocese of La Crosse has yet to issue anything publicly to clarify the confusion.

The fact remains that Bishop Morlino of Madison is not participating in the CCHD collection this weekend until he has completed his own investigation of the funds being spent. And other groups directly funded by the CCHD nationally have directly funded to promotion of abortion, contraception, and same sex "marriage."  Milwaukee group Voces dela Frontera, still remains in question as I have seen no corrective statement made regarding this group by the Milwaukee Archdiocese or elsewhere. 

Voces de la Frontera Wisconsin - $50,000
  • Promoted homosexual campaign “Gayneighbor.org” for ally group Equality Wisconsin in Oct. 2009 newsletter
  • Listed as member of “Health Care for America Now
    Health Care for America Now firmly stated:
    • When we say health care for all, we also mean preserving the reproductive health care coverage women currently have.”

      (Richard Kirsche) “Unfortunately, the House legislation included a provision that will deny some women access to abortion services, a standard benefit now available on the insurance market. We will work to see that women have access to comprehensive health coverage in the final bill that passes.”

      A central promise of health care reform is that if you like the health care coverage you have, you can keep it. Today in America, millions of women who buy health care on their own or who get it through the small business employer have abortion care coverage. Congressman Stupak's amendment would strip them of that coverage, breaking that central promise.

      Stupak wants to outlaw abortion coverage in the new health insurance Exchange, where individuals and small businesses will purchase their coverage. Instead, women would only be able to purchase abortion coverage in a "abortion rider" plan - a single-service plan that covers abortion only. Such an "abortion rider" is discriminatory and illogical. Women do not plan to have unintended pregnancies (or pregnancies in which a complication will arise that will require ending the pregnancy). In fact, about half of all pregnancies are unintended. Abortion is simply not something that women plan to insure against.
I haven't seen any emails yet "attacking" the bishops, but apparently some are circulating which are not being charitable.  That is unfortunate.  Even though Catholics have been extremely scandalized in our time, we must show the bishops the same respect we would show Jesus Christ, the High Priest.  The Holy Father recently spoke on the need for charity dealing with others on the internet as well as in person.  Hopefully the situation nationwide with the CCHD will be corrected and perhaps additional oversight or precautions can be taken to ensure proper handling of our donations.

CCHD - More updates

Recently I blogged on how the Bishops are supporting groups promoting abortion in Wisconsin.  through the USCCB group known as the Catholic Campaign for Human Development.

It seems things have been heating up over this.  The Bishops fall meeting in DC had brought this subject up.
The chairman of the U.S. bishops’ subcommittee which oversees the Catholic Campaign for Human Development (CCHD) has defended the program against what he called “outrageous” allegations and claims. He reiterated that the campaign is pro-life and has “zero tolerance” for funding any group that violates Catholic teaching.

Bishop of Biloxi, Mississippi Roger Morin on Tuesday addressed the fall assembly of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) on the topic of the CCHD.

CNA Nov 19
This response is a bit troubling considering the fact that their own documents are the ones condemning them.  The USCCB published who received money, this isn't like someone is releasing classified documents.

The bishop(Morin) said it was “particularly disturbing” that people form an opinion of CCHD based on an individual incident of misconduct.
What is becoming obvious is that MANY of the organizations receiving money participate in promoting the culture of death.  If we just look at Wisconsin we can find 4 out of the 7 groups receiving money have directly or cooperated with groups in promoting abortion.  This is not an "individual incident" and this is very minimal checking on my part. 

Green Bay
ESTHER (Gamaliel Foundation affiliate)
$32,000
Green Bay
JOSHUA Justice Organization Sharing Hope & United for Action
$25,000
LaCrosse
AMOS (Gamaliel Foundation affiliate)
$25,000
LaCrosse
Joining Our Neighbors Advancing Hope
$25,000
Milwaukee
Common Ground – Industrial Areas Foundation – See Website
$40,000
Racine
RIC - Racine Interfaith Coalition (Gamaliel Foundation affiliate)
$25,000
Milwaukee
Voces dela Frontera 
$50,000

Another thing to remember is that the CCHD is not involved with actually helping the poor, but to overcome the "root causes" of poverty.
  • Pro-Life groups are NOT eligible for these funds
  • Pregnancy Care Centers are NOT eligible for these funds
  • Religious Orders are NOT eligible for these funds
  • Soup kitchens and homeless programs are NOT eligible for these funds.
  • Direct services at Not covered.

Relevant Radio's Drew Mariani's show today is on this subject...

UPDATE: Diocese of Madison is NOT PARTICIPATING in CCHD collection this weekend!
American Life League alerted me to this just published by the Madison Diocese

While Bishop Morlino continues to seek out answers to the many questions arising with regard to the National Campaign, and until he is personally confident that funds collected from the faithful of the Diocese of Madison will not be used to fund groups which violate the teaching of the Church by their policies, he will continue to seek out other helpful ways to assist those in need.  This year’s National CCHD collection (2009) from the Diocese of Madison will go to the Little Sisters of the Poor and their international outreach ministry to the elderly.  The sisters operate 202 homes in 32 countries.

 We hope and pray other diocese will follow Bishop Morlino's example.

Note: It has been said that those not approving of the CCHD actions are "bishop bashing" among other things. I think this is exact opposite, we love our bishops and want any group who may be deceiving them on how money is being spent to be exposed.  Discussion and even *gasp* debate are a good thing, and as GK Chesterton said "Too often people can let an argument get in the way of a good debate."

Do the Wisconsin Bishops fund groups promoting abortion?

Several problems have been raised recently about the USCCB's "Catholic Campaign for Human Development."  Findings by Bellarmine Veritas Ministry & American Life League have found several cases where the CCHD has been directly funding groups that promote abortion and same sex "marriage."  The group has funded ACORN, among other groups.  CCHD money is never used to help the poor or homeless, it is specifically targeted at funding "social concerns."

Here is an excerpt:
In early 2009, the WCRP received a grant totaling $16,400 from the Philadelphia based organization Women’s Way. (Source: Women’s Way web-site)  Women’s Way, like many organizations which give grants, has a strict policy in place as to what manner of organizations are eligible for grants.
This policy includes the following:

What WOMEN’S WAY is NOT Interested in Funding
WOMEN’S WAY seeks applications that support our mission. The following types of organizations and projects conflict with our values and funding philosophy and would not be considered.
  • Organizations that consider themselves to be pro-life
  • Organizations and projects that do not support a woman’s full range of reproductive choices
  • Organizations and projects promoting abstinence-only sex education
  • Organizations and projects opposing same sex relationships or marriage (Emphasis present in original.  Source: Women’s Way web-site)
Obviously this is extremely embarrassing for the US Bishops and I'm sure at some point corrective action will be taken.  But with a bureaucratic culture at the USCCB, and a lack in oversight, it is clear the CCHD needs to go.

So that's bad news, but what groups does the CCHD fund in Wisconsin?  I searched the USCCB document for 2009 and found these groups on the list:

Diocese & Name of Organization
Description of Organization

Granted
Amount
AREA B
Wisconsin
Green Bay
ESTHER

ESTHER (Equality, Solidarity, Truth, Hope, Empowerment, Reform) is an interfaith social justice advocacy organization that includes Catholic and Protestant congregations as well as the Fox Valley
Islamic Society. We work to link communities of faith, to build relationships that will bridge divisions and to act collectively in pursuit of the common good. Though our membership is rooted in
religious congregations, its mission is civic in nature. ESTHER members do not seek to proselytize, but work to find common ground on which to build a more compassionate and sustainable
community. ESTHER focuses on the root causes of needs and injustices, organizing people to bring about action that will lead to systemic change. Our current focus is on five key issues: criminal
justice reform, improved public education, comprehensive immigration reform, affordable healthcare and workforce housing. Action reflecting core values based in our faith gives voice to the
powerless, emboldens people, and brings hope that change can happen for the greater good.


$32,000

AREA B
Wisconsin
Green Bay
Justice Organization Sharing
Hope & United for Action

JOSHUA is a congregation based community organization with 17 institutional members, including religious congregation from Catholic, ELCA Lutheran, Methodist, Episcopal, UCC, Unitarian,
Moravian, and non-denominational congregations. More denominations are expected to join, including Presbyterians, before the grant year. JOSHUA is dedicated to being an effective power
organization. We organize our members and others to form a community that can have a positive impact on decisions made in the public arena. JOSHUA works through: Intentional relationship
building among members of our own congregations, public officials and others; Leadership development and training - providing tools to individuals promoting better leadership, while fostering both
collaboration and accountability; Education and Action - We organize committees, public events, and other actions for change in public policy and accountability of both government and private
officials. Current issue concerns include: health care, housing, immigrant rights, and, treatment alternatives to incarceration.


$25,000

AREA B
Wisconsin
LaCrosse
Joining Our Neighbors
Advancing Hope

We are a congregation-based organization that works for social justice. We are a member of the statewide WISDOM network and the international Gamaliel Foundation. Our primary goals are
embedded in our name -- Joining Our Neighbors (building community that crosses economic, religious, social and geographic boundaries), Advancing Hope (developing new leaders, and cutting issues
that can make a tangible difference in our community -- especially for the most needy and marginalized). JONAH is a new organization; our initial "covenanting" celebration was in November 2007.
JONAH is an interfaith coalition. At the moment, our member congregations are Roman Catholic, Unitarian Universalist, Friends Meeting (Quakers), Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA),
United Church of Christ (UCC), Episcopalian, and the Unity Christ Center. We are in conversation with the Jewish Synagogue in Eau ClaireAltoona about their joining us. and the Islamic Society in


$25,000

AREA B
Wisconsin
LaCrosse AMOS, Inc

AMOS is a powerful coalition of faith communities working to deepen relationships within and among congregations and empower people to act together to build a more just and healthy society. We
seek to: Deepen relationships by promoting "one-on-one" interviews through which people discover their talents, resources and motivations to act for the good of the community; Empower people
by teaching communication and organizing skills that will enable people to be agents of change; Build cooperation and trust between congregations by working together to listen to the broader
community, identify issues of common concern, analyze causes of poverty and injustice, and develop strategies for positive change; Work with leaders in government, business and other community
organizations to impact decisions regarding the political, social, economic, and environmental issues for the purpose of promoting a more just and healthy society.


$25,000

AREA B
Wisconsin
Milwaukee
Common Ground Inc.

The mission of the organization will be non-partisan political power for social justice and social change. Initial issues for action identified to date include health care for the uninsured, gun violence, job
training, water distribution, racial tensions and school reform. These key issues greatly impact the lives of the poor and most vulnerable in our community.


$40,000

AREA B
Wisconsin
Milwaukee
Voces de la Frontera Workers'
Center

Voces de la Frontera (VF) is a workers' center that educates low-wage and immigrant workers about their employment rights, promotes youth leadership, and promotes community organizing as a
means to win changes that will benefit the immigrant community and the workforce at large. In order to win policy changes we build alliances at the local, state, national, and international level. VF
started as a bilingual newsletter which covered the struggles of workers in the maquiladora industry to improve working and living conditions. It evolved into a workers center in Milwaukee in 2001
and has steadily grown in numbers and chapters. It is a community run organization; primarily composed of low-income Latino workers and youth.
$50,000

AREA B
Wisconsin
Milwaukee
Racine Interfaith Coalition

The Racine Interfaith Coalition (RIC) is a congregation-based community organization. Our history began in 1993. Our mission is to address the root causes of social problems and lead to new ways of
thinking and acting. We accomplish that by focusing on identifying the most marginalized members of Racine. We train them to run their own meetings and lead others to understand the policies and
procedures at the source of their pain. We do extensive research, and plan community forums and print publications as a result of our findings. We recruit people to formulate solutions through focus
groups committees Our issue committees set goals to reduce the problem little by little Currently RIC includes 17 congregation members with two newly recruited in December of 2007.  Our total membership is 10,000.




$25,000

AREA B
Wisconsin
Superior
Comunidad Hispana

Comunidad Hispana works to provide local Hispanics with community solidarity helping them to enjoy the rights to which they are entitled so they can begin to become empowered to overcome
some of the root causes of poverty. Comunidad Hispana has evolved appropriately under the control of low-income Hispanics. Non-Hispanics who played a major role in launching the organization
currently serve on the board and/or provide technical assistance. The focus of the organization is to continue to provide a place for local Hispanics to have a dominant voice in shaping the policies and
activities of Comunidad Hispana. Through Comunidad Hispana, local Hispanics are taking the lead affecting institutional changes that will improve their living conditions within the community.


$25,000


Now these groups seem to have a social-concern type flavor.  The descriptions are vague enough that they could possibly be taken either way.

The Diocese of Green Bay has come out with a statement  indicating no diocesan money had been spent opposing Church teaching despite the umbrella group WISDOM promoting abortion. A bit of a cop out, I must say......

Another from Milwaukee has some more bad news:

Voces de la Frontera Wisconsin - $50,000
  • Promoted homosexual campaign “Gayneighbor.org” for ally group Equality Wisconsin in Oct. 2009 newsletter



  • Listed as member of “Health Care for America Now

    Health Care for America Now firmly stated:





    • When we say health care for all, we also mean preserving the reproductive health care coverage women currently have.”

      (Richard Kirsche) “Unfortunately, the House legislation included a provision that will deny some women access to abortion services, a standard benefit now available on the insurance market. We will work to see that women have access to comprehensive health coverage in the final bill that passes.”

      A central promise of health care reform is that if you like the health care coverage you have, you can keep it. Today in America, millions of women who buy health care on their own or who get it through the small business employer have abortion care coverage. Congressman Stupak's amendment would strip them of that coverage, breaking that central promise.

      Stupak wants to outlaw abortion coverage in the new health insurance Exchange, where individuals and small businesses will purchase their coverage. Instead, women would only be able to purchase abortion coverage in a "abortion rider" plan - a single-service plan that covers abortion only. Such an "abortion rider" is discriminatory and illogical. Women do not plan to have unintended pregnancies (or pregnancies in which a complication will arise that will require ending the pregnancy). In fact, about half of all pregnancies are unintended. Abortion is simply not something that women plan to insure against.

Wisconsin bishops appear to have been supporting at least one group promoting abortion, same-sex "marriage" and contraception among other things.  How can we expect the state of Wisconsin to respect our freedom of religion in life matters(ie, forcing dioceses to fund contraception) if we do not even practice what we preach?  Let's pray for our bishops and spread the word so these kinds of errors are corrected!