Romanian Catholics proclaim a day of fasting, prayer for justice: February 11

<http://www.catholicculture.org/news/features/index.cfm?recnum=60286>http://www.catholicculture.org/news/features/index.cfm?recnum=60286
 


Feb. 10, 2009 (CWNews.com) - The Romanian 
Catholic Church has set February 11 as a day of 
strict fasting and prayer, as the Eastern-rite 
Church confronts a crisis in Romania.

Since the fall of that country's Communist 
regime, the Romanian Catholic Church has sought 
the return of parish properties that were 
confiscated during the Stalin era and turned over 
to Romanian Orthodox control. The Romanian 
Catholic Church, which endured fierce persecution 
under Communism, survived underground and 
returned to vigorous public life after the 
repressive regime led by Nicolae Ceausescu finally fell in 1989.

Still most of the confiscated church property 
remained under Orthodox control, and in many 
instances Eastern-rite Catholics have been forced 
to worship in schools and other public buildings, 
or even outdoors, rather than in the churches 
built by their forefathers. In a country where 
Orthodox believers form a clear majority, the 
Romanian government has been reluctant to press 
for restoration of Catholic properties. Disputes 
over the legal ownership of churches have caused 
considerable conflict between the two Eastern churches.

The situation is complicated by the fact that 
some church buildings have now been used by 
Orthodox congregations for decades. Moreover, the 
Romanian Catholic Church was decimated by the 
years of brutal Communist persecution. There were 
about 2.5 million Eastern-rite Catholics in 
Romania before the Communist takeover; today the 
number is closer to 250,000. In some towns there 
are not Catholics remaining to claim ownership of an old church.

In 2007, legislation was introduced in the 
Romanian parliament that would have severely 
curtailed the efforts by Catholics to regain 
church property: including artwork and 
furnishings as well as the buildings themselves. 
Although the proposal was defeated, it has been 
introduced again this year, prompting what 
leaders of the Romanian Catholic Church see as a crisis for their community.

Major Archbishop Lucian Muresan of Alba 
Iulia-Fagaras, the leader of the Romanian 
Catholic Church, has called his people to fast 
and pray for justice on February 11. In the 
United States, the Bishop John Michael Botean, 
who heads the American eparchy of the Romanian 
Catholic Church, has asked all parishes to join 
in solidarity with that fast. In addition to 
fasting, he proposed that the faithful "go to the 
church you are blessed to have free and 
unhindered use of in order to pray on that day 
that God’s will be done in Romania­and injustice is not God’s will."


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