Forty years ago this month, Pope John Paul II came to Ireland. I was just beginning my last year in school at Saint Columb\u27s College, Derry. It was a tense time. In the three months leading up to the pope\u27s visit, 36 people were killed in the Troubles - including 16 Catholic and Protestant civilians. In 1979 I went to see the Pope at Drogheda and subconsciously I think his words on that occasion have possibly framed much of my thinking about this evening\u27s theme - the role of faith in our politics
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The November 2012 death from septicaemia of an Indian woman, Ms Savita Halappanavar, at an Irish hos...
What could Pope Benedict possibly mean by the astounding claim that reason in public discourse must ...
It is often assumed, particularly by outsiders, that the conflict in Northern Ireland, known euphemi...
Pope John Paul II’s visit to Ireland in 1979 was an iconic moment in the history of twentieth-centur...
I first encountered the Pope’s Children when I was a student in the United States at Providence Coll...
The Cowl - student newspaper of Providence College. Vol 64 - No. 4 - September 28, 2000. 28 pages
Paper presented at Institute for British-Irish Studies Conference “Old structures, new beliefs: reli...
Pope Francis has breathed new life into the Catholic Church and revitalized the faith of millions, i...
Vatican II left Catholicism with some unresolved tensions: on the one hand between the authority of ...
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries Catholicism was a defining element of Irish national ident...
John Ireland had an evolving vision of the Catholic laity\u27s mission in the United States. Archbis...
The \u27de-Christianisation\u27 of Europe and Catholic Church\u27s history during the Troubles in No...
The Catholic Church in Ireland - and the hierarchy in particular - strongly condemned the military c...
Despite the involvement of radical socialists like James Connolly and the Irish Citizen Army in the ...
This article examines the message of Pope Benedict XVI to representatives of other religions, especi...
The November 2012 death from septicaemia of an Indian woman, Ms Savita Halappanavar, at an Irish hos...
What could Pope Benedict possibly mean by the astounding claim that reason in public discourse must ...
It is often assumed, particularly by outsiders, that the conflict in Northern Ireland, known euphemi...
Pope John Paul II’s visit to Ireland in 1979 was an iconic moment in the history of twentieth-centur...
I first encountered the Pope’s Children when I was a student in the United States at Providence Coll...
The Cowl - student newspaper of Providence College. Vol 64 - No. 4 - September 28, 2000. 28 pages
Paper presented at Institute for British-Irish Studies Conference “Old structures, new beliefs: reli...
Pope Francis has breathed new life into the Catholic Church and revitalized the faith of millions, i...
Vatican II left Catholicism with some unresolved tensions: on the one hand between the authority of ...
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries Catholicism was a defining element of Irish national ident...
John Ireland had an evolving vision of the Catholic laity\u27s mission in the United States. Archbis...
The \u27de-Christianisation\u27 of Europe and Catholic Church\u27s history during the Troubles in No...
The Catholic Church in Ireland - and the hierarchy in particular - strongly condemned the military c...
Despite the involvement of radical socialists like James Connolly and the Irish Citizen Army in the ...
This article examines the message of Pope Benedict XVI to representatives of other religions, especi...
The November 2012 death from septicaemia of an Indian woman, Ms Savita Halappanavar, at an Irish hos...
What could Pope Benedict possibly mean by the astounding claim that reason in public discourse must ...