This story appears in the Mining feature series. View the full series.

by Clare Nolan

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I have done justice training with the project staff in Kolwezi, Democratic Republic of the Congo since 2013, so I was anticipating the release of the video "Maisha: A New Life Outside the Mines." I was told it was a documentary of the work of the Good Shepherd ministry being done there. And so it is — and quite a good documentary at that.

This story appears in the Notes from the Field feature series. View the full series.

Notes from the Field - After graduating from college in the spring of 2015, my husband, Ian, and I moved from Michigan to Kermit, West Virginia, to live and work at the Big Laurel Learning Center where we both help Sr. Kathy O'Hagan and Sr. Gretchen Shaffer explore ways to make it more sustainable by helping to host various work groups throughout the year.

Michelle Njeri is a member of the Franciscan Sisters of the Immaculate Conception, Nairobi, Kenya, and a final-year student in Social Communication at Tangaza University College (Catholic University Of Eastern Africa).

GSR Today - Right now, Missouri executes death row inmates faster than any other state — reportedly about one inmate a month, outpacing even Texas’ per capita execution rate. Last week, prominent death penalty opponent St. Joseph Sr. Helen Prejean was in Kansas City to discuss Missouri’s capital punishment situation. 

by Joachim Pham

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Sr. Elizabeth Tran Thi Quynh Giao, former provincial superior of Franciscan Missionaries of Mary in Vietnam, has spent more than 15 years training and building the Apostolic Institute of the Annunciation. The institute aims to give chances to poor, uneducated women in northern Vietnam so they can become nuns and serve other people. It was founded by the late Cardinal Archbishop Paul Joseph Pham Dinh Tung of Hanoi when Vietnam started to open its doors to the outside world and ease its religious policies.

by Marya Grathwohl

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Twenty years ago I was in a small group visiting with geologian Thomas Berry. We got to talking about the deplorable state of the planet. Our stories, statistics and images of widespread destruction, abject poverty, species loss and war piled high on the table around which we crowded. Many heavy sighs. “It’s hard not to despair,” someone said. I nodded slowly. Thomas cut in: “Despair is a luxury we can’t afford right now.”