Thursday, March 24, 2005
Stations
From Zenit.org, the online Catholic news service, comes this heartbreaking article:
Schiavo Case: "Another Station in Her Calvary"
VATICAN CITY, MARCH 24, 2005 (Zenit.org).-
The rejection by a U.S. appeals court to give food and water to Terri Schiavo is "another painful station in her calvary," says L'Osservatore Romano. In a front-page article, today's Italian edition of the Vatican's semiofficial newspaper commented on the decision of Schiavo's parents to appeal to federal courts to save their daughter's life. Later, the U.S. Supreme Court also turned down a request to order the reinsertion of a feeding tube to keep Schiavo alive. Her husband wants to let her die. "Unfortunately, until now, in her painful journey Terri seems to have come across executioners -- from the one who decided for the first time to let her die, to the judges who have now signed her sentence," stated the newspaper article. "And this, despite the opinion of most of American society and the intervention of President George W. Bush himself, who expressed his regret over the judge's decision," added the newspaper. "Meanwhile, unaware of the media noise caused by her case, Terri is dying in silence."
Schiavo Case: "Another Station in Her Calvary"
VATICAN CITY, MARCH 24, 2005 (Zenit.org).-
The rejection by a U.S. appeals court to give food and water to Terri Schiavo is "another painful station in her calvary," says L'Osservatore Romano. In a front-page article, today's Italian edition of the Vatican's semiofficial newspaper commented on the decision of Schiavo's parents to appeal to federal courts to save their daughter's life. Later, the U.S. Supreme Court also turned down a request to order the reinsertion of a feeding tube to keep Schiavo alive. Her husband wants to let her die. "Unfortunately, until now, in her painful journey Terri seems to have come across executioners -- from the one who decided for the first time to let her die, to the judges who have now signed her sentence," stated the newspaper article. "And this, despite the opinion of most of American society and the intervention of President George W. Bush himself, who expressed his regret over the judge's decision," added the newspaper. "Meanwhile, unaware of the media noise caused by her case, Terri is dying in silence."