Catholic News Around Indiana
            Compiled by  Brandon A. Evans
            Diocese of Evansville
            Senator  Lugar: DREAM Act ‘critical to our economy’
            
            
              
By Paul  R. Leingang (Message editor)
            
            The first  thing people need to know about the DREAM Act is that it is not yet an act,  said Susan Brouillette, a member of Senator Richard Lugar’s staff. “It is still  a bill.”
            
            Brouillette  was one of several speakers at a forum presented by Senator Lugar’s office at  the Juan Diego  Center, located at Nativity Church  in Evansville.  About 140 people attended the forum, which was presented in English and in  Spanish. 
            
            The bill was  introduced by Senator Lugar, R-Ind., and Senator Richard Durban, D-Ill, on  March 26. The bill must be enacted by congress and signed by the president  before immigration benefits will be available to qualified young people.
            
            The second  thing Brouillette said people should know is what the DREAM Act is not. “It is  not comprehensive immigration reform,” she said.
            
            DREAM stands  for Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors. It is intended to  benefit young people, “those who did not come to the United States of their own choice,”  Brouillette said.
            
            If the DREAM  Act becomes law, an eligible person would have to have entered the United States before turning 16 years of age,  and would have to be physically present in the United States for a continuous  period of at least five years. 
            
            Under current  law, a person who has entered the United States without documentation  cannot become legal. An undocumented person who stays for a year or more must  leave the United States  for 10 years before application for legal status can be made.
            
            Photo  caption: Abraham Brown, Celina  Weataherwax and Pilar Tirado welcome participants to a forum at the Juan Diego Center at Nativity  Church in Evansville July 22. Brown is the parish  director of youth ministry. Weatherwax is on the staff of Senator Richard  Lugar. Tirado assists in parish ministry to the Spanish speaking. (Message  photo by Paul R. Leingang)
             
            Catholic  home schooling parents, children gather monthly
            
            
              By Mary  Ann Hughes (Message staff writer)
            
            This week,  dedicated maintenance workers are finishing their summer-long projects in  Catholic schools all around southern Indiana.  Teachers are hanging students’ names on bulletin boards, and principals are  finalizing plans for the first day of school.
            
            There’s  another group that’s gearing up for the 2009-2010 school year. It’s the Fruit  of the Spirit Co-op, a group of 13 families — all Catholic — who home school  their children with a large focus on their faith.
            
            Janice Martin  is a parishioner at St. Wendel Church in St. Wendel. She sent her oldest  children to school there, but five years ago she made the decision to home  school her youngest daughter Alena.
            
            Barbara O’Nan  lives in Henderson, Ky.,  and is a parishioner at Holy Spirit Church in Evansville. She holds a master’s degree in  theological studies from St. Meinrad and she currently home schools her three  sons, Ethan, Aaron and Brandon.
            
            The two women  met about five years ago at a meeting at St. Rupert Church in Red Brush for  home schooling families. They stayed in touch, and last year they invited other  Catholic home schooling families to meet on a monthly basis at the public  library in downtown Evansville.
            
            Last year at  the monthly meetings, the children learned about world geography, then attended  noon Mass at nearby Holy   Trinity Church,  and enjoyed lunch together. During the year, they also went swimming and  bowling together, had an All Saints party, and provided entertainment for the  residents at the Little Sisters of the Poor Home in Evansville.
            
            Barbara says  the gatherings are important, both for the parents and the students. “It’s  important to us for our kids to be around other Catholic kids, and I knew I  would need the support of other Catholic home schoolers. We can brain storm,  and we can ask for help.”            
            (For these stories and more news from the  Diocese of Evansville,  log on to the website of The Message at www.themessageonline.org)
             
            Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend
            Burmese  receive support through skills program
            
            
              
By Lauren Caggiano
            
            FORT WAYNE — A special program through  Catholic Charities has more Burmese people learning to assimilate to American  culture.
            
            Professional  skills are key to landing and maintaining a good job — something that refugees  often lack. Since April, the job readiness classes at the former St. Henry   School have catered to this large group  of Burmese refugees. The six-week sessions taught in Burmese instruct these  people on a variety of topics, such as how to apply for a job and appropriately  answer the phone. Catholic Charities staff even conduct mock interviews to help  them prepare. Books are provided to help them follow along.
            
            Burmese-born Nyein Chan, Catholic Charities’ resettlement services  director,  has been instrumental in the  success of the program. Chan worked with Employment Services Supervisor Kela  Johnson-Guy to establish the curriculum. As Guy explained, the students are  placed in one of two classes, depending on ability. This way those who need  more advanced or individual attention can be helped if needed.
            
            There are many skills, however, that cannot be learned in the  classroom. Differences in language and cultural norms “may be small to us, but  to them the cultural difference might be drastic,” Guy said. The hope is that  the Burmese will transition smoothly into the American workplace. 
            
            But they cannot do this without the support of the community.
            
              “Welcome and community assistance in collaboration is foremost  important for the refugee population when they   reestablish individual and family lives in new community,” Chan said.
            
            Photo caption: Students are shown at the job readiness  classes at the former St. Henry School.  The classes instruct the Burmese refugees on a variety of topics, such as how  to apply for a job and  appropriately  answer the phone. Catholic Charities staff even conduct mock interviews to help  them prepare. (Photo by Lauren Caggiano)            
            (For these stories and more news from the  Diocese of Fort Wayne-South  Bend, log on to  the website of Today’s Catholic at www.diocesefwsb.org/today)            
             
            Diocese of Lafayette
            Helping the  homeless, family by family
            
            
              
By  Caroline B. Mooney
            
            CARMEL — The new face of  homelessness is families with husbands, wives and children, says Sharon Glenn,  executive director of the Interfaith Hospitality Network. 
            
              “In the past,  it was single moms and kids, but we are seeing hardworking fathers and husbands  having to move into shelters,” she says.
            
              Through IHN,  faith communities work to help homeless families get back on their feet. St.  Elizabeth Ann Seton Church hosted three families July 5-12.
            
              “We found  ourselves without a home, and IHN has been a tremendous blessing,” Larry  Collins said.
            
              Collins, his  wife, Mary, son Levi, 6, and daughter Cheyenne,  3, were on a waiting list for IHN for six weeks. They were in their fourth week  in the program while at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton.
            
            Homelessness  in Indianapolis  has risen by 78 percent from 2008 to 2009, according to the Coalition for  Homelessness Intervention and Prevention. Forty-one percent of the homeless are  members of homeless families. 
            
            IHN, founded  in 1986, is active in 39 states. St. Elizabeth Ann Seton joined in 1994. Twenty  churches in Greater Indianapolis take turns hosting homeless families for one  to two weeks at a time. 
            
            Volunteers at  each church donate food for meals. They cook, set up beds, and serve as  activity hosts, overnight hosts and van drivers. Guest families stay overnight  at each church and are driven to the IHN day center every morning. 
            
  About 80  volunteers are involved at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, said coordinator Todd  Vanderohe. 
            
            Photo  caption: Volunteers and guests  share a meal at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Parish, Carmel. The parish recently hosted three  families in the Interfaith Hospitality Network program. (Photo by Caroline B.  Mooney)
             
            "That's  evangelization. And who doesn't like gelato?"
            
            
            
By Katy  Harrison Troxell 
            
            WESTFIELD —  One local parish has found a way to honor its patroness, reach out and share  with the community, and enjoy food, fun and family the Italian way. 
            
            St. Maria  Goretti held its first Italian festival in July 1997, while the faith community  was still a mission of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel in Carmel. 
            
            Organizers  hoped for 400 attendees and were shocked when more than 900 showed up. 
            
            After 12  years, St. Maria Goretti’s Italian festival — staged July 11 this year — is a  fine-tuned machine. 
            
            Planning  begins a year in advance — basically when the last breadstick is served. 
            
            Greg and Kim  Stanley served as this year’s chairs and estimated that she spent at least 300  hours planning and executing the event. 
            
              “People show  up and do what they need to do with no complaining,” Kim Stanley said.
            
              Organizers  expected between 2,000 and 2,500 hungry attendees. They canvassed Westfield by hanging  signs, stuffing mailboxes and by word-of-mouth. Clarke said that everyone was  welcome. “It’s fellowship of the community,” she said.
            
            The Italian  festival is not a fund-raiser; the event is purely for fellowship and  evangelization. With donations, food vendors, and the sale of tickets and  T-shirts, the event pays for itself. 
            
              “Certain  ministries have certain booths that they cover year after year,” Angie Weas,  event volunteer coordinator, explained. For example, the activity booth for the  Altar Rosary Society allows kids to make a “Good Deed Rosary.”             
            
            Photo  caption: Andy BeNardo and Carla  Erickson work at the spaghetti and meatballs station. Organizers expected  between 2,000 and 2,500 hungry festival-goers this year. (Photo by Katy  Harrison Troxell)            
            (For these stories and more news from the  Diocese of Lafayette,  log on to the website of The Catholic Moment at www.thecatholicmoment.org) †