Voice From The Desert
Gaillot pleads for people to call for change in the Church--to embrace those whom the Church has rejected
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In January, 1995, thousands took to the streets in France. Their cause? An advocate for the poor...a champion for the rights of AIDS patients, homosexuals, and other social outcasts...a friend to non-believers...a critic of Catholic Church rules...and beloved bishop of the diocese of Evreux: Jacques Gaillot. The Vatican, judging Gaillot to be disobedient to authority and harmful to church unity, "relocated" him to a desert diocese in Moslem North Africa that had effectively ceased to exist thirteen centuries before: Partenia. Partenia today is no more than a phantom diocese.The action made international headlines as not only French Catholics but many throughout Europe and the United States expressed outrage. For them, Gaillot had been the hopeful sign of a new church.Voice from the Desert is Gaillot's visionary letter to his new flock, the church in Partenia. It is, in effect, a pastoral letter to all Catholics. In vibrant, clear, and poetic prose, Bishop Gaillot expresses his dreams for a Catholic Church that exists to serve the people of God.
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