Buffalo Diocese focusing on hope and healing during Ash Wednesday, Lent
BUFFALO, N.Y. (WIVB) — Church pews at Christian churches throughout Western New York might be filled on Ash Wednesday. Ash Wednesday is one of the busiest days of the year for the Buffalo Diocese.
'If you talk to any church secretary, they will tell you the phone rings more on Ash Wednesday then it does on the 23rd and 24th of December,' said Father Bill Quinlivan, a pastor of Catholic Family Parishes in South Buffalo. 'Our hope is always that people will enter into the season and not just see it as a superficial thing on their forehead, being marked with the sign of the cross, but that they will remember the one who carried the cross for them, and enter into a season of genuine and deep prayer and renewal in their hearts.'
Quinlivan says he will be distributing ashes from 2-4 p.m. at St. Martin of Tours and will have a mass at 7 p.m. with ashes, at Our Lady of Perpetual Help.
Quinlivan says in the Catholic Church worldwide every 25 years is a jubilee year. This year, instituted by Pope Francis, will be known as the Jubilee year of Hope. Quinlivan also says for the Buffalo Diocese, this year they're focusing on hope and healing.
'In the Diocese, there's a great need for healing, with not only the consolidation of churches and closures, but the tragic history of sexual abuse of children by clergy and other members of the church,' said Quinlivan. 'We're continually working to repent every one of us, to repent our sins and we take on the burden of other people's sins as well.'
He believes this year parishioners will make an extra effort to go to their churches if they are slated to be part of the Diocese's closures, or some might be going to a different church to continue their faith. Father Bill also believes the recent news of Pope Francis' serious illness is on the forefront of parishioners' minds.
'Every time you hear about a Pope, you think of the Catholic Church, we're the only ones who have a Pope I believe, and the identity with one of our great and solum traditions of having a holy father who is the vicar of Christ also flows down into other traditions like Ash Wednesday.'
For more information on Ash Wednesday and Lent, visit the Buffalo Diocese website here.
Hope Winter is a reporter and multimedia journalist who has been part of the News 4 team since 2021. See more of her work here.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Its students come mostly from working-class families and tuition per term is roughly $300, a substantial sum in a country where GDP per capita was about $1,000 in 2023. Yet that tuition is lower than at many other Catholic-run schools in Kampala, where many students report later in the term because they can't raise school fees in time, Akite said. Late starts, long lines, extension requests One of the most expensive private schools in Kampala, the Catholic-run Uganda Martyrs' Secondary School Namugongo, maintains a policy of 'zero balance' when a child reports to school at the beginning of a three-month term. This means students must be fully paid by the time they report to school. Tuition at the school was once as high as $800 but has since dropped to about $600 as enrollment swelled to nearly 5,000, said deputy headmaster James Batte. On a recent morning, there was a queue of parents waiting outside Batte's office to request more time to clear tuition balances. 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Across the region, the Catholic Church has built a reputation as a key provider of formal education in areas often underserved by the state. Its schools are cherished by families of all means for their values, discipline and academic success. In Zimbabwe, the Catholic Church operates about 100 schools, ranging from dozens in impoverished areas where annual tuition is as low as $150 to elite boarding schools that can charge thousands of dollars. But a legacy of inclusion is under pressure in the southern African nation due to fee increases at boarding schools and efforts by Catholic leaders to fully privatize some schools. Many boarding schools already charge tuition fees between $600 and $800, prohibitive for the working class in a country where most civil servants make less than a $300 per month. Privatization will raise tuition fees even higher, warned Peter Muzawazi, a prominent educator in Zimbabwe. Muzawazi, who attended Catholic schools, once was the headmaster of Marist Brothers, a top Catholic school for boys in Zimbabwe. That school in Nyanga is among those earmarked for privatization. 'I know in the Catholic Church there is a lot of space for reasonable fees for day scholars, but for boarders there is need to be watching because the possibility that they would be out of reach for the vulnerable is there,' he said. The church needs to be actively engaged, he said. 'How do we continue to guarantee education for the poor?' Efforts to privatize church-founded schools have sparked debate in Zimbabwe, which for years has been in economic decline stemming in part from sanctions imposed by the U.S. and others. Authorities say privatizing these schools is necessary to maintain standards, even as critics warn Catholic leaders not to turn their backs on poor people. 'Schools have now turned into businesses,' Martin Chaburumunda, president of the Zimbabwe Rural Teachers' Union, told The Manica Post, a state-run weekly. 'Churches now appear only hungry for money as opposed to educating the communities they operate in." Rather than privatizing old mission schools, the church should invest in building new ones if it's useful to experiment with different funding models, said Muzawazi, a lay Catholic who serves on the governing council of the Catholic University of Zimbabwe. 'The bright people who advance the cause of countries are not the rich ones,' he said. 'We want every church and every nation to tap the potential of every person, regardless of economic status.' ___ Mutsaka reported from Harare, Zimbabwe.
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