Catholic Charities - Diocese of YoungstownHow can I teach about Peace and Justice?There are many wonderful resources for school educators, parish religious catechists, youth ministers and young adult coordinators.on teaching/engaging young persons in justice and peace ministries and services. This website provides some links to various national and international Catholic resources for kids, young adults and adults. If you find resources or links that you find are useful and helpful from the perspective of Catholic social doctrine, please let us know so that we can update our website. It is our hope that this site will serve as a useful place for idea exchange. THANK YOU FOR YOUR WORK AND LEADERSHIP IN EDUCATING/FORMING IN JUSTICE AND PEACE.
The Catholic University of America Archives: INTER-ACTIVE EDUCATIONAL WEB
SITE: The Bishops' Program of Social Reconstruction
1919, site
The American Catholic History Research Center and
University Archives at
Catholic University in Washington, D.C. is pleased to announce a free new primary document website on the Bishops' Program of Social Reconstruction of 1919. Written by Father John A. Ryan and released by the National Catholic War Council (the forerunner of the National Catholic Welfare Conference), the Bishops' Program offered a guide for overhauling America's politics, society, and economy based on Pope Leo XIII's Rerum Novarum and a variety of American influences. The site explores the Bishops' Program, from its origins in the uncertainty of the immediate post-World War One period, to the ideas that informed its author Father John A.Ryan, through its reception by the Catholic community and the broader public upon its release. The Bishops' Program of Social Reconstruction site contains: 1. Thirty-five documents and more than two dozen photographs related to the National Catholic War Council. 2. Background information on the creation of the Bishops' Program. 3. A Chronology of events surrounding the creation of the plan toward placing it in broader historical context. 4. A Further Reading list for deeper exploration of the Program. 5. A History Standards page for teacher who wish to integrate the site documents into the U.S. History curriculum. 6. A So What? section suggesting broader themes and issues the site illuminates. The site is part of the American Catholic History Classroom at the Catholic University Archives and can be found at: http://libraries.cua.edu/achrcua/bishops/1919_wel.html For more information, or to share ideas and curriculum, contact Brian Corbin at the Diocese, 330-744-8451, ext. 320. |