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Ministry of Care and Companionship

Ministry of Care and Companionship Resources

In the 2016 Easter season, Archbishop Smith of the Archdiocese of Edmonton (and native of Nova Scotia) will be hosting a series of presentations on the subject of physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia. Five sessions will be held at five different parishes in the Edmonton area. Each dealing with a different aspect of this important topic. They will include prayer, personal witness, teaching from the Archbishop, and time for questions and answers.

The inaugural Archbishop James M. Hayes Symposium will happen May 9, 10, and 11, 2016 and is being hosted by the Atlantic School of Theology (AST). The theme of the symposium is: Living Through Death: Dying, Death and Bereavement.

The Symposium is a learning opportunity for the ongoing professional development of health care providers, spiritual care practitioners, and those interested in broadening their understanding of dying, death and bereavement in our changing world.

Following the release on February 25, 2016, of the report Medical Assistance in Dying: A Patient-Centred Approach, by the Special Joint Committee of the Government of Canada on Physician-Assisted Dying, several declarations and reactions have been published. They include:

February 26, 2016

To the Catholic Faithful of the Archdiocese of Halifax-Yarmouth

Dear Friends,

On February 25th, 2016, the joint committee of the Government of Canada released its report entitled: Medical Assistance in Dying: A Patient-Centered Approach. It is with great sadness and disappointment that I write this pastoral note to express the inadequacy and unacceptability of these recommendations to the Canadian Government as it prepares itself to pass legislation on the matter of assisted suicide.

On Thursday, February 25, the special joint parliamentary committee on physician- assisted dying released their report, “Medical Assistance in Dying: A Patient- Centred Approach”. The 21 recommendations published in the report have stirred much debate in this already divided subject. The Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB) added their unified voice to this current conversation and released an official statement on Friday, February 26. Our own Archbishop Anthony Mancini has expressed his sadness and disappointment regarding the report in a pastoral note to the faithful of Halifax-Yarmouth. Read his full message on the Archdiocesan website under Letters to Faithful. Click here.


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Prayer

Samples of prayers for specific moments, as well as contact info for a great variety of resources.

Services & Outreach

Descriptions and contact information for the services that are available throughout the archdiocese.

Resources

Contact info for information and materials to meet the great many needs, interests and circumstances.