The Case of the Looted Bust
ɬ Law alum Leila Amineddoleh is one of the world’s leading experts on plundered artworks. In 2018, she found herself entrenched in a global art-world mystery.
Moving the Church Forward
For twenty years, ɬ’s Church in the 21st Century Center has worked to revitalize the Catholic tradition.
On January 6, 2002, ɬ Professor Thomas Groome was among the millions of Catholics around the world to read the shocking results of a Boston Globe investigation that exposed a decades-long pattern of sexual abuse within the Church, and efforts by the Archdiocese of Boston to cover it up. Not long after, Groome was one of about twenty-five people called into an emergency meeting by ɬ President William P. Leahy, SJ, to discuss the University’s response to the unfolding crisis. Everyone in attendance was in agreement: ɬ could not stay silent. Instead, Groome recalled, “we decided to face it head-on.”
The result was the Church in the 21st Century Center, which recently celebrated its twentieth anniversary. Initially launched as a two-year program, C21’s mission was to serve as a catalyst for the renewal of the Catholic Church by publishing papers and hosting lectures and conferences exploring three main areas: roles and relationships within the Church, sexuality in the Catholic tradition, and handing on the faith to the next generation. (The Catholic intellectual tradition was later added as a fourth area of focus.) No topic was off-limits. In the Center’s first year, speakers at C21-sponsored events discussed Catholic attitudes toward homosexuality and debated the role of women in the Church. The Center even invited the Globe reporters who uncovered the abuse scandal to appear on a panel.
“I remember being so proud because we were the first Catholic university to step into the crisis and start doing the work, convening people, and having lots of hard conversations,” said Karen Kiefer ’82, who joined the C21 staff in 2008 and now serves as the organization’s director.
Early on, C21 directors took efforts to engage young people in the Center’s programming. For instance, in 2005, Director Tim Muldoon ’92 launched Agape Latte, a monthly storytelling series in which speakers from the ɬ community shared their faith journeys with students over coffee. Now entirely student-led, Agape Latte remains one of the Center’s most popular offerings and has inspired similar programs in more than 150 schools and parishes around the world. In 2012, C21 expanded the concept into a seven-day celebration of faith on campus, known as Espresso Your Faith Week, featuring outdoor activities like “Cornhole with the Jesuits” as well as panel discussions and a candlelight mass.
C21’s audience has always extended beyond the ɬ campus (its twice-yearly magazine C21 Resources has a mailing list of 180,000), but the coronavirus pandemic unexpectedly broadened its reach. In 2020, with the world under quarantine, Kiefer’s team created downloadable guides that allowed people to mimic the Center’s popular Faith Feeds program—which brings local parishioners together for a meal and conversation—from the safety of home. “It just took off and suddenly people were downloading hundreds of thousands of these guides,” Kiefer recalled. “It taught us that there’s a real case for intimate conversation over Zoom.”
Since then, C21 has launched Pray It Forward, a fifteen-minute prayer session that attracts more than six hundred people via Zoom every Wednesday, and Breakfast with God, a weekly online faith program for children. It also continues its work to address the Church’s ongoing struggle to attract young people: Last year, C21’s Student Voices Project surveyed thousands of college students nationwide about their hopes for the Catholic Church, and shared the results with Pope Francis. The project, which included input from more than 550 ɬ students, was the perfect example of C21’s modern-day approach to its twenty-year-old mission, Kiefer said. “We try to look at the biggest challenges the Church is facing,” she said, “and meet them not just with conversations, programs, and publications but also with new ideas and innovations. Then we give it all back to the Church.”
As it enters its third decade, C21 plans to keep asking the big and challenging questions related to the Church, and to launch even more new initiatives that encourage young adults to connect with their local parishes. “As long as questions prevail, there’s still a need for the Church in the 21st Century,” said Groome. “Our work is far from finished.”