WOMEN IN CHURCH AND SOCIETY
Author: Kathryn Hauwa Hoomkwap | Date:
I consider it a great honour and privilege that His Holiness, Pope John Paul II, has invited me to speak on behalf of the millions of women in Africa on the theme: Women in Church and Society in Africa to this Special Assembly for Africa
IN SEARCH OF HUMAN GLOBALIZATION
Author: Kathryn Hoomkwap -presented UNIV2001 Rome | Date: 10th April 2001
The concept of globalization is not exactly as new as it appears. There has always been in human beings a desire to move to reach out towards the other. At different times in history people have traveled across borders for numerous reasons not excluding trade. However, the present age is witnessing an overwhelming form of globalization in the economic and business spheres.
Excerpt from: A/S-23/1 8
Author: Kathryn Hauwa Hoomkwap on behalf of the Holy See | Date: Friday, 9 June 2000
The Holy See delegation has participated actively in the negotiations leading to this special session of the General Assembly, a session which has raised issues of critical importance to the lives of millions of women worldwide, and which has been evaluating the progress that has been made since the Fourth World Conference on Women.
GRATITUDE FROM KATHRYN's HEART
Author: Kathryn Hauwa Hoomkwap | Date:
This is indeed the Lord's doing and it's marvelous in our eyes. I give praise and thanks to God for the wonder of my being and for sustaining me from the moment of my conception to this day....
POVERTY AND THE FAMILY IN THE THIRD WORLD
Author: Kathryn Hauwa Hoomkwap | Date: October 11-13, 2000
The family remains the basic unit of society in the world today. In its modern meaning, the family is that social unit comprising a man, his wife and their children. In most sub-Saharan African countries, the extended family, which is a more inclusive definition of the family, includes uncles, aunts, cousins, grandparents and other distant relations. This paper has deliberately chosen to make the family its center-piece for a number of reasons.
POVERTY AND THE FAMILY IN THE THIRD WORLD
The family remains the basic unit of society in the world today. In its modern meaning, the family is that social unit comprising a man, his wife and their children. In most sub-Saharan African countries, the extended family, which is a more inclusive definition of the family, includes uncles, aunts, cousins, grandparents and other distant relations. This paper has deliberately chosen to make the family its center-piece for a number of reasons.
Excerpt from: A/S-23/1 8
The Holy See delegation has participated actively in the negotiations leading to this special session of the General Assembly, a session which has raised issues of critical importance to the lives of millions of women worldwide, and which has been evaluating the progress that has been made since the Fourth World Conference on Women.



