Wednesday, May 27, 2026

RNS Morning Report - 🧵 After refugee aid cuts, faith groups help Afghan women connect through sewing

RNS Morning Report Desktop
After refugee aid cuts, faith groups help Afghan women connect through sewing
In Durham, North Carolina, the Trump administration’s sweeping cuts to refugee admissions and support has meant a local mutual aid organization no longer had resources to run a sewing circle for Afghan women whose families had recently been resettled. For the women involved, the program was about more than sewing — it helped them feel less isolated.
Now, two Durham-based congregations have stepped in to fill the gap. The Eno River Unitarian Universalist Fellowship and Judea Reform Congregation raised money and sought volunteers to offer these new immigrants a class to improve their sewing skills, meet fellow Afghans and pick up some English skills. They are among religious congregations around the country now compensating for lack of government support.
Read RNS national reporter Yonat Shimron’s story from the class below.

Top Stories

After refugee aid cuts, faith groups help Afghan women connect through sewing

After refugee aid cuts, faith groups help Afghan women connect through sewing

DURHAM, N.C. (RNS) — The Trump administration’s vast cuts to refugee services have led some religious congregations to fill in gaps.
After refugee aid cuts, faith groups help Afghan women connect through sewing

AI has a bias toward Catholicism, researchers say

(RNS) — ‘As AI amplifies and compounds religious bias at scale, more users may misunderstand the contribution faith and belief can make to moral and ethical AI grounding,’ said Elder Gerrit W. Gong, one of the 12 apostles in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, in a speech.
After refugee aid cuts, faith groups help Afghan women connect through sewing

What we know and don’t know about the emerging deal to end the Iran war

CAIRO (AP) — It is not clear when or how the deal might be finalized and when its various parts will take effect. Details come from two regional officials and a U.S. official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive negotiations.
After refugee aid cuts, faith groups help Afghan women connect through sewing

Muslims begin the annual Hajj in sweltering heat against a backdrop of war concerns

MECCA, Saudi Arabia (AP) — The faithful have been pouring into the country for the Hajj against the backdrop of a tenuous ceasefire in the Iran war and related regional tensions and uncertainty.

Opinion

After refugee aid cuts, faith groups help Afghan women connect through sewing

The anti-Muslim rhetoric that inspired teen gunmen has been increasing for years

(RNS) — Islamophobia rose sharply from 2022 to 2025, according to the Institute of Social Policy and Understanding’s Islamophobia Index, which has tracked anti-Muslim rhetoric since 2016.
After refugee aid cuts, faith groups help Afghan women connect through sewing

What Jefferson and Madison would have thought about ‘rededicating’ the US to God

(The Conversation) — The ‘Rededicate 250’ rally raised questions about separation of church and state. Jefferson and Madison’s many letters to each other shed light on that much-debated principle.

ICYMI

After refugee aid cuts, faith groups help Afghan women connect through sewing

Eli Lilly sues church leaders for alleged $200 million ‘sham’ drug program

(RNS) — A lawsuit filed by the pharmaceutical giant alleges that Bishop Jerry Maynard Sr. and Elder Readus C. Smith III, a national COGIC leader, worked with wholesalers to submit fraudulent drug reimbursement claims.
After refugee aid cuts, faith groups help Afghan women connect through sewing

In his first encyclical, Pope Leo XIV says AI must serve humanity, not the powerful few

VATICAN CITY (RNS) — In ‘Magnifica Humanitas,’ Leo's 83-page manifesto on AI, the pope tackles the social, economic and political challenges associated with artificial intelligence.

Support Our Work

As a nonprofit newsroom that covers all faiths, RNS sits uniquely at the intersection of freedom of the press and freedom of religion. News tips or feedback? Email comments@religionnews.com. Like the Morning Report? Share it with a friend. Forwarded this newsletter? Subscribe here. We rely on reader donations to power our reporting. Donate here. Or send a check to: Religion News Foundation PO Box 1808 Columbia, MO 65205
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Copyright © 2026 Religion News Service, All rights reserved.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

RNS Morning Report - NY City Council passes bill to protect Muslim pilgrims from Hajj scams

RNS Morning Report Desktop

Top Stories

NY City Council passes bill to protect Muslim pilgrims from Hajj scams

NY City Council passes bill to protect Muslim pilgrims from Hajj scams

(RNS) — Some pilgrims save for years to afford the trip, which can cost anywhere between $9,000 and $15,000, and many turn to specialized travel agencies to handle the planning.
NY City Council passes bill to protect Muslim pilgrims from Hajj scams

Eli Lilly sues church leaders for alleged $200 million ‘sham’ drug program

(RNS) — A lawsuit filed by the pharmaceutical giant alleges that Bishop Jerry Maynard Sr. and Elder Readus C. Smith III, a national COGIC leader, worked with wholesalers to submit fraudulent drug reimbursement claims.
NY City Council passes bill to protect Muslim pilgrims from Hajj scams

As Iran war persists, some US Muslims consider risks of Mecca pilgrimage

STERLING HEIGHTS, Mich. (RNS and NPR) — Hajj is performed on the eighth through 13th days of the Islamic month of Dhu'l-Hijjah, or from May 25 to May 30.

Opinion

NY City Council passes bill to protect Muslim pilgrims from Hajj scams

What is an encyclical? Inside Pope Leo’s urgent warning about AI and the ‘culture of power’

(RNS) — Encyclicals have become a way the Catholic Church presents its moral vision to the whole world, especially in the face of evolving developments and challenges that arise from economics and technology.
NY City Council passes bill to protect Muslim pilgrims from Hajj scams

What Memorial Day once meant for us

(RNS) — Few Americans didn't know someone whose life hadn't been claimed by war.
NY City Council passes bill to protect Muslim pilgrims from Hajj scams

I went to Anthropic’s ethics gathering. I left believing wisdom traditions have key role.

(RNS) — At the convening of technologists, theologians and practitioners, the most urgent questions about artificial intelligence turned out to have some of the oldest answers.
NY City Council passes bill to protect Muslim pilgrims from Hajj scams

The growing divide between the Trump administration and the LDS Church

(RNS) — The church's pointed emphasis on charitable giving feels like the politest and most quintessentially Mormon 'F you' ever.

ICYMI

NY City Council passes bill to protect Muslim pilgrims from Hajj scams

In his first encyclical, Pope Leo XIV says AI must serve humanity, not the powerful few

VATICAN CITY (RNS) — In ‘Magnifica Humanitas,’ Leo's 83-page manifesto on AI, the pope tackles the social, economic and political challenges associated with artificial intelligence.
NY City Council passes bill to protect Muslim pilgrims from Hajj scams

Pope Leo calls just war theory ‘outdated’ in new encyclical

(RNS) — 'Today, more than ever, without prejudice to the right to self-defense in the strictest sense, it is important to reaffirm that the 'just war' theory, which has all too often been used to justify any kind of war, is now outdated,' Leo writes in 'Magnifica Humanitas.'

Support Our Work

As a nonprofit newsroom that covers all faiths, RNS sits uniquely at the intersection of freedom of the press and freedom of religion. News tips or feedback? Email comments@religionnews.com. Like the Morning Report? Share it with a friend. Forwarded this newsletter? Subscribe here. We rely on reader donations to power our reporting. Donate here. Or send a check to: Religion News Foundation PO Box 1808 Columbia, MO 65205
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Copyright © 2026 Religion News Service, All rights reserved. 

WCC News: “What kind of world are we hoping to build?” WCC commends "Magnifica Humanitas” to all people

Upon the publication of “Magnifica Humanitas,” Pope Leo XIV’s new encyclical on artificial intelligence and human dignity, World Council of Churches (WCC) central committee moderator Bishop Prof. Dr Heinrich Bedford-Strohm expressed gratitude for the papal social document.
Pope Leo XIV signs encyclical letter "Magnifica humanitas" at the Vatican, May 15, 2026. Photo: Vatican Media
26 May 2026

“Magnifica Humanitas” (Latin for “The Magnificent Humanity”), addresses the rapid technological developments in the age of digitalization, which find their most advanced expression in artificial intelligence. 

“This development holds great opportunities, but also great risks,” said Bedford-Strohm. “Technological development has gained such momentum that the rules ensuring its responsible use have not kept pace.”

This makes a global public discussion about such urgently needed rules all the more important, Bedford-Strohm noted. “One of the goals is to establish effective mechanisms to protect freedom and human dignity against data corporations whose monopoly power is now virtually uncontrollable,” he said. “Especially when it comes to artificial intelligence, the core issue is also the concept of humanity.”

Bedford-Strohm added that it is obvious that the churches, with their rich treasure of anthropological reflection, have something important to say here. “That is why we have been discussing this intensely in the last years within the World Council of Churches,” he said. “I am very grateful that Pope Leo is now giving a strong impulse to this discussion with his new encyclical, which will hopefully have as great an impact on the global public as Pope Francis’s encyclical Laudato Si’ had on the issue of ecology.”

Churches need to raise their voices

WCC general secretary Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay noted that the WCC has long recognised the advancement and benefits of technology and AI in many areas of life but equally cautioned against the challenges it brings to spiritual, moral, and ethical values if not carefully checked and monitored. “Technology must be used to enhance and develop human life and living and not displace human labour, value, and dignity,” he said. “I am especially grateful to Pope Leo XIV for Magnifica Humanitas, which is very relevant and timely in an age of AI expansion.”

Pillay further noted that the theological approach of the encyclical provides a firmly established position as to why churches need to raise their voices of discernment and caution of the risks and consequences that come with AI. 

“It acknowledges God's creation of human beings and the capacity of humans to do good, but it also acknowledges the presence of evil and its tragic consequences on human beings and life in the world,” he said. “The wars, conflicts, senseless killing of thousands of people daily, and the use of technology that assists in such destruction must be called into question.”

When technology is used for good, serving the human good to build family, community, and world, it is in line with God's plan, noted Pillay. “However, in the hands of the powerful and wealthy, it is a tool for self-service and abuse, and of limited good to those who are poor and marginalised,” he said. “Technology without social responsibility is reshaping power relations and impoverishing human relationships.”

Pillay concluded that the encyclical helps us to understand the call to love, grace, and peace. “It poses the question that should always be in our minds, hearts and lips: ‘What kind of world are we trying to build?’ ” he said. “The WCC applauds and commends “Magnifica Humanitas” to all people, not just people of faith, for study, reflection, and action as we seek to build a better world for all people and creation.”

Encyclical Letter “Magnifica Humanitas” of His Holiness Pope Leo XIV on Safeguarding the Human Person in the Time of Artificial Intelligence

Pope Leo’s ‘Magnifica humanitas’: AI must serve humanity not concentrate power (Vatican News)

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The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 356 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa.

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