Jump to content

Charitable activities of the Knights of Columbus

From Wiki Knights Errant Life
Revision as of 09:47, 6 October 2025 by WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{broader|Knights of Columbus}} {| class="wikitable" style="float: right; margin-left:1em" |- !style="background:#efefef; font-size:smaller"| '''Fraternal year''' !style="background:#efefef; font-size:smaller"| '''Money donated''' !style="background:#efefef; font-size:smaller"| '''Volunteer hours''' |- |2024{{r|arnold}} |$190 million |47 million |- |- |2023{{r|PJS}} |$185 million |49 million |- |2022<ref name=top/> |$154 million |47+ million |- |2019<ref name="jean" /> |...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Template:Broader

Fraternal year Money donated Volunteer hours
2024Template:R $190 million 47 million
2023Template:R $185 million 49 million
2022[1] $154 million 47+ million
2019[2] $185 million 76 million
2015[3] $175+ million 73.5+ million
2013Template:R $167.5+ million 70+ million
1982[4]Template:Efn $41.7 million 10.4 million

The charitable activities of the Knights of Columbus include the time and money which are donated to charitable causes by the Supreme, state, and local councils of the Order of the Knights of Columbus. Charity is the foremost principle of the Knights of Columbus. At its 2019 convention, the supreme knight reported the Knights had donated $185 million and 76 million volunteer hours to charitable projects the previous year.[2]

United in Charity, a general, unrestricted endowment fund, was introduced at the 2004 Supreme Council meeting to support and ensure the overall long-term charitable and philanthropic goals of the order. The fund is wholly managed, maintained, and operated by Knights of Columbus Charities, Inc., a 501(c)(8) charitable organization.[5] Before United in Charity was formed, all requests for funds were met with the general funds of the order or in combination with specific appeals.[6]

The reach and ability to give large sums of money has caused some to worry that it can influence the ecclesiology and governance of the church itself.[3]

Employment

At its 1897 convention, Supreme Knight John J. Phelan spoke of the need to assist fellow knights who were in distress as a result of the economic depression in the United States. This led to the establishment of charitable funds within local councils.Template:Sfn During the early 20th century, local councils often functioned as agencies for social welfare to support Catholics.Template:Sfn Councils occasionally established unemployment bureaus to find jobs for Catholics (including non-members).Template:Sfn

Herbert Hoover appointed Supreme Knight Martin Carmody to the President's Organization for Unemployment Relief.

When Supreme Knight Martin Carmody assumed office in 1927, on the eve of the Great Depression in the United States, he urged knights to cherish the virtue of charity.Template:Sfn When President Herbert Hoover established the President's Organization for Unemployment Relief in 1931, Carmody wrote to him pledging the services of the Order.Template:Sfn Carmody had already encouraged the 2,600 councils to have "strong and active employment committees."Template:Sfn Some, such as the 20 councils in Saint Louis, joined together to establish full-time employment agencies throughout the 1920s.Template:Sfn

The Order also established a Bureau of Employment at their headquarters in New Haven to coordinate efforts among councils.Template:Sfn Peter Collins, who ran the effort for returning servicemen after World War I, ran the new Bureau.Template:Sfn By the end of July 1931, a total a 43,128 unemployed people had been placed into jobs.Template:Sfn In less than two years, the Order would provide more than 100,000 jobs.[7] In October of that year, Hoover appointed Carmody to the Organization.Template:Sfn

People with disabilities

The Knights have a tradition of supporting those with physical and developmental disabilities. Charles P. Greco was largely responsible for engagement of the Order in this area.Template:Sfn One of the largest recipients has been the Special Olympics.[8] The Order's support goes back to the first games in 1968.[8]

Disaster relief

Giving to those in need of natural disasters dates back to the earliest days of the Order. After a flood in Kansas in 1903, the Order raised US$5,000 to be distributed to parishes and local councils, and it collected over US$100,000 after the 1906 San Francisco earthquake.Template:Sfn In 1927, the order gave US$50,000 for flood relief.Template:Sfn

The Knights of Columbus also gave significant charitable contributions to the people of Haiti in the aftermath of the earthquake in 2010. The order also donated 1,000 wheelchairs to the people of Haiti in partnership with the Global Wheelchair Mission.[9] The Knights also partnered with Project Medishare for an initiative entitled, "Healing Haiti's Children." The initiative, backed by a more than US$2.5 million commitment from the Knights of Columbus provided free prosthetic limbs and a minimum of two years of rehab to every child.[8][10]

In 2015, the order donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to victims of typhoons and other natural disasters.[3]

Housing

In 1967, the Massachusetts State Council voted to establish a non-profit corporation to construct affordable housing.Template:Sfn The Boston Redevelopment Authority selected the Knights to develop a parcel, but the Supreme Council did not like the idea.Template:Sfn The Massachusetts State Council constructed Christopher Columbus Waterfront Park in Boston's North End instead.Template:Sfn

The Order donates money and volunteer hours to Habitat for Humanity.[8]

Coats for Kids

In 2009, the Order began giving winter jackets to needy children through its Coats for Kids program.Template:R As of 2023, they had donated more than 1 million coats.Template:R Baseball pitcher Ty Blach supports the program and participated along with Patrick Kelly at a ceremony in Denver, Colorado to mark the 1 millionth donation; in this ceremony, they also made $10,000 donations to five local Catholic schools.Template:R

Health initiatives

The Order set up its first national blood drive in 1938.[8]Template:Sfn

The Knights believe that showing pregnant women ultrasound images of their fetuses will make them less likely to go through with an abortion; by 2019, they had donated over 1,000 machines to centers throughout the United States and Canada.[11]

Following the United States Supreme Court decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, Supreme Knight Patrick Kelly called on the order to increase their support for women facing unplanned and crisis pregnancies with the Aid and Support After Pregnancy (ASAP) initiative.[1] Whenever a local council donates to a pregnancy center or maternity home, the Supreme Council will make a matching donation of 20%.[1] They set an initial goal of $5 million for the first year of the program.[1]

Refugees

Middle East

Between 2014 and 2018, the Knights gave more than $20 million to provide food, shelter, clothing, and medical care to persecuted Christians and other religious minorities in the Middle East.[12][13][14][3]

At a Solidarity Dinner for the Washington-based group In Defense of Christians, Vice President Mike Pence singled out the order for their "extraordinary work caring for the persecuted around the world."[15] Between 2014 and 2017, the Knights of Columbus Christian Refugee Relief Fund gave over $17 million for humanitarian relief work in the area.[15] That includes $2 million to rebuild the primarily Christian town of Karamles in Iraq.[15]

At the end of 2017, the Knights and the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops recognized a "Week of Awareness" for persecuted Christians.[15] In 2018, a national awareness campaign was launched by the Knights to bring greater public awareness to the plight of Christians in the Middle East.[12] In 2017, the Knights praised the decision of the US government to provide direct US aid to persecuted Christians in the Middle East who were suffering at the hands of the Islamic State.[15] They also led the effort to get the United States Department of State to declare the atrocities a genocide.[16]

Latin Americans

The Knights donated $250,000 in 2018 to help refugees crossing over the Mexico–United States border who were seeking asylum in the United States.[17] At the Supreme Convention, Anderson announced that they were prepared to expand the program to aid those in refugee camps in every state along the border.[17]

Ukraine

In the aftermath of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the 2,000 Knights of Columbus in the country worked to help those impacted.[18] Within days of the invasion, leaders of the Knights met with Mieczysław Mokrzycki, the Latin-rite archbishop of Lviv, and Sviatoslav Shevchuk, the Major Archbishop of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, and created the Anti-Crisis Committee to better coordinate relief efforts.[18] They began by providing food and clothing to those at train and bus stations in Lviv who were fleeing into Poland.[18] They then began organizing busses to take people the Polish border.[18]

Once in Poland, knights in that country established a Mercy Center to welcome refugees and provide additional aid.[18] In the first three months of the war, the Knights in Poland helped more than 300,000 people, or 10% of those who fled to that country.[18] Polish knights also organized relief boxes of supplies, donated by knights from around the world, to ship back into Ukraine to help those who remained.[18] Convoys of supplies cross the border into war zones once or twice a week.[18]

Aid is provided according to need and without regard to the religion of the recipients.[18] The name of the Knights work in Ukraine is the Ukraine Solidarity Fund, which had raised $20 million as of early 2023.[19] By the end of 2023, the Order had served over 1.4 million Ukrainians.Template:R More than 7.3 million pounds of humanitarian supplies had been donated, along with 250,000 care packages and 400 wheelchairs.Template:R

State Deputy Youriy Maletskiy was awarded the St. Michael Award at the 2022 Supreme Convention for the work he had done and was doing to help civilian refugees and others in the country.[18] The award is given to those who provide exemplary service to the Order and the Church.[18] The Knights released a film, "In Solidarity with Ukraine", in February 2023. The 60-minute documentary details the humanitarian crisis in Ukraine primarily through interviews with many Ukrainians.Template:R

In December 2023, Russia banned the Knights of Columbus, along with the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church and other Catholic organizations in occupied areas of Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia region.Template:R Russia claimed the Knights were "associated with the intelligence services of the United States and the Vatican."Template:R

Vatican initiatives

A photograph of the façade of St. Peter's Basilica.
The order contributed towards the renovation of the façade of St. Peter's Basilica.[20]

In 1965, the Knights donated the land in Rome for the building of the Paul VI Audience Hall.Template:Sfn The Vicarius Christi Fund has an endowment of US$20 million. Since its establishment in 1981, the fund has generated over $57 million for the Pope's personal charities.[21] The funds are invested in loans to churches.Template:Sfn

The Vox Clara Committee received $100,000 in support of its efforts to translate liturgical texts.[3]

Bishops' conferences and church facilities

The Knights give to individual churches and diocese, but is also a major donor to the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.[3]Template:Sfn They have spent more than $1.4 million between 2010 and 2014 to provide workshops for the bishops coordinated by the National Catholic Bioethics Center.[3] Since 1977, the order has provided funding to the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops.Template:Sfn

In 1979, a US$500,000 memorial fund was set up to support the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington.Template:Sfn The Order also operates the Saint John Paul II National Shrine.[3] A further $20 million went to church facilities and $7.4 million to Catholic schools from state and local councils.[8]

Education initiatives

Catholic University of America

Template:Main

The Knights of Columbus presented a check to Catholic University of America on the steps of the university's McMahon Hall in 1904 to establish a Chair of American History

In the early years of the Order, educational activities were limited to things like establishing scholarships to local institutions, placing books in libraries, holding public lectures, and similar activities.Template:Sfn In 1904, in the first national response to a call from the American Church, the Order presented a check for over $50,000 to The Catholic University of America to establish a chair of American history.[22]Template:Sfn[23] In the years following this initial gift, an additional $500,000 was raised to establish 50 scholarships at the university.Template:Sfn Originally there was to be one fellowship for every $10,000, with preference going to Knights or their families.Template:SfnBy 1922, 146 K. of C. Fellowships had been awarded.Template:Sfn

Post–World War I efforts

Following efforts to support servicemen during World War I, the order established an educational system for returning veterans.Template:Sfn It included evening schools, scholarships, and a correspondence school, all of which were free for men who fought in the war.Template:Sfn The system was run by Mark J. Sweany.Template:Sfn Within four years, over 200,000 men would take courses in one of the order's schools, 400 would receive college scholarships, and over 10,000 would take correspondence courses.Template:Sfn

Year Schools Students
1919–20Template:Sfn 45 31,163
1920-21Template:Sfn 87 79,843
1921-22Template:Sfn 75 67,196
1922-23Template:Sfn

In June 1919, the Knights established a school a school for servicemen at Camp Devens in Massachusetts.Template:Sfn By November, when the government took over and the Knights left military facilities, classes were being taught on 25 army camps and naval bases with 5,884 students.Template:Sfn

The brief experience showed both the need and the desire of servicemen to continue their education, however, and so the Knights became the first organization to establish free evening schools for able-bodied veterans.Template:Sfn Courses were taught in academic, commercial, trade, and technical topics to prepare the ex-servicemen for post-war employment.Template:Sfn The first such school opened in Boston, Massachusetts, on July 7, 1919.Template:Sfn By the end of the year, 31,163 students were taking courses in 45 schools around the country.Template:Sfn An insubstantial number of those students were not veterans, but instead paid tuition to attend.Template:Sfn

Council schools

Year Schools Students
1919–1920Template:Sfn 21 >7,000
1920–1921Template:Sfn 38 19,467
1921–1922Template:Sfn 31 22,735
1922–1923Template:Sfn

The Supreme Council established a committee of education on August 7, 1919, to administer a series of night schools run by councils, and appropriated $50,000 for administrative costs.Template:Sfn Occupational courses were offered to members and the general public for a fee.Template:Sfn Courses were taught not only to improve the students' career prospects, but also to promote patriotism in the hopes that the greater good of the community would also benefit from the knowledge being imparted.Template:Sfn Veterans were allowed to attend these schools at no cost.Template:Sfn

Scholarships

The Knights of Columbus was the first organization to provide college scholarships to veterans returning home from World War I.Template:Sfn The War Activities Committee first announced in August 1919 that 50 scholarships would be awarded, including tuition, fees, books, equipment, and room and board.Template:Sfn Originally intending to limit the number of scholarships to 100, the Committee instead decided to award a scholarship to every man who was accepted to one of several designated schools by September 30, 1919.Template:Sfn There were 2,291 applicants, and 1,002 were deemed eligible.Template:Sfn Of those, 440 were deemed eligible for entrance by the colleges and universities, and 403 scholarships were awarded.Template:Sfn

Correspondence courses

A correspondence school was established by the Knights in February 1922 to serve veterans in areas outside of cities.Template:Sfn By the end of that year, more than 10,000 students had enrolled from every state in the union.Template:Sfn The goal was to extend to veterans "in the smaller communities and in the rural districts of the advantages of free educational opportunities through correspondence courses."Template:Sfn Students were permitted to take one course at a time.Template:Sfn

The courses were established for the benefit of those men and women who had served in the militaries of the United States or her allies during World War I, but not civilians. Template:Sfn The order partnered with several universities to prepare the courses, and several provided materials at low or no cost.Template:Sfn

Students paid their own postage, and put down refundable deposits on some books, but there were no other costs for most courses.Template:Sfn When equipment was needed, students could either furnish their own or purchase it at "the lowest possible price" from the Knights' Educational Bureau.Template:Sfn Students could take up to one year to complete the courses.Template:Sfn

Seminarians

In 2012, $1.8 million was given by state and local councils to seminaries, with an additional $5.9 million in direct assistance to seminarians.[8] In 2017, more than $3.8 million was given to 6,348 seminarians and postulants.[12] The order also has eleven separate funds totaling $18 million to assist men and women who are discerning religious vocations pay tuition and other expenses.[24]

Other efforts

After World War II, the order established scholarships for children on Knights who were killed or wounded in war.Template:Sfn In 1970 this scholarship was extended to the children of police officers.Template:Sfn

The order funded a message from the Pope to the delegates of the 1979 National Catholic Education Association convention in which the pontiff stressed the importance of Catholic education.Template:Sfn The same year, the Supreme Board voted to fund the Conference's Advisory Committee on Public Policy and Catholic Schools.Template:Sfn

In 1979, the Supreme Board voted to fund the Conference's Advisory Committee on Public Policy and Catholic Schools.Template:Sfn In 1980, each member in the United States and Canada was assessed $1.00 to raise $1 million for the newly established Father Michael J. McGivney Memorial Fund for New Initiatives in Catholic Education.Template:Sfn The fund was designed to support the National Catholic Education Association's research efforts.Template:Sfn The association expressed their appreciation for this and other efforts to promote Catholic education by awarding the order the C. ALbert Koob Merit Award in 1981.Template:Sfn

Catholic media

The Knights paid for the funeral of Pope Paul VI to be televised around the world.

Since the 1960s, the Knights' Satellite Uplink Program has provided funding to broadcast a number of papal events, including the annual Easter and Christmas Masses, as well as the World Day of Peace in Assisi, World Youth Days, the opening of the Holy Door at St. Peter's Basilica for the Millennial Jubilee, Pope John Paul II's visit to Nazareth, and several other events.[3][25]Template:Sfn In missionary territories the order also pays for the satellite downlink.[3][25]Template:Sfn

The Satellite Uplink project was originally planned to telecast three papal events each year. However, the program expanded when, upon the death of Pope Paul VI, Bishop Andrew-Maria Deskur, president of the Pontifical Commission for Social Communications, telegrammed Supreme Knight Dechant asking if the order would pay to broadcast the funeral and following conclave and investiture of the next pope.Template:Sfn The same request was made shortly thereafter following the death of Pope John Paul I.Template:Sfn It is estimated that each telecast was seen by more than 800 million people.Template:Sfn

In recent years a contribution of $100,000 was made to support the Holy See's strategic communications office.[3] It also purchased "a mobile unit with recording and transmitting equipment to enable Vatican television to broadcast in high definition."[3]

In 1977, Deskur asked the order for funding for two additional projects, the Vatican Film Library and Radio Veritas, both of which were approved.Template:Sfn The film library was designed to collect all the known video footage of popes for use by journalists, scholars, and others.Template:Sfn This resulted in the creation of the Knights of Columbus Vatican Film Library at Saint Louis University.Template:Sfn

Following Pope John Paul II's trip to Mexico in 1978, the Knights produced an English-language video documenting the visit.Template:Sfn The following year the pontiff returned to Poland. Bishop Paul Marcinkus, President of the Institute for the Works of Religion, later told the order that raw footage of the trip existed, but there were no funds available to edit it into a usable format.Template:Sfn The Knights provided the money, and the videos were shown on Polish television and in movie theaters.Template:Sfn During his visit to the United States in October of the same year, the order once again provided funding to video record it at the request of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops.Template:Sfn

The order donated one of two new radio transmitters to the Vatican in 1966; the other was donated by Cardinal Francis Spellman.Template:Sfn In 1977, Bishop Andrew-Maria Deskur, president of the Pontifical Commission for Social Communications, requested funding for Radio Veritas, a program to broadcast religious programming to the one-quarter of the world's population living behind the Bamboo Curtain in atheistic communist countries.Template:Sfn

The Knights have continued to support the Vatican's news operation for decades.[3]

The Knights are major sponsors of the Eternal Word Television Network, the Association for Catholic Information, the Catholic News Agency, and Crux.[3] According to John L. Allen Jr., CruxTemplate:'s editor, while the Knights sponsor a major portion of their budget, the order has no control over content.[3]

Military and veterans

Each year, the Knights bring veterans to Lourdes, France, as part of the International Military Pilgrimage to Our Lady's Shrine.[12] In 2017, the order brought over 200 veterans through their Warriors to Lourdes program.[12]

As part of the order's efforts to support seminarians, they partner with the Archdiocese for the Military Services to educate priests who will serve as military chaplains.[12] The Knights have given over $2 million to the effort since its inception.[12]

World War I

A Knights of Columbus poster from WWI

After the United States entered World War I, Supreme Knight James A. Flaherty proposed to U.S. President Woodrow Wilson that the Order establish soldiers' welfare centers in the U.S. and abroad. The organization already had experience, having provided similar services to troops encamped on the Mexican border during Pershing's expedition of 1916.[26] Staff and chaplains were sent to every Army camp and cantonment.Template:Sfn

With the slogan "Everyone Welcome, Everything Free," the "huts" became recreation/service centers for doughboys regardless of race or religion.Template:Sfn[27] They were staffed by "secretaries," commonly referred to as "Caseys" (for K of C) who were generally men above the age of military service. The centers provided basic amenities not readily available, such as stationery, hot baths, and religious services.[28] One well-known "Casey" was major league baseball player Johnny Evers of ""Tinker-to-Evers-to-Chance," who traveled to France as a member of the Knights of Columbus to organize baseball games for the troops.[29] A total of 260 buildings were erected and 1,134 secretaries, of which 1,075 were overseas, staffed them.Template:Sfn In Europe, headquarters were established in London and Paris.Template:Sfn The order continued this work until November 1919, at which point the effort was taken over by the federal government.Template:Sfn

To pay for these huts and their staff, the order instituted a per capita tax on the membership to raise $1 million.Template:Sfn Local councils undertook their own fundraising drives which resulted in an additional $14 million to support the effort.Template:Sfn In 1918, just before the war ended, the Knights and other organizations undertook another effort to raise funds to support the welfare of the men fighting abroad.Template:Sfn The amount apportioned to the order and the National Catholic War Council totaled $30 million which, when combined with earlier efforts, funded efforts to support troops both in the United States and overseas.Template:Sfn After the war, the Knights became involved in education, occupational training, and employment programs for the returning troops.[26]Template:Sfn

World War II

Less than two weeks after the outbreak of World War II, on September 13, 1939, Canadian Supreme Director Claude Brown wired each Canadian state deputy to inform them of his plans to establish a welfare program comparable to the "huts" sponsored by the order during World War I.Template:Sfn The Canadian government accepted his proposal by the end of October, and formed a unified organization including the Knights, the YMCA, the Salvation Army, and the Canadian Legion.Template:Sfn Between December 1939 and April 1940, the Canadian Knights raised almost $230,000, "an extraordinary amount considering the fact that there were relatively few Knights in Canada."Template:Sfn

In large cities, recreation centers were established, and morale programs were run in a number of training camps.Template:Sfn Hostels were established for servicemen on furloughs first in Canada, then England, and eventually across Europe.Template:Sfn Sporting events were organized, musical and comedy shows were produced, and even academic courses and a library were provided.Template:Sfn

Recognizing the danger the volunteers who staffed these camps were undertaking, the Canadian government gave them a stipend equal to that of a captain in the Canadian Army and made them eligible for retirement and disability pay.Template:Sfn F. O'Neil, who ran the Knights' recreation center in Hong Kong, was captured by the Japanese and was made a prisoner of war.Template:Sfn Six volunteers, including Brown, died during the war.Template:Sfn

Canadian Knights, and not the government, provided supplies for Catholic chaplains.Template:Sfn

Armed with the Faith

Since 2004, the Knights have produced Armed with the Faith, a "virtually indestructible, waterproof, flip-top prayer [book], designed for use in the most rugged conditions, including hard battle."[30] The books include prayers, information about the sacraments and holy days of obligation, and a primer on just war theory.[30] It also includes reference material on the Church's teachings on the works of mercy and virtues.[30] It closes with a number of classic hymns, a list of patron saints for the military, and the new Mass responses adopted in the United States in 2011.[30]

Growth and impact

There is, according to the National Catholic Reporter "hardly a corner of the Catholic world where the resources of this international force have not left an impression."[3] The Order has donated funds to such varied causes as restoring Roman antiquities, purchasing the Pope John Paul II Cultural Center, and providing communications equipment to the Vatican to spread their message around the globe, in addition to numerous local charities and parishes.[3]

This has allowed the Knights and its high-ranking officers to "become powerful and influential in ways unimaginable [at the Order's founding] in 1882 ... and no other lay group can match the Knights' ability to leave its mark on the church."[3] According to Massimo Faggioli, the scope of the Knights' of philanthropy of can "create influence through money, especially in important places like Rome or Washington, D.C."[3] The church has given honors and appointments to high ranking officials of the Knights, making their voices more prominent than other, poorer, Catholic organizations.[3]

Notes

Template:Notelist

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named top
  2. 2.0 2.1 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named jean
  3. 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 3.16 3.17 3.18 3.19 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named financial
  4. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named at100
  5. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named uic
  6. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named united
  7. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named columbia
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Annual2013
  9. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named haiti
  10. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named medishare
  11. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named CNA_1
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 12.5 12.6 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named annual18
  13. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named stand
  14. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named ceo
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 15.4 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named praises
  16. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named aid
  17. 17.0 17.1 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named garcia
  18. 18.00 18.01 18.02 18.03 18.04 18.05 18.06 18.07 18.08 18.09 18.10 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named telli
  19. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named usf
  20. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Rome
  21. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named proceeds
  22. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Pike
  23. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Catholic DC
  24. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named vocations
  25. 25.0 25.1 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named love
  26. 26.0 26.1 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Kauffman
  27. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named 5yQNs
  28. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named appel
  29. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named evers
  30. 30.0 30.1 30.2 30.3 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named armed


Bibliography