Like all confessions, prisoner confessions can only be heard by a priest
Saint John Vianney, the patron saint of priests, heard lots and lots of confessions. Confession is the Catholic sacrament by which the confessing person's sins are forgiven him by God. So Saint John Vianney helped people be forgiven by hearing their confessions.
Yes. I heard in TV that prisoners were escaped when the prison was destroyed by earthquake.
Yes, most Orders have international seminaries in Rome for the training of their priests from all over the world.
In most countries priests are and have to behave as every other citizen. However may legal jurisdiction's allow that what is said to a priest as part of a formal confessional meeting is sacrosanct.
Yes-It's called Lurigancho and because there are too many prisoners versus guards, they have to elect prisoners that run the show. The conditions are terrible.
I have heard of cases were prisoners get married, it probably also depends on the prisoners behavior on weather or not privlages of that high standard would be permitted
Not the English!! Do not believe them if they say they did. The just are full of themselves. It was probably created somewhere in Africa. I heard a story that prisoners in a prison in south Africa they created because they were bored.
29 prisoners tried. it is said 0 made it..
From what I have heard from a person very knowledgeable on the American Civil War, Grant wanted to exchange prisoners because he knew that Union prisoners were dying in Confederate POW camps, but he also knew that it would drag the war out longer. The Confederacy, short of personnel, would have thousands of released prisoners with which to fight the Union again. Despite his personal views, Grant decided that he could not allow a prisoner exchange.
They came from Europe in the 1500sPortugal
Yes. The fences were so lethal that they could be seen vibrating and were heard "howling." Some of the prisoners committed suicide by throwing themselves upon the fences. http://isurvived.org/AUSCHWITZ_TheCamp.html
The Catholic Church has always served people in the same way: by bringing God to the people in the sacraments, and by bringing the people to God. They baptized them, confirmed them, heard their confessions, gave them Holy Communion, married them, and buried them.