Patricia Lefevere has reported for National Catholic Reporter from six continents since 1975. More specifically she has filed stories from 22 nations and has had bylines datelined in 24 states during her four decades of writing for NCR.

A business and finance reporter in Hong Kong, Brussels and Antwerpen, Belgium, she switched to religion after reporting on the work of the World Council of Churches in Geneva, Switzerland in 1976 as it and other religious organizations sought to deal with the huge resettlement issues of a quarter million Indo-Chinese refugees rendered homeless by the Vietnam War. Lefevere returned to the United States in 1983 following 16 years of living, studying and writing in Britain, Hong Kong, Belgium and Australia.

Among her NCR articles to win first place in news reporting by the Catholic Press Association was her interview with death row prisoner Thomas Andy Barefoot in Huntsville, Texas on the eve of his execution in 1984. She also won an award for her cover story on the attack and destruction of the World Trade Center in New York on 9/11 and honorable mention citations for her online work in recent years.

Lefevere reported from the Vatican in 1995, 1996 and 1997 during brief periods in Rome. She has frequently covered top United Nations conferences for NCR including the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in June 1992, the Social Development Summit in Copenhagen, Denmark in 1995 and the International Women's Summit in Beijing, China in 1995. She has reported from the UN in Geneva on refugees, human rights and global security issues and was a correspondent at the European Community in Brussels for several years.

Lefevere, who has taught creative writing at colleges and universities, holds a bachelor's degree in journalism from Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and a master's in drama from the University of Essex in Colchester, England. Since 1996, she has made her home and writing headquarters on the Left Bank of the Hudson in Englewood, New Jersey.

Show full bio ↓
Perspective

Thank you, Queen Elizabeth II, for helping me find my vocation

Perspective: From June 2-5, Britons will enjoy a four-day extravaganza marking Queen Elizabeth's 70 years as sovereign — the longest reign by a monarch in British history. I for one will be watching in a spirit of thanksgiving.

Remembering Desmond Tutu, a fearless truth-teller who preached nonviolence and forgiveness

During the 1983 World Council of Churches' Sixth World Assembly, Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu said that during interrogations and while under house arrest, "I have been physically buoyed by your prayers." 

Pueri Cantores youth choirs worldwide make joyful noise unto the Lord

A French priest started Pueri Cantores during World War I. More than 70,000 young singers — including members of the American Federation Pueri Cantores — now participate in the youth choral program organizers hope instills respect for liturgical music.

Hans Küng, celebrated and controversial Swiss theologian, has died

Hans Küng died April 6 at his home in Tübingen, Germany, at age 93. Few men throughout Christendom have had as much to say or had their work seen by as many Christians as the Swiss theologian and Catholic priest.

Pages