Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Pakistan: Church attack puts Christians on guard

Vandals have attacked a Catholic church in Karachi, Pakistan, reports UCAnews:

The attack was made on St Joseph Catholic Church on the morning of August 27.

“Wooden ventilators 14 feet high were broken. Marble stones, shattered glass from window panes and pieces of wood were found on the church floor when we opened the doors,” said Father Richard D’Souza, the parish’s priest.

He added that a police complaint had been filed against the perpetrators, whose identities remain unknown.
Pakistani Catholics pray for persecutors during Marian Festival, September, 2009

AsiaNews: Sharia begins to cast its shadow on the new democratic Libya

AsiaNews reports that the draft constitution drawn up by the National Transitional Council enshrines Shariah law at the core of the new government's jurisprudence. This, combined with the presence of Islamists in the rebel movement, raises disquieting questions about the future.


CNS: Introduction of new missal going smoothly in English-speaking nations

Bit by bit, the third edition of the Roman Missal is being introduced in parishes throughout the English-speaking world.

From Canada to southern Africa to New Zealand, Catholics have seen parts of the new missal introduced at various times -- most since January, but some earlier -- so that by the first Sunday of Advent Nov. 27, the transition to a new set of prayers and liturgical music will be as seamless as possible for the faithful.

As the implementation moves forward, the liturgists charged with overseeing the missal's introduction in seven of the 10 English-speaking countries and regions outside of the U.S. making the transition told Catholic News Service that their efforts have eased concerns that the translation was a step back from the Second Vatican Council's vision for liturgy.

[. . .]

In Canada, Father William Burke, director of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops' National Liturgy Office, has found people accepting of the changes -- once the reasoning behind them is explained.

Father Burke has visited 27 Canadian dioceses to explain the changes and said he has found some anxiety and animosity over the new text at each stop. As he reviews the translation and offers the reasoning behind them, he said he has seen the uncertainty wither.

"By and large," he said, I hear people saying, 'What's all the fuss about?' People realize this is not the devastation (of the liturgy) we heard."
Source: Wikipedia

CNS: Men central to Pennsylvania 9/11 events find strength in Catholic faith

Sept. 11, 2001, was a routine Tuesday morning at the Miller Funeral Home in Somerset [Pennsylvania]. Wallace "Wally" Miller, Somerset County coroner, was in his office and his father, Wilbur, who lived with him, was in his customary place on the couch, watching television.

"Come and look at this," he yelled to his son. "A pilot must have had a heart attack and crashed his plane into the World Trade Center. How would you like to be the coroner in New York?" he asked rhetorically.

Miller watched for a bit and retreated to his office. A little later, he received a call from Denny Kwiatkowski, Cambria County coroner, asking him about a plane crash near Shanksville.

[. . .]

"As a coroner, I'm the last man to get to the scene of a death. When I got to Shanksville there were state policemen, firemen, FBI, ATF and emergency personnel already at the site," Miller recalls, "and they all looked to me to orchestrate the disaster recovery."

He says he felt totally unprepared to handle the situation, but with the help of a few friends, along with his Catholic faith, he was able to establish a morgue in Friedens and a family operations center at nearby Seven Springs Resort.

"I really believe my faith allowed me to deal with Flight 93," said Miller, a member of St. Peter Parish in Somerset who became a Catholic in 1996.
Read the rest at this link.


CWN: South Sudan prelate warns tribalism could destroy new nation

Amid reports of hundreds of deaths caused by violence between the Lou Nuer and Murle tribes, South Sudan’s leading prelate has called upon the citizens of the newly independent nation to shun tribalism.

“If we don’t shun tribalism, corruption, killing one another, then that will be the end of our lives,” Archbishop Poulino Lukudu Loro of Juba said on August 28.
Catholic Archbishop Paulino Lukudu Loro (L) and Anglican Archbishop Daniel Deng Bul (R) proudly display their voter ID cards in the run-up to the January 9, 2011 referendum that established South Sudan's independance.

CWN: Cardinal backs indigenous protest against Bolivian highway

Catholic World News reports that Bolivian Cardinal Julio Terrazas is backing an indigenous protest against a new highway proposed by President Evo Morales. The highway, which would cut right through the heart of the Amazonian Indians homeland and destroy thousands of acres of rain forest, is also opposed by environmental groups. 1500 indigenous people are demonstrating against the planned highway by marching 300 miles from the Department of Beni to the capital, La Paz.

President Morales was elected as a champion of the indigenous, and his stance is felt as a betrayal by Adolfo Chavez, leader of the Confederation of Indigenous Peoples of Bolivia, who Al Jazeera quotes as saying: "The government doesn't think about the interests of indigenous people, and it has not done so for a long time. It wants to open another highway that will allow the enslavement of our lands and the planting of hectares of coca."

On its side, the government stresses that the project is necessary for development, improving the transportation system by directly connecting the two major cities of Trinidad and Cochabamba,  and integrating the isolated department of Beni into the national economy. We will build the highway, says Morales, "whether it is wanted or not."

Cardinal Julio Terrazas Sandoval

Rueters: Cuba dissidents ask Church to stop harassment by state

Leaders of the dissident group Ladies in White asked the Catholic Church on Tuesday to intervene with the Cuban government to end what they described as violent acts against them and other human rights activists.

[. . .]

Laura Pollan and Berta Soler told reporters they met with Church officials, but not Church leader Cardinal Jaime Ortega as planned because he was tired after returning from a trip.

"We asked the Catholic Church, which is our mediator, to end the harassment and the beatings of the Ladies in White ... and human rights activists," Soler said after the two emerged from the meeting at the Church's headquarters in Havana.

[. . .]

The Church intervened last year after the Havana group was subjected to several "acts of repudiation" as they are called in Cuba and got an agreement from the government to allow them to continue silent marches every Sunday from the Santa Rita church on the main avenue of Havana's Miramar neighbourhood.

But the Ladies in White say they are being harassed by government supporters when they march elsewhere. Their protests began in March 2003 to demand the release of 75 of their family members jailed in a government crackdown.
Raul Castro and Cardinal Jaime Ortega Alamino

CNA: Archbishop Gomez: new missal is ‘reverent and inspiring’

The new translation of the Mass promises to help Catholics “enter more deeply into the mystery of the faith” in a way that continues the Second Vatican Council’s liturgical renewal, Archbishop José H. Gomez has said.

“We become what we pray,” he wrote in his Aug. 20 column in the Los Angeles archdiocesan paper The Tidings. “The prayer of our Eucharistic worship is meant to make us become more like Jesus Christ.”

[. . .]

Archbishop Gomez described how the new translation “restores the beauty of the original Latin” and lets Catholics hear “the many Scriptural allusions that are woven into the fabric of the Mass.”

It helps unite worship on earth to “the liturgy of heaven,” he added.
Archbishop José Gomez, Los Angeles

CNA: Eliminating religious symbols ignores history, warns Argentinean bishop

Bishop Antonio Marino of Mar de Plata, Argentina recently criticized a proposed law in Buenos Aires that would remove religious symbols from public spaces.

He said such a measure would mean ignoring the historical and cultural identity of the country.

[. . .]

“To take seriously the proposal to eradicate religious symbols from civil institutions and public spaces would have far-reaching consequences,” the bishop said. “The consistent and systematic application of this principle which a minority is pushing for would seem to entail that in organizing a society one can ignore its past and its historical and cultural identity.  This would be the equivalent of attempting to re-build our country upon foundations that differ from the ones already in place.”

[. . .]

He also noted that the Spanish language is filled with words and expressions that come from Christian tradition and the Bible and that therefore to adopt such a law would lead to “the denial of the history and culture of the West itself.”

[. . .]

Christianity was the spiritual force that led to a proper distinction between spiritual power and temporal power, he said, and the secularity of the State properly understood has its origins in the Christian faith.
Saints Peter and Cecilia Cathedral, Mar del Plate, Argentina

CNA: Uganda's economic woes threaten to stunt growing seminaries

Rampant inflation and other severe economic troubles are threatening to close seminaries in Uganda, despite the growing number of priestly vocations in the country.

[. . .]

Alokolum Seminary is based in an area that has endured over 20 years of civil war between the Ugandan government and the Lord’s Resistance Army.

Although the seminary is suffering from a severe shortage of space, it has had to stop all building because materials have become increasingly expensive.

However, with 209 students expected this new academic year – 26 more than the previous year –building has become necessary.

Msgr. Alule said that the economic situation is affecting other seminaries in the east African country as well.
Martyrs Shrine, Uganda; Uganda is approximately 45% Catholic

CNA: Scottish archbishop tells Catholics not to kneel for communion

The Archbishop of Glasgow, Scotland has told Catholics in his archdiocese not to kneel to receive communion.

“The Faithful should follow the General Instruction of the Roman Missal, namely coming to communion in procession and standing to receive Holy Communion,” wrote Archbishop Mario Conti in a letter to all his priests, dated August 25.

“Standing in our Western culture is a mark of respect: kneeling at the altar rails (where they continue to exist) is not the practice envisaged by the instructions in the Missal,” he stated.

The archbishop’s letter was issued ahead of the introduction of the new translation of the Roman Missal, which comes into effect throughout the English-speaking world this coming November.

Ironically, his instruction comes only a year after Pope Benedict XVI celebrated Mass in Glasgow. At that papal Mass, all those receiving communion from the Pope did so kneeling on a pres-dieu.
Archbishop Mario Conti

From the Office of Readings for August 31: From a commentary on John by Origen

Christ spoke of his body as a temple

Destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it up.

It seems to me that Jesus meant the Jews in this episode to stand for sensual men and those desirous of carnal and sensual things. These Jews were angry at his expulsion of the people who were turning his Father’s house into a market. So they asked for a sign to justify these actions, a sign that would show that the Word of God, whom they refused to accept, was acting rightly. The Saviour’s reply combines a statement about the temple with a prophecy about his own body, for in answer to their question: What sign can you give to justify your conduct? he says: Destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it up.
 
Indeed, I think that both the temple and the body of Jesus can be seen together as a type of the Church. For the Church is being built out of living stones; it is in process of becoming a spiritual dwelling for a holy priesthood, raised on the foundations of apostles and prophets, with Christ as its chief cornerstone. Hence it bears the name “temple.” On the other hand, it is written: You are the body of Christ, and individually members of it. Thus even the harmonious alignment of the stones should seem to be destroyed and fragmented and, as described in the twenty-first psalm, all the bones which go to make up Christ’s body should seem to be scattered by insidious attacks in persecutions or times of trouble, or by those who in days of persecution undermine the unity of the temple, nevertheless the temple will be rebuilt and the body will rise again on the third day, after the day of evil which threatens it and the day of consummation which follows. For the third day will dawn upon a new heaven and a new earth when these bones that form the whole house of Israel are raised up on that great day of the Lord, when death has been defeated. So the resurrection of Christ, accomplished after his suffering on the cross, embraces the mystery of the resurrection of his whole body.
 
For just as that physical body of Christ was crucified and buried, and afterward raised up, so in the same way the whole body of Christ’s holy ones has been crucified and lives no longer with its own life. For each of them, like Paul, makes his boast of nothing else but the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by which he has himself been crucified to the world, and the world to him. But each Christian has not only been crucified with Christ and crucified to the world; he has been buried with Christ too, as Paul tells us: We have been buried with Christ. But as though already in possession of some pledge of the resurrection, Paul goes on to say: And we have risen with him.

Saint of the Day, August 31

St. Joseph of Arimathea (1st century): A wealthy Israelite, Joseph was a good and just member of the Sanhedrin; he did not consent to Jesus' condemnation. He requested from Pilate the Body of Jesus upon his death. He wrapped the Lord's Body in fine linen and laid it in his own tomb.

Daily Reading, August 31

Col 1:1-8

Paul, an apostle of Jesus Christ, by the will of God, and Timothy, a brother, To the saints and faithful brethren in Christ Jesus, who are at Colossa.

Grace be to you and peace from God our Father, and from the Lord Jesus Christ. We give thanks to God, and the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, praying always for you. Hearing your faith in Christ Jesus, and the love which you have towards all the saints. For the hope that is laid up for you in heaven, which you have heard in the word of the truth of the gospel, Which is come unto you, as also it is in the whole world, and bringeth forth fruit and groweth, even as it doth in you, since the day you heard and knew the grace of God in truth. As you learned of Epaphras, our most beloved fellow servant, who is for you a faithful minister of Christ Jesus; Who also hath manifested to us your love in the spirit.


Ps 52:10, 11

I trust in the mercy of God for ever.

But I, as a fruitful olive tree
in the house of God,
have hoped in the mercy of God for ever,
yea for ever and ever.

I trust in the mercy of God for ever.

I will praise thee for ever, because thou hast done it:
and I will wait on thy name,
for it is good in the sight of thy saints.

I trust in the mercy of God for ever.


Lk 4:38-44

And Jesus rising up out of the synagogue, went into Simon's house. And Simon's wife's mother was taken with a great fever, and they besought him for her. And standing over her, he commanded the fever, and it left her. And immediately rising, she ministered to them.

And when the sun was down, all they that had any sick with divers diseases, brought them to him. But he laying his hands on every one of them, healed them.  And devils went out from many, crying out and saying: Thou art the Son of God. And rebuking them he suffered them not to speak, for they knew that he was Christ.

And when it was day, going out he went into a desert place, and the multitudes sought him, and came unto him: and they stayed him that he should not depart from them. To whom he said: To other cities also I must preach the kingdom of God: for therefore am I sent. And he was preaching in the synagogues of Galilee.

Jay McShann's Kansas City Stompers w/ Julia Lee: Trouble in Mind


Teacher who worked as stripper called 'Johnny Anglais' and ran porn website is facing ban from classroom

Wait for it. . . he teaches sex ed.

Speaking in his defense, The Daily Mail quotes him as saying, " Pornography is here to stay, the Internet is here to stay, social networking is here to stay.

"Being told that it's wrong, that it's immoral is not an appropriate response."

No pictures with this one. Beefcake ain't my thing.

Excuse me officer, have you seen my dope?

A NEW Zealand woman who lost a bag filled with cannabis was arrested when she tried to reclaim it as lost property from the local police station.

I have no idea what this is.

Libya forces loyal to Colonel Gaddafi given ultimatum to surrender

They've closed to within 20 miles to the west of Col. Muammar Gaddafi's last remaining stronghold, and 80 miles to the east, menacing the town with troops, tanks, rocket launchers, and Nato air support. The National Transitional Council (NTC) is prepared for the decisive final battle in Libya's six month old civil war. Now they have delivered an ultimatum to the remaining loyalist forces in Gaddafi's home town of Sirte: surrender by the end of Eid (Saturday) or face the full force of a battle you cannot win. 

The hope is to avoid pointless bloodshed. The grunts on the ground would have preferred to press ahead as quickly as possible, concerned that the guardians of Sirte will only use the interregnum to strengthen their defenses. It is a reasonable fear which must have made the decision to pause a daunting one for the NTC.  

If the loyalists will not see reason, the coming battle will be bloody indeed: Sirte is more unified then Tripoli was, and it has had ample time to prepare. But it has no way of being resupplied or reinforced. Sirte could make a valiant stand, but ultimately only a Quixotic one.

Sirte, Libya.

Le Parisien: New application for release of Dutroux's ex-wife

A very rough translation:

The court must make a decision on September 22. The lawyers for the ex-spouse of Belgian pedophile Marc Dutroux, Michelle Martin, presented on Tuesday a new application for the anticipated release of their client before the parole board of Mons, in Belgium. The hearing will take place in a closed session in the presence of Michelle Martin. However, the contents of the new rehabilitation plan which was filed has not been revealed. "You must understand that if the first plan fell apart, it is essentially on account of the media coverage, so I am not going to play a part in having the follow up similarly disrupted," explained the lawyer for the detained, Thierry Moreau.

The project for a residence in a French convent abandoned

The initial plan envisioned her installation in a convent in France. But the religious community, which had at first given its consent, indicated in June that it was withdrawing its offer after the "uproar" caused in France and Belgium by the announcement of her release. The plan was, in any case, already unlikely because the  French Minister of Justice, Michel Mercier, had asserted that he would refuse to allow into France the former accomplice of Marc Dutoux.

"A monster by nature," for the father of one victim.

Last May, the families and parents of the young victims of the diabolical couple had for their part denounced the plan as a "provocation." "She is still the murderer of my daughter. Fifteen years, that is too lenient.  You cannot fully rehabilitate someone who is a monster by nature," was the reaction of the father of Julie, Jean-Denis Lejeune.

On Tuesday, the lawyers for the victims families petitioned for the right to have an open hearing on the plan developed by the defense. "Some parole boards allow the civil parties to participate in the proceedings, but this is not the case in Mons.  It is difficult to speak properly without knowing the plan and the projects  of Michelle Martin," avers George-Henri Beauthier, the lawyer for the victims' families.

Sentenced to thirty years of incarceration, she has spent fifteen in prison

"We can only express our opposition to her parole, but we cannot speak concretely about what could be put in place because we haven't any idea," regrets Géraldine Piette, another lawyer representing the civil parties in the case. On September 22, the parole board will make an announcement concerning both the rehabilitation plan of the defense lawyers and the petition of the lawyers for the civil parties.

A 51-year-old former teacher and mother of three, Michelle Martin was found culpable in 2004 of having sequestered several of the young victims of her pedophile husband, and of having allowed the death by starvation of Julie Lejeune and Melissa Russo, both nine-years-old, who were walled up alive in a dungeon installed by the couple in their home in Marcinelle, close to Charleroi. She was sentenced to thirty years of incarceration.

Arrested in August 1996, at the same time as Marc Dutroux, who she divorced in 2003, Michelle Martin has spent nearly fifteen years in prison, counting her pre-trial detention.

Read the article in the original French at this link.

Photo: AFP; Michelle Martin

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Fides: Nicaragua; After Father Pupiro’s assassination: "We will continue to denounce injustice, corruption and violence, although we put our lives at risk", says Mgr. Baez

Garbage pickers at an illegal dump near Managua, Nicaragua made an unusual and gruesome discovery on August 23: the body of a Catholic priest, Fr. Marlon Ernesto Pupiro Garcia, wrapped in plastic. 

"Why would they kill the padre? Why? What can we poor people do?" said one of thousands of the popular priest's congregants who gathered in the plaza outside his church, people from all walks of life, to express their anguish after the news broke. Fr. Blas Cordo spoke of his murdered colleague thusly: "Father Pupiro was always a humble man; I am not the only one who says this, the presence of the weeping people here says this. He gave himself to the community; this is something that saddens all of us and which we condemn. There has never been a case like this in Nicaragua, but still we don't understand how a pitiless criminal hand could so destroy a priest." 

According to a subsequent police investigation, Fr. Pupiro, 40, was murdered for his SUV. Seven men have been arrested in connection with his death, including the owner of the auto-repair shop that bought the vehicle, and those who conspired with him to sell it, part by part.

The auxiliary Bishop of Managua, Mgr. Silvio Baez, denounced the crime in last Sunday's homily, and vowed that priests will not be deterred by the violence swirling around them. "The time has come when we must take discipleship seriously and we have to follow Jesus on the path of fidelity to our faith, even at the expense of one’s life," the Bishop said. Nicaragua is currently suffering from high levels of violent crime, petty and organized, and increasing drug activity as Central America becomes more and more a key base of operations for the narcotics industry. Another Bishop, Mgr. Abelardo Mata, relates that many Catholic priests have received death threats recently.

The President of Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega, who is facing re-election in November of this year, condemned the murder: “Nothing can justify any type of crime and least of all one committed against a priest who had earned the respect and affection of the community.” Ortega, controversial since his time as ruler of the country during the Marxist Sandanista years of the 1980's, is facing a current of opposition from within the Church as he prepares for the upcoming campaign. 

Ortega has moderated his views over time- angering many on the left by coming out firmly in opposition to abortion in recent years, and actively governing from that stance- and now speaks frequently of his faith. Critics accuse him of doing so cynically and view him as little changed from his years as a socialist revolutionary. Ortega is an ally of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and was one of the few world leaders recently to speak out in support of Libyan strongman Muammar Gaddafi.

Agenzia Fides reports on Bishop Baez's homily at this link.

Nicaraguan forensics unit investigates the crime scene of murdered priest Fr. Marlon Ernesto Pupiro Garcia.

A Mean Cat wake-up call


I could have used this today.

Ugandan villagers reel from mudslide tragedy

A series of mudslides killed at least 30 Ugandans in 7 villages yesterday morning. Agence France Presse has an excellent report.

Mount Kadam, on Uganda's eastern border with Kenya

Nigeria: Jos Boils Again

Christian youths battled Muslim youths in Jos, Nigeria, yesterday. Twenty were killed and fifty injured, based on early estimates. Accounts, of course, vary. What is clear is that members of the "'Izala" Islamic Group assembled at an abandoned mosque in the predominantly Christian Rukuba Road area of Jos to celebrate the end of Ramadan and pray; this mosque had been abandoned due to previous inter-communal violence.

According to one version of what followed, local Christian youths were incensed at the encroachment on their territory and set upon the Muslims who were gathering peacefully, if a bit provocatively given the simmering tensions carried over from the recent past. Another version is that the Muslims, mostly young themselves according to press reports, entered the neighborhood "brandishing guns, knives, and other weapons," and then fired on a crowd of Christian youth from inside the mosque, who, in both accounts, gathered menacingly outside. It is also alleged that some of the deaths are the result of the Nigerian Special Task Force opening fire on the  crowd  to disperse it. All accounts stress the youth of those involved.

This clash follows an incident in the same neighborhood in late July that left five dead and twelve injured; a man, from a nearby area and presumably Muslim, was called to the Rukuba road district to duplicate a car key. This man was attacked and killed shortly thereafter. As news of his murder spread, young men from his neighborhood converged on Rukuba Road in response and the bloody melee began.

Downtown Jos, Nigeria.

Controversial John Paul statue looks set for makeover


The sculptor, Oliviero Rainaldi, a member of the Pontifical Culture Commission, has himself heard the calls, and will respond. He will make changes to his work, alterations to the statue's neck and head. He insists the changes are "minimal", but he has zeroed in on some of the greatest problem areas: L'Osservatore Romano called the head "excessively spherical"; others opt for "bullet-like." The resemblance to John Paul II is there, but barely. By design: ''I wasn't thinking of getting a resemblance but a work that could synthesize, in the posture of the head and body and the draping of the cloak, the way the pope went out into the world,'' Rainaldi says. 

Hopefully the changes will salvage the work. Rainaldi sounds like a good and earnest man of real faith: it would be nice to see his creation redeemed and this controversy brought to a close.

Fides: Vietnam: The government will release 10 thousand prisoners. A Bishop: "One thinks of those who struggle for freedom, Justice, Democracy"

The Vietnamese government will release 10,000 prisoners on independence day, mostly common criminals. Human rights campaigners, political prisoners, and those targeted for their faith will, for the most part, not be released:

Hanoi (Agenzia Fides) - The President of Vietnam, Truong Tan Sang, has ordered the release of 10,000 prisoners on the basis of an amnesty, granted annually on the occasion of National Independence Day, which is celebrated on September 2. According to preliminary information, these people were put in prison for common crimes, and no high-ranking dissident politicians are among those who will be released. There are, however, some representatives who belong to ethnic minorities from the central Highlands of Vietnam. In that area there are, the so-called "Montagnard" (mountain people), who are mainly Christians, and have always been repressed and marginalized by the Vietnamese government and fight for religious freedom and respect for human rights.

Among the 10,535 prisoners who will be released, 11 are foreigners, serving sentences for having committed common crimes. The release of prisoners is a custom on the occasion of Independence Day: 17 thousand of them were released last year, 5,000 in 2009.

Mgr. Paul Nguyen Thai Hop, OP, Bishop of Vinh, and Chairman of the Commission "Justice and Peace" of the Episcopal Conference of Vietnam, commented to Fides: "The amnesty is a measure that is repeated every year and is often for prisoners held for crimes regarding security and not for people who are in prison for reasons of conscience. We have not yet the official list of people who will be released. What people are asking us to remember, on this occasion, are those who are imprisoned for political and conscience reasons, people who struggle for freedom, rights, justice, democracy. It is, however, good news that some members of ethnic minorities of the Central Highlands are released". The Justice and Peace Commission of Bishops, he concludes, "is following the situation on human rights, peace and justice in Vietnam with great attention, even in comparison with non-Catholic intellectuals and members of the Communist Party".

The Vietnamese Criminal Code applies the penalty of imprisonment to those who criticize the government publicly. The Vietnamese justice has punished Christian representatives and political groups not recognized by the government with long prison sentences. According to the Commission for Human Rights in Vietnam there are at least 258 political prisoners of conscience in the Vietnamese prisons, detained solely for their ideas. (PA) (Agenzia Fides 29/08/2011)

From the Office of Readings for August 30: Excerpt from The Imitation of Christ

The Truth of the Lord endures for ever

You thunder your judgements upon me, O Lord; you shake all my bones with fear and dread, and my soul becomes severely frightened. I am bewildered when I realise that even the heavens are not pure in your sight.
 
If you discovered iniquity in the angels and did not spare them, what will become of me? The stars fell from heaven, and I, mere dust, what should I expect? Those whose works seemed praiseworthy fell to the depths, and I have seen those who once were fed with the bread of angels take comfort in the husks of swine.
 
There is no holiness where you have withdrawn your hand, O Lord; no profitable wisdom if you cease to rule over it; no helpful strength if you cease to preserve it. If you forsake us, we sink and perish; but if you visit us, we rise up and live again. We are unstable, but you make us firm; we grow cool, but you inflame us.
 
All superficial glory has been swallowed up in the depths of your judgement upon me.
 
What is all flesh in your sight? Can the clay be glorified in opposition to its Maker?
 
How can anyone be stirred by empty talk if his heart is subject in the truth to God?
 
If a man is subject to truth, possession of the whole world cannot swell him with pride; nor will he be swayed by the flattery of his admirers, if he has established all his trust in God.
 
For those who do nothing but talk amount to nothing; they fail with their din of words, but ‘the truth of the Lord endures for ever’.

Thomas à Kempis, author of The Imitation of Christ

Saint of the Day, August 30: Saint Jeanne Jugan

St. Jeanne Jugan (1792-1879): As a teenager, Jeanne developed a special love for the aged, particularly poor widows. She went door to door collecting money to care for them. Attracting followers with her work, she founded the Little Sisters of the Poor and served as superior.

Saint Jeanne Jugan

Daily Reading, August 30

1 Thes 5:1-6, 9-11

But of the times and moments, brethren, you need not, that we should write to you; For yourselves know perfectly, that the day of the Lord shall so come, as a thief in the night. For when they shall say, peace and security; then shall sudden destruction come upon them, as the pains upon her that is with child, and they shall not escape.

But you, brethren, are not in darkness, that that day should overtake you as a thief. For all you are the children of light, and children of the day: we are not of the night, nor of darkness. Therefore, let us not sleep, as others do; but let us watch, and be sober.

For God hath not appointed us unto wrath, but unto the purchasing of salvation by our Lord Jesus Christ, [Who died for us; that, whether we watch or sleep, we may live together with him. For which cause comfort one another; and edify one another, as you also do.


Ps 27:1, 4, 13-14

I believe that I shall see the good things of the Lord in the land of the living.

The Lord is my light and my salvation,
whom shall I fear?
The Lord is the protector of my life:
of whom shall I be afraid?

I believe that I shall see the good things of the Lord in the land of the living.

One thing I have asked of the Lord,
this will I seek after;
that I may dwell in the house of the Lord
all the days of my life.
That I may see the delight of the Lord,
and may visit his temple.

I believe that I shall see the good things of the Lord in the land of the living.

I believe to see the good things of the Lord
in the land of the living.
Expect the Lord, do manfully,
and let thy heart take courage, and wait thou for the Lord.

I believe that I shall see the good things of the Lord in the land of the living.


Lk 4:31-37

And he went down into Capharnaum, a city of Galilee, and there he taught them on the sabbath days. And they were astonished at his doctrine: for his speech was with power.

And in the synagogue there was a man who had an unclean devil, and he cried out with a loud voice, Saying: Let us alone, what have we to do with thee, Jesus of Nazareth? art thou come to destroy us? I know thee who thou art, the holy one of God. And Jesus rebuked him, saying: Hold thy peace, and go out of him. And when the devil had thrown him into the midst, he went out of him, and hurt him not at all. And there came fear upon all, and they talked among themselves, saying: What word is this, for with authority and power he commandeth the unclean spirits, and they go out? And the fame of him was published into every place of the country.

Carlos Galhardo: Outras mulheres


Farming their way to Mars: Gardeners and chefs likely to join astronauts on first trip to the Red Planet

I hope we can afford this someday, but it really isn't looking good. From the Daily Mail:

Astronauts on the first manned mission to Mars are likely to number horticultural experts and chefs as well as more traditional ex-military personnel.

Supplying enough food for a round trip to the Red Planet is one of the greatest challenges facing mission planners, experts were told yesterday.

[. . .]

Dr Maya Cooper, from Nasa's Space Food Systems Laboratory in Houston, Texas, said a five-year mission to Mars would require almost 7,000lb of food per person.

[. . .]

'We need new approaches. Right now, we are looking at the possibility of implementing a bio-regenerative system that would involve growing crops in space and possibly shipping some bulk commodities to a Mars habitat as well.

'This scenario involves much more food processing and meal preparation than the current food system developed for the space shuttles and the International Space Station.'

Bio-regenerative systems involve growing 'multi-task' plants that not only provide food but also release oxygen for astronauts to breathe, remove the carbon dioxide they exhale, and even purify water.

Nasa expects to launch its first manned mission to Mars in the 2030s.
Photo: NASA; image of Endeavor crater, Mars

Libya: maid of Colonel Gaddafi's daughter-in-law tortured with boiling water

Nice people.

Photo: CNN; Shweyga Mullah, former maid for Aline Gaddafi.

Monday, August 29, 2011

Typhoon shuts down southern Taiwan

Typhoon Nanmadol roared through Taiwan today, after hammering the Philippines as a category 3 typhoon late last week.  Typhoon Manmadol packed sustained winds of up to 85 mph (137 kph) as it blasted the Philippines, killing 12, injuring 21, and driving 14,000 people into evacuation centers. Although downgraded to a category 1 storm before making landfall in Taiwan, the government took the precaution of evacuating 3,000 residents out of the storms path, and deployed 35,000 soldiers to handle all contingencies. In Taiwan, the weakened Nanmadol carried sustained winds of 60 mph and caused substantial flooding. Next stop: China.


Image: Typhoon Nanmadol over the Phillipines; source: NASA

Le Figaro: Iran distances itself from its Syrian ally

A very, very rough translation:


It is bad news for the Syrian regime: Iran, its principle ally in the Middle East, is putting distance between itself and Damascus. Even if, Monday, the Iranian minister of Foreign Affairs, Ali Akbar Salehi, rejected any change of regime in Damascus,  many high officials in Iran in the past few days have criticized, in a thinly-veiled way, the policy of "total repression" chosen by President Bashar al-Assad against the hundreds of thousands of demonstrators who demand his resignation.  "When there is a problem between the people and their leaders, far from violence, there is an obligation to sit down together as a group to reach a solution," declared Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the President of Iran, last Wednesday.

Damascus is accused by the international community of abuses of force, in the hope of quelling the revolt, which have caused more than 2,200 deaths in the last six months.  "One side should not kill the other," added  the Iranian chief of state, who appealed to "the people and the Syrian government" to  "meet together to reach an agreement." Saturday, Ali Akbar Salehi added that Damascus should respond "rapidly" to the "legitimate demands of the people."

Hezbollah appeals for calm

The principle ally of Iran in the Arab world, Syria is its "window" on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, via Hezbollah of Lebanon. But the Iranian regime is pragmatic. After having logistically aided the Syrian security forces in their repression of the "revolutionaries", Tehran has concluded that, by refusing reforms, Assad has scuttled himself.  According to our information, Iranian officials have met with representatives of the Syrian opposition in a European capital. These emissaries want to know more about  the leaders of this opposition, driven underground the last forty years by the Baath, the ruling party of Syria. They seek to determine as well the strength of Islamists at the oppositions core, the relationships that a new Syrian leadership will form with their ally Hezbollah, and if a compromise with the regime is still possible.

In Beirut, the Shi'ite party has also sought to enter into contact with the Syrian opposition. Friday, their leader, Hassan Nasrallah, appeared distinctly less enthusiastic in the support hitherto given Assad- support which has brought about about an erosion of favor in Arab opinion towards the Shi'ite militia. These approaches made to the opposition constitute a clear message to the Syrian elite. On several occasions, Iran has encouraged them to institute the reforms that would allow them to stay in power. But the Syrian leadership has remained deaf to these appeals. Now time is running out: the Syrian demonstrators and the leaders of the opposition inside the country refuse at this point to accept any compromises. Realistically, these same opponents are not ready, at this juncture, to turn their backs on Iran. "We are rebalancing our relationship with Iran, but we will not adopt an anti-Iranian policy," we were told recently by one of the key figures of the opposition.

"Syria is an important link in the resistance (against Israel, ed.) in the Middle East, and certain parties want to eliminate this link," asserts the Iranian Foreign Minister, in an allusion to the United States and France, who have called for the departure of Assad. It is through Syrian territory that the majority of Iranian arms destined for Hezbollah are conveyed. But today, the Shi'ite militia dreads that a new regime in Damascus will sever this umbilical cord. The impromptu visit on Thursday to Tehran by the Emir of Qatar, Sheik Hamad al-Thani, was intended to encourage the Iranians to distance themselves from Damascus, and to reassure Hezbollah in particular on the outlines of a future Syrian leadership.  Doha enjoys cordial relations with Iran and Hezbollah. Disappointed by its longstanding ally Syria, Qatar now leads the Arab revolt against Damascus, which has just ignored a diplomatic entreaty from the Arab League to Syria.

Read the article in the original French here.

Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad sees his support crumbling.

L’Osservatore Romano: Full text of Pope Benedict XVI's Sunday Angelus address

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

In today's Gospel Jesus explains to his disciples that he must “go to Jerusalem and suffer many things from the elders and chief priests and scribes, and be killed, and on the third day be raised” (Mt 16:21).

Everything seems to have been turned upside down in the disciples' hearts! How could “the Christ, the Son of the living God” (v. 16) suffer and be killed? The Apostle Peter rebels, he refuses to accept this route, he begins to rebuke the Teacher and says to him: “God forbid, Lord! This shall never happen to you” (v. 22). The divergence between the Father's loving plan — which even went as far as the gift of the Only-Begotten Son on the cross to save humanity — and the disciples' expectations, wishes and projects stands out clearly. And today too this contrast is repeated: when the fulfilment of one's life is geared solely to social success and to physical and financial well-being, one no longer reasons according to God but according to men (v. 23)

Thinking as the world thinks is setting God aside, not accepting his plan of love, preventing him, as it were, from doing his wise will. For this reason Jesus says some particularly harsh words to Peter: “Get behind me Satan! You are a hindrance to me” (ibid.). The Lord interprets “this 'following' him [walking behind him] on the way of the Cross from an essentially anthropological standpoint: it is the indispensable way for man to 'lose his life', without which it is impossible for him to find it...” (Jesus of Nazareth, English edition, New York, p. 287).

Just as he invited the disciples, Jesus also addresses an invitation to us: “If any man would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me” (Mt 16:24). A Christian follows the Lord when he accepts lovingly his own cross, which in the world's eyes seems a defeat and a “loss of life” (cf. vv. 25-26), knowing that he is not carrying it alone but with Jesus, sharing his same journey of self-giving.

The Servant of God Paul vi wrote: “In a mysterious way, Christ himself accepts death... on the cross, in order to eradicate from man's heart the sins of self-sufficiency and to manifest to the Father a complete filial obedience” (Apostolic Exhortation Gaudete in Domino, 9 May 1975). By willingly accepting death, Jesus carries the cross of all human beings and becomes a source of salvation for the whole of humanity.

St Cyril of Jerusalem commented: “The glory of the Cross led those who were blind through ignorance into light, loosed all who were held fast by sin and brought redemption to the whole world of mankind” (Catechesis Illuminandorum XIII,1: de Christo crucifixo et sepulto: pg 33, 772 b).
Dear friends, Let us entrust our prayers to the Virgin Mary and also to St Augustine whose Memorial is today, so that each one of us may be able to follow the Lord on the way of the cross and let ourselves be transformed by divine grace, renewing — as St Paul says in the liturgy today — our minds so that we “may prove what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect (Rom 12:2).

After the Angelus the Pope said:

Dear Friends,

I am glad to address a cordial greeting to Bishop Marcello Semeraro, Bishop of this Diocese of Albano, on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of his priestly Ordination; and I extend it, for the same anniversary, to Archbishop Bruno Musarò who I recently appointed Apostolic Nuncio in Cuba, and to Bishop Filippo Santoro of Petropolis, Brazil, as well as to 17 priests who are present here today. May the Lord fill you with graces, dear confreres.

I welcome the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors present at this Angelus prayer, including those of Mary Mother of the Poor Foundation and young people from South Africa. I also greet the new students of the Pontifical North American College. Dear Seminarians, do not be afraid to take up the challenge in today’s Gospel to give your lives completely to Christ. Indeed, may all of us be generous in our commitment to him, carrying our cross with faith and courage. May God bless all of you!

I wish you all a good Sunday. Thank you for your enthusiasm! Have a good Sunday!


Vatican Radio: Pope Benedict XVI: Be transformed by God's grace


Speaking to thousands of pilgrims in the courtyard of the Papal summer residence in Castel Gandolfo, the Holy Father said when the goal of a person’s life is aimed at social success and personal well-being, the person is no longer thinking with God, but with man.

The Pope explained the Christian follows the Lord when he accepts his cross with love, knowing Jesus is sharing in his journey of self-giving.

After the Angelus, Pope Benedict greeted the new seminarians at Rome’s North American College.

“Dear Seminarians, do not be afraid to take up the challenge in today’s Gospel to give your lives completely to Christ,” he said. “Indeed, may all of us be generous in our commitment to him, carrying our cross with faith and courage.”

Lybia: Rebels prepare for final push into Sirte


Nato bombers have struck the town, where rebel leaders now believe Gaddafi himself to be hiding, repeatedly.  His wife and three of his children, meanwhile, have fled to safety in Algeria. 

Over the weekend, rebel leaders rejected feelers from loyalist representatives to include Gaddafi in a transitional government. The National Transitional Council is not in a forgiving mood: 50,000 political prisoners are reported "missing" in Libya, and every day new evidence of mass executions of rebel forces and supporters is uncovered. Fears of rebel reprisals are increasing in this heated climate: fears that are well founded, as clear evidence of the executions of loyalist forces by NTC troops has come to light in recent days.

A town square in Sirte, Lybia, potential scene of the final battle for control of Libya.

Al-Qaeda branch claims responsibility for Algeria bombing

Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb claimed responsibility Sunday for a Friday suicide attack on an Algerian officers academy which killed eighteen. The Cherchell Military Academy is viewed by the group as a highly symbolic target associated with the prestige of the Algerian government.

Aftermath of attack on the Cherchell Military Academy, Algeria.

Somalis walk for days as famine pushes war-racked nation deeper into abyss

World attention has waned, but still their plight continues: the poor and malnourished are walking days- some as long as a month- through territory known for its chaotic violence in order to escape the famine in Somalia. The Washington Post has an evocative article chronicling their courage and endurance.

Photo: HON; starving cattle in Somalia.

Baghdad suicide bomber kills 29 in attack on Sunni mosque

A man strolled into the middle of gathered worshippers in Baghdad's largest Sunni mosque yesterday, disguised as a beggar, before detonating a bomb, killing 29. The imam of the Umm al-Qura mosque, Sheik Ahmed Abdul Gafur al-Samarraie, who was speaking at the time, is known for his sermons denouncing violent extremism. Sheik al-Samarraie, although only a few feet from the bomber at the moment of detonation, was unharmed. The Iraqi government has blamed al-Qaeda for the attack; no one has claimed responsibility at this time. The fear of the government is that such an attack will reignite sectarian tensions; the hope of those who planned this attack might have been the same, although the urge to silence a voice of moderation such as Sheik al-Samarraie cannot be ruled out. Adding to the tension in Iraq, firebrand Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr has called for mass demonstrations following Ramadan to protest the government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Al-Sadr charges the Maliki government with doing too little to improve public services in Iraq.

Umm al-Qura Mosque in Baghdad, site of Sunday's suicide bombing; source: Wikipedia

AsiaNews: Japan's new prime minister is finance minister Yoshihiko Noda

The  majority Democratic Party of Japan has selected Yoshihiko Noda, currently finance minister, to replace Naoto Kan as its leader. This ensures that Noda will be selected prime minister of the country by the full Diet shortly. Kan resigned as PM recently after seeing his approval ratings battered by an ineffective response to the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, and the nuclear crisis that resulted. Noda is Japan's sixth prime minister since 2006. Best wishes to Prime Minister Noda who faces a deeply dissatisfied nation reluctant to extend him a honeymoon:

The first comments from political and financial experts in the Land of the Rising Sun are marked by scepticism. A recent editorial in the Tokyo Shimbun says that the Kan administration had led the nation "into a sort of dead end", but with his resignation and the formation of a new government, "hopes, frankly, are no greater".

Incoming Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda

AsiaNews: Catholic activists and students to be put on trial in Vietnam very soon

Five Catholic activists are scheduled to be tried shortly on charges of belonging to a banned US based Vietnamese group, the Vietnam Reform Party (Viet Tan), and of "working to overthrow the people’s administration through non-violence."

Half a million Vietnamese Catholics marched through the streets of Hanoi on July 20 to protest against harassment and police violence. The government has since intensified a crackdown on the Christian community, jailing several, including the Catholic journalist and blogger Paulus le Son, who has been detained since August 3 on similar charges, and Catholic priest Fr. Nguyen Van Ly,  jailed since July 25.

Fr Le Ngoc Thanh, spokesman for the Redemptorists of Vietnam, has slammed the government’s oppressive practices, calling on the authorities to release unconditionally the jailed Catholics.

Looking at the ‘Risen Christ’, the clergyman told AsiaNews, “We are raising our voice against the violations of the law by the police, which is arresting and jailing people,” and “turning a peaceful nation into a place where kidnapping and terrorism happen everywhere”.
Fr. Nguyen Van Ly

AsiaNews: Karnataka, 4 Christians arrested over "door to door" forced conversions

Four Christians in Karnataka state, India, were beaten and then arrested on the charge of proselytizing door to door. The Christians had been visiting Dalit families and poor Hindus for a month, bringing them reading material, praying with them, and instructing them in the faith. Some residents report being insulted by the Christians when they refused to give them a hearing.

The Dalits, AsiaNews informs,

are Hinduism's "untouchables," relegated by the high-caste to an almost permanent underclass status. The caste system, though illegal in India, remains in force socially. Dalits are not allowed to enter upper-caste houses, fields, or temples. They cannot draw water from village wells or wear shoes while passing upper-caste areas".

"Many of them - continues the president of the GCIC - are empowered by the liberative message of the Gospels and this is staunchly opposed by the Hindus, hence they will use even fabricated charges to arrest anyone who announces to them the Good News of Salvation through Jesus Christ". 
Jog Falls in Karnataka, India, the highest plunge waterfalls in India.

Hurricane Irene Reporter Gets Covered In Raw Sewage

The perfect metaphor for our media: covered in crap and they don't even know it.


From the Daily Mail:

When a local television reporter became covered in a mysterious foam while reporting on the hurricane he said, 'it doesn't taste great'.

But what he did not know that he was actually being immersed in the remnants of raw sewage.

[. . .]

'It doesn't taste great', said the reporter who called it 'organic material'.

[. . .]

The foam is thought to be the effect of raw sewage pouring into the ocean during the storm.

Organic material, indeed.