Showing posts with label world youth day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label world youth day. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Arab Christians shake off fear at Catholic youth


Arab Christians shake off fear at Catholic youth gathering

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MADRID — Fade Sarkis, a Christian who fled Iraq after receiving death threats, says he has finally found a sense of safety in Roman Catholic youth festivities in Madrid.
“I am very, very happy here. I have never seen so many Christians in one place,” he said as lounged on the grass of Madrid’s central Retiro park surrounded by dozens of other pilgrims.
“It helps me feel more Christian, everyone here is Christian, I feel relaxed, I feel good,” added the 23-year-old who moved to Paris from Mosul as a refugee two years ago after receiving several letters from Islamists warning that he would be shot because of his religious beliefs.
He is one of about 200 Iraqis who have come to Madrid for the six-day World Youth Day festival, which wraps up Sunday with a mass celebrated by Pope Benedict XVI and is expected to draw around one million faithful.
Christians are a small and vulnerable minority in many Arab countries, except for in Lebanon where they make up about one-third of the population and wield political power.
And those from nations like Iraq where Christians routinely suffer attacks, or countries like Syria where there is a growing risk of violence against them, say taking part in the gathering helps ease feelings of isolation.
“Here we do not feel so alone,” said Bassam al-Ahmad, a 21-year-old business administration student from Damascus as he left a mass held in Arabic Thursday at Madrid’s San Jeronimo el Real church for pilgrims from the Middle East.
“Of course we are afraid. We see what is happening in countries around us and we fear that the same could happen in our land,” added al-Ahmad, one of around 640 Syrians taking part in the festivities.
Syria’s Christians fear their religious freedom could be threatened if President Bashar al-Assad’s autocratic but secular rule is overthrown by the violent protests sweeping the country.
In Egypt, attacks against Christians have increased since a popular uprising overthrew strongman Hosni Mubarak in February.
Hundreds of faithful sang songs and waved flags from Iraq, Lebanon, Syria and Jordan during the Arabic mass on Thursday, which was presided over by Bishop Shlemon Warduni of Baghdad.
“The situation is not good for all Iraqis, not only for Christians, because there is no peace. Because we are a minority it is worse for Christians because there are many fanatics that want to do bad things against us,” he said.
Warduni’s Church of Our Lady of Sacred Heart in east Baghdad was itself hit by a suicide car bomb in July 2009 that killed four people and wounded 21.
He warned that the unprecedented pro-democracy uprisings sweeping through the Arab world could lead to more violence against Christians in the region by Islamic fundamentalists.
“For me it doesn’t help, on the contrary it is very bad. The strong fanatics are becoming even stronger but we trust in God that he will do something to protect us,” said Warduni, the second-most-senior Chaldean bishop in Iraq.
Iraq’s Christian population has halved since the US-led invasion to oust Saddam Hussein in 2003 and now stands at around 400,000, he said.
Many Iraqi Christians have moved to parts of the country that are perceived to be safer.
Steven Jaleel Mansoor, a 22-year-old student, fled to the northern city of Mosul from Baghdad with his two sisters, his mother and his father last year seeking greater security.
“Iraq is dangerous because Muslims bomb Christians in Iraq, they don’t want Christians in Iraq,” said Mansoor, who is the only member of his family attended World Youth Day.
Some Iraqi Christians though said they saw improvements to their situation, despite the challenges that they face.
“We have Christian televisions stations, radio, newspapers. This is my first time at World Youth Day because during the Saddam era we could not get visas to travel,” said Matti Ismael, 42, from the northern Iraqi town of Karemless.

Monday, August 22, 2011

Benedict XVI laments ‘amnesia’ about God


Benedict XVI laments ‘amnesia’ about God

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WORLD YOUTH DAY IN MADRID Pope Benedict XVI (center) waves from the popemobile at the people crowding Madrid’s Cibeles square on Thursday for the formal opening of the four-day festivities. It was also to welcome the Pope who arrived in Spain that day. He told the youths of the world that their faith is all the more important in modern society where there’s “a certain eclipse of God” taking place. AP
MADRID—Pope Benedict XVI lamented on Friday what he called modern society’s “amnesia” about God as he traveled to a famed Spanish monastery on the second day of his four-day visit for the Church’s world youth festival.
Several hundred young nuns cheered, waved flags and performed the “wave” at El Escorial monastery as they waited for Benedict inside a courtyard of the 16th-century complex, a Unesco world heritage site about 50 kilometers northwest of the capital.
Benedict told them their decisions to dedicate their lives to their faith was a potent message in today’s increasingly secular world.
“This is all the more important today when we see a certain eclipse of God taking place, a kind of amnesia which albeit not an outright rejection of Christianity is nonetheless a denial of the treasure of our faith, a denial that could lead to the loss of our deepest identity,” he said.
Pious roots
Benedict’s main priority as Pope has been to try to reawaken Christianity in places like Spain, a once staunchly Catholic country that has drifted far from its pious roots.
He has traveled here three times as Pope, an indication that he views it as the key battleground as he tries to remind Europe of its Christian heritage and the place he believes God should still have in everyday life.
That he chose to deliver his message in El Escorial is significant: The massive granite structure constructed by King Philip II in 1559 was his seat of power over a vast empire whose overwhelming international concern was defending the Catholic faith from what it considered the threat of Protestantism and the Reformation.
The building acted much like the White House and the Pentagon at the height of Spain’s international power, throwing its weight and organizational ability behind the Vatican.
Spiritual awakening
“This is a moment for unity and reflection, it’s a spiritual awakening,” said Sister Maria Sandoval, a 58-year-old nun who traveled from Medellin, Colombia, for the event.
Benedict later was to meet with university professors at El Escorial; in previous such encounters he had stressed the role of professors like himself in forming the minds and consciences of young people.
His meetings, and a private audience with members of Spain’s royal family Friday morning, came after a second relatively minor night of clashes between riot police and protesters opposed to his visit and the Church’s World Youth Day.
Smaller rally
Four protesters suffered light injuries after riot police wielding truncheons forced several hundred people to leave Madrid’s central Sol plaza on Thursday night, sending them scurrying through side streets with officers in pursuit. No arrests were made, said a police spokesperson who spoke on condition of anonymity in keeping with department policy.
The demonstration was much smaller than a protest by 5,000 people on the eve of the Pope’s visit for the Church’s youth festival. It also ended in violence when a smaller group clashed with police in Sol, resulting in more injuries and detentions.
Protesters have used Sol since May as the epicenter of their rage against Spain’s political establishment, the government’s anti-austerity measures and unemployment of nearly 21 percent, a eurozone high.
They also are angry about the 50-million euro ($72-million) tab for staging World Youth Day as Spain struggles economically.
The Church says the week-long festival is being paid for by participants, donors and the Church—but pilgrims are staying for free in government buildings and getting deeply discounted subway and bus tickets, while public transport fees were raised significantly for everyone else this month.
As he arrived Thursday, Benedict offered words of encouragement to young people facing precarious futures because of the economic crisis, calling for policy makers to take ethical considerations that look out for the common good into account when formulating economic policy.
Later Friday, he will have lunch with a dozen young volunteers of World Youth Day, meet with the prime minister and then participate in the Way of the Cross procession reenacting Christ’s crucifixion and death—a staple of the Catholic youth fests that were inaugurated over a quarter century ago by Pope John Paul II. AP