Thursday, August 26, 2010

Happy birthday

Marking the 100th anniversary of Mother Teresa's birthday, hundreds of nuns, bishops and devotees attended a Mass to celebrate the selfless nun who dedicated her life to helping hundreds of thousands of poor and sick in India. A coin will be released in her honor by the Indian government and the Indian Railways will be launching a blue and white train that will travel the country with an exhibition on Mother Teresa.


Sister Mary Prema, the nun who now heads the Missionaries of Charity, said, "Her life and work continue to be an inspiration for the young and the old, the rich and the poor, from all walks of life, religions and nations."

Sacred space saved

A sacred mountain in remote Orissa has been saved from bauxite mining. Taking into account such factors as this sacred mountain, disturbance of the Dongria Kondh tribe lifestyle and tribal traditions, and the effects on ecosystems-water sources-wildlife-water pollution-displacement-deforestation-endangered species led the Indian government to reject an operation in the Niyamgiri Hill range by a multinational company.

Times to die

Accelerating National Health Service cutbacks in England have chaplains concerned patients of religious faith facing operations or even death without the opportunity of spiritual comfort. NHS "cutbacks in the out-of-hours services mean that you should not die out of hours if you want spiritual help. Die only between nine and five,” warned Carol English who works with the College of Health Care Chaplains in London.


Archbishop Vincent Nichols, head of the Catholic Church in England and Wales, said the NHS reduces the sick and the dying to “a bundle of genes and actions. There is a hidden violence in so many of our systems, even those of care, because their operational mode is reductionist. If we reduce death to a clinical event and manage it through a series of standard procedures then we do not deal with death well, either clinically or humanly.”

Ancient manuscript

Recent tests confirm what the monks have held all along - a brightly illustrated book written on goatskin are some of the oldest Christian writings in existence. The Garima Gospels, possibly dating as far back as 330 AD, are kept under lock and key in a blue, circular monastery in the center of an Ethiopian monastery for the best part of the last 1600 years. The monks believe the books also hold magical properties.


The isolated Abuna Garima monastery clings to a mountainside 2130m above sea level and is located in Ethiopia's Tigray Highlands. The monks there have guarded the sacred book from centuries of various threats. Now, a restoration funded by the Ethiopian Heritage Fund has now been completed. Bookbinder, Lester Capon, spent three laborious weeks redoing and restoring bindings that held the pages together. New carbon testing has provided a scientific confirmation to what the monks have always insisted as to the age of the Garima Gospels.