Category: Current Events

Current Events, Poland - Polish - Polonia

From the R.C. Diocese of Rzeszów, Poland

Rzeszów, Poland is my family’s ancestral home. I’ve visited and taught there and I have family and friends there. I keep tabs on the area and came across this report from Catholic Church Conservation: Good news from Poland.

It appears that the Ordinary for the R.C. Diocese of Rzeszów has given permission for the establishment of Traditional Latin Rite Community (Duszpasterstwo Tradycji فacińskiej) in the Diocese. The community will be using the Church of the Holy Cross which is in the center of the city.

Of course the inroads the SSPX has made in Poland (and the Ukraine), especially in areas like Rzeszów (See: St. Andrew Bobola Parish), would have nothing to do with this – right?

Current Events, Perspective, PNCC, Political

Miscellaneous

PNCC

Adam has a link to pictures from the November 30th Consecrations of four PNCC bishops. Note that the linked site is commercial.

Church and school closings:

Our PNCC seminarian and soon to be cleric, Adam has a post regarding closures in the Diocese of Scranton. See A Sad Situation… He rightly points out that the PNCC, a Church established along democratic lines, develops solutions to pressing issues in a manner that better serves its constituents.

In the same vein, at least one R.C. Bishop is taking first steps in recognizing the democracy and Church can co-exist. See In southern NJ, Roman Catholic churches preparing to consolidate from Newsday. Here’s an excerpt:

Unlike many, though, the bishop is leaving it largely up to lay people to figure out how the church should be reorganized.

Bishop Joseph Galante on Thursday announced a process that will shake up the configuration of churches that serve an estimated 500,000 Catholics in six southern New Jersey counties.

He envisions some parish churches and Catholic schools being closed, some churches sharing priests and perhaps some new churches and schools being planned in growing communities.

Committees from groups of parishes and schools are being formed to work out the plans. Galante said he would make the final decisions.

Anglicans Making Sense?

From the Guardian: Church of Ireland head wants end to ban on Catholic monarchs

Turkish PM – getting it right?

The BBC is reporting that prominent Turkish-Armenian writer Hrant Dink has been shot dead. See Turkish-Armenian writer shot dead. Amazingly, the Turkish PM has condemned the killing as an affront to democracy.

Turkish PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan condemned the killing and said two suspects had been arrested.

“A bullet has been fired at democracy and freedom of expression,” Mr Erdogan told a hastily convened news conference.

The attack on Hrant Dink was an attack on Turkey and on Turkish unity and stability, Mr Erdogan said, vowing that the “dark hands” behind the killing would be brought to justice.

Hopefully he really believes this and will move to overturn the Turkish Identity Law which prosecutes anyone who exercises freedom of speech and conscience.

Dink, 53, was found guilty more than a year ago of insulting Turkish identity after he wrote an article which addressed the mass killings of Ottoman Armenians nine decades ago.

Dink was among dozens of writers in Turkey who have been charged under 301 of Turkey’s penal code with insulting Turkish identity, often for articles dealing with the killing of Kurds and Ottoman Armenians.

Current Events, Perspective

Shoes a droppin’

From the Buffalo News: Catholic Charities sets goal of $11 million: Campaign facing added challenges

Amid growing anxiety about the future of Catholic schools and parishes, Bishop Edward U. Kmiec announced Wednesday that the Diocese of Buffalo will try to raise $11 million for Catholic Charities services and various diocesan programs.

No problem there. Catholic Charities does lots of great work in the Buffalo area.

Kmiec and campaign organizers acknowledged that they face an additional challenge in this year’s fundraising.

School closings are expected to be announced later this month, and an initial round of parish mergers, consolidations and closings is slated to be made public in February.

The plans are part of a restructuring process, known as “Journey in Faith and Grace,” that began in 2005. In some parts of the diocese, the process has heightened emotions and anxiety among many Catholics.

A problem for sure, but not something people have been unaware of. But wait, the process of self-destruction begins now.

David Uba, chairman of the 2007 appeal, said the campaign and the diocese’s restructuring efforts are “two separate issues.”

People continue to need Catholic Charities, regardless of whether there are fewer parishes and schools in the future, Uba said.

“What we really want to emphasize is, “We’re service-oriented and the need is there,’ ” said the Rev. Joseph J. Sicari, diocesan director of Catholic Charities.

Actually no. That’s the problem with Catholic social services, they separate Catholic from charity. They are ‘Catholic Charities’ in name only (it’s a fundraising trick). The underlying message, at least as conveyed by Mr. Uba, is that people need charity, not Jesus. People will pick up on this.

The Church, at a minimum, should understand that you can’t compartmentalize your efforts. These are not separate ‘goods.’ Good is a totality, starting with Jesus Christ, through His salvation, to service flowing from Him.

Now for the other shoe:

The diocese, which has a $2.1 million budget deficit this year, will set aside a greater percentage of the 2007 appeal funds for its own operations than it had in previous years.

About $6.4 million of the $11 million goal – down from $6.6 million in 2006 – will go toward the operating budget of Catholic Charities, which serves about 180,000 people per year at 56 sites in eight counties.

The rest – $4.6 million, up from $4.3 million in 2006 – is earmarked for the Bishop’s Fund for the Faith, which helps pay for diocesan programs, such as seminary training, the diocesan retreat house and subsidies for central city parishes and schools.

Again with the business model. Budget deficits, closings, restructuring, fancy titles of journeying in faith… I take it that some of these folks were sick on the day they studied logic in seminary.

“We’re service-oriented and the need is there” so were re-balancing and focusing more on deficit reduction over direct aid. We’ll reduce Catholic Charities programs by $200,000, up the ante by $100,000 and put the combined total of $300,000 into Diocesan operations – instead of ‘Catholic Charities.’

We’re going to put the money into seminary training (for the – how many men studying for the priesthood?), a retreat house (vacations not vocations), and subsidies for city parishes and schools which will be — CLOSING.

Try to sell that one to the pockets in the pews.

Current Events, Political

Iran in 4-6 weeks?

This from the AP via the San Diego Union Tribune: Strained by wars, Pentagon proposes to increase size of Army and Marine Corps

Maj. Randy Taylor, a spokesman for the 3rd Battalion, 43rd Air Defense Artillery Regiment, at Fort Bliss, Texas, said the Patriot unit was aware of the announced deployment but he said no formal order had been received Thursday. He said a Patriot battalion normally has 500 to 600 soldiers assigned to it. The last time the unit was deployed to the Gulf was from August 2002 to May 2003 with missions in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait and Iraq, Taylor said.

The dispatching of a Patriot missile battery, capable of defending against shorter-range ballistic missile attacks, appeared linked to Bush’s announcement Wednesday that he ordered an aircraft carrier strike group to the Middle East, which would be in easy reach of Iran, whose nuclear program is a U.S. concern.

Navy officials said the carrier heading to the Gulf region is the USS John C. Stennis, which previously had been in line to deploy to the Pacific…

Various Texas news reports are stating that the troops assigned to Fort Bliss regiment were shocked and surprised by the deployment. Not as shocked as they will be when they’re firing the Patriots 24/7 because of incoming.

Also, Lockheed Martin gets new contract

Lockheed Martin will take on yet another multi-million dollar project for the U.S. Army.

The Army awarded a contract modification worth nearly $377 million to Lockheed. The company will use the money to upgrade the Patriot PAC-3, which is a surface-to-air missle used by the Army.

The work will be done at facilities in 6 different states.

It will probably take around 4-6 weeks to get the resources in place. Me thinks we’re getting ready for the big one.

Current Events, Perspective, Political

Diplomacy and the Vietnamization of Iraq

So the United States decides to take out another country’s consulate. It’s probably not surprising, seeing that international rules most nation-states have lived by for decades, if not centuries, are meaningless to the Bush Administration.

Geneva conventions? We’ll re-write them the way we see fit.
Inviolability of another nation’s embassies and consulates? Nah, forget it.

Now I’m not saying that the raid will not produce some damning evidence of Iranian interference in Iraq. It probably will. But that’s not the point. We lived for decades with Russian, Chinese, and Israeli spies in the heart of Washington and NY City. For some strange reason we could live within the bounds of international law through the whole Cold War, when every major city had a thermonuclear target painted on it. Why can’t we live by those rules now?

The reason is this. We have an Administration that is bent of dragging the entire region into its version of the apocalypse. What we’ll get is just a bloodier version of Apocalypse Now (by the way, based on Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad – i.e., Teodor Józef Konrad Korzeniowski).

Do they really think that they can relive Vietnam and ‘win’ this time? The parallels are pretty evident, Iran as Cambodia, Syria as Laos, the domino theory.

Here’s the synopsis of the days events from the NYT. 5 Iranians Detained at Consular Office

American forces backed by helicopters raided the Iranian consulate in the mainly Kurdish city of Erbil in northern Iraq before dawn today, detaining at least five Iranian employees in the building and seizing some property, according to Iraqi and Iranian officials and witnesses.

Kurdish forces were in control of the consulate building when a reporter went there after the raid. There was broken glass on the pavement outside the building, and no sign of the Iranian flag.

A statement from the United States military today did not mention the Iranian consulate specifically, saying only that six people were taken into custody in —routine security operations— in the Erbil area. Other than saying they were —suspected of being closely tied to activities targeting Iraqi and Coalition forces on Jan. 11,— the statement did not say who the people were.

But the American statement did warn that —the Coalition will continue to work with the Government of Iraq to prevent interference by hostile actors in Iraq’s internal security affairs.—

Statements by the Iranian government were more explicit. A Foreign Ministry spokesman, Mohammad Ali Hosseini, said that United States forces arrested five Iranian staff members at the consulate early this morning, and confiscated computers and documents.

The Iranian embassy in Baghdad has sent a letter of protest to the Iraqi Foreign Ministry, Mr. Hosseini told the IRNA news agency.

A statement issued by the presidency office in Kurdistan said the American forces were backed by helicopters.

Noting that the consulate was protected by international agreement and that the regions under Kurdish control have been fairly calm, the statement said the raid —does not help the efforts to bring peace, stability and security to the rest of Iraq.—

The statement suggested that the raid was an unwelcome surprise to the Kurdish authorities. —It is better to inform the Kurdistan government before taking actions against anybody,— it said.

Mr. Hosseini, the Iranian spokesman, also reacted sharply to the speech Mr. Bush gave last night about Iraq, telling the news agency that the dispatch of more than 20,000 additional American troops to Iraq was intended to prolong the United States occupation, and that it would increase insecurity and tension.

Referring to Mr. Bush’s accusations that Iran and Syria were interfering in Iraq’s domestic affairs, Mr. Hosseini said that Washington was seeking —pretexts for its failed policies— in Iraq.

IRNA also quoted an Iraqi Kurdish security official, whom it did not name, as saying that Kurdish forces were responsible for maintaining security in Erbil, including protecting the consulate. American forces —disarmed the Kurdish guards of the consulate and used force to enter the building,— IRNA quoted the Kurdish official as saying.

Secretary of the War State, Condoleezza Rice was exceedingly blunt in testimony before Congress:

The US stepped up pressure on Iran Thursday with the secretary of state warning that Washington will not stand “idly by” if Tehran disrupts a new strategy to stabilize Iraq hours after US troops raided an Iranian government office in Irbil. Condoleezza Rice faced a fierce grilling by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee over the plan to send 21,500 more troops to Iraq and President George W. Bush’s warning that US soldiers would tackle Iranian and Syrian elements there.

Rice declined repeatedly to rule out US military action against Iran.

“I don’t want to speculate on what operations the United States may be engaged in, but you will see that the United States is not going to simply stand idly by and let these activities continue,” she said.

Rice defended the Gulf military deployments as necessary to assure US allies they “have the defense capacity that they need against a growing Iranian military buildup.”

She also said Bush in his speech was referring to taking action against Iranian and Syrian operatives inside Iraq.

“Obviously, the president isn’t going to rule anything out to protect our troops, but the plan is to take down these networks in Iraq,” she said.

No, he won’t rule out anything, because ruling things out takes judgment, something sorely lacking in this administration.

In her testimony, Rice also reaffirmed the Bush administration’s refusal to open a dialogue with Iran on stabilizing Iraq, as strongly recommended last year by the bipartisan Iraq Study Group and many foreign-policy experts.

She said Iran would seek in any such talks to obtain concessions in the standoff over its nuclear program in exchange for help in Iraq. “That’s not diplomacy, that’s extortion,” she said.

Rice insisted that Bush’s revised strategy would put more pressure on Iraqis to take over their own security, vital to any eventual US military pullback.

She also defended the reliance of the Bush administration on the much-derided government of Iraqi Premier Nuri al-Maliki, which has failed to satisfy past US demands for robust action.

“I think he knows that his government is, in a sense, on borrowed time,” she said…

Threats – those help. He’s bad, he’s good, he’s I don’t know… You’ve just pushed the Iraqi Premier closer to Shiite terrorists and radicals.

[Senator Joe] Biden said that Americans’ prayers for a workable strategy had not been answered.

“I believe the president’s strategy is not a solution, Secretary Rice. I believe it’s a tragic mistake,” Biden said.

Yep. He and 70+% of the American public.

In response to our actions, the war is coming to us tit-for-tat (and that didn’t take long). See: Blast rips through U.S. embassy compound in Athens

ATHENS (Reuters) – An explosion ripped through the U.S. embassy compound in central Athens on Friday, a police source said.

It was not clear what caused the blast and there was no immediate word on whether there were any casualties.

Police cordoned off all roads around the embassy.

Police officials at the scene said that whatever caused the explosion damaged the official embassy sign outside the mission, but there was little other indication of the extent of damage inside.

Syria and Iran will pull Israel in and U.S. interests will be hit. People will feel less secure, the police state will grow…

I pray not. Let’s go Congress and God have mercy on us all.

Current Events, Perspective, Political

News Analysis?

From the NY Times: Bush’s Strategy for Iraq Risks Confrontations

WASHINGTON, Jan. 10 —” By stepping up the American military presence in Iraq, President Bush is not only inviting an epic clash with the Democrats who run Capitol Hill. He is ignoring the results of the November elections, rejecting the central thrust of the bipartisan Iraq Study Group and flouting the advice of some of his own generals, as well as Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki of Iraq.

The obvious…

In so doing, Mr. Bush is taking a calculated gamble that no matter how much hue and cry his new strategy may provoke, in the end the American people will give him more time to turn around the war in Iraq and Congress will not have the political nerve to thwart him by cutting off money for the war.

Don’t you just hate it when the truth smacks you in the face. Our leaders have no courage, our king has no clothes. Still, we must pray and witness.

The plan, outlined by the president in stark, simple tones in a 20-minute speech from the White House library, is vintage George Bush —” in the eyes of admirers, resolute and principled; in the eyes of critics, bull-headed, even delusional, about the prospects for success in Iraq. It is the latest evidence that the president is convinced that he is right and that history will vindicate him, even if that vindication comes long after he is gone from the Oval Office…

Now where was I? Step 1, Put the steak through the meat grinder. Step 2, Re-create the cow. Thank you Dr. Frankenstein*.

—It’s more than a risk, it’s a riverboat gamble,— said Leon E. Panetta, a Democratic member of the Iraq Study Group and former chief of staff to President Bill Clinton. —There’s no question that under our system he’s going to be able to deploy these troops without Congress being able to stop him. But he’s going to face so many battles over these next few months, on funding for the war, on every decision he makes, that he’s basically taking the nation into another nightmare of conflict over a war that no one sees any end to.—

And whose consequences we will live with well into the future.

I think the NY Times is stretching the analysis angle. I know that they’ve got to make it fit the format, but perhaps they should add a new section – pointing out the obvious.

*Stay tuned for the movie. Gene Wilder as George Bush, Marty Feldman as Ey-gor, I mean the Vice-president, and Cloris Leachman as Frau Rice.

Christian Witness, Current Events, Perspective, Political

The urge to surge

To President Bush’s Administration and the plan to send upwards of 20,000 more young men and women to Iraq:

  • It won’t work – it’s too late.
  • It’s a useless waste of more young lives.
  • It’s a waste of our national resources and treasure.
  • It does not protect our country.
  • The Democrats will talk it up, but owing to politics will let the Republicans hang for the error. They will do nothing to stop it. They’re co-dependent.
  • Pray.
  • Speak-up, even though your witness may seem like words into the wind, speak-up.

Let us pray:

Almighty God, by whose grace we look for the day when nation shall not any more lift up sword against nation, and when men shall live without fear in security and peace, grant to us in this time of strife the will to labor for peace even while our sword is drawn to resist the foe. Let not the evil we oppose turn us from our purpose, to achieve unity and concord among the nations of the earth, to Thy honor and glory. Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

Current Events, Perspective, Political

What’s that smell

As you’ve probably read, parts of New York City and New Jersey were covered by a mysterious odor yesterday. The Gulf News picking up on Reuters reported: Mysterious gas odour causes minor ailments for 19 people

New York: A powerful, mysterious smell of gas wafted through much of Manhattan and parts of New Jersey on Monday.

It forced building evacuations and a temporary suspension of commuter train service before dissipating by mid-afternoon.

Officials were quick to stress that the odour was not dangerous, but at least 19 people went to the hospital with minor ailments and its wide extent provoked jitters in a city that constantly reminded of the September 11 attacks…

Besides the humor in today’s news – people saying the the odor emanated from New Jersey, I’m thinking three possibilities:

  • An accidental release from an industrial site or landfill
  • An intentional release of gas to ascertain the how a gas or other airborne attack would spread. People’s panicked response gave the perpetrators all the data they needed. They can use the 911 database and GIS to map it all out. It could be the government performing such a test, but you never know.
  • An intentional release of gas in preparation for a “Maine” type attack as a pretext for a wider war.

I’m hoping its the first choice, thinking its the second, and praying it’s not the third.

Current Events, Perspective,

Life in all its beauty

Just when you thought that the lowest common denominator had been reached, stories continue to appear pointing out that “stem cells” can be used to make people look youthful and to rebuild their missing teeth

Of course you have to dig into the stories to realize that they are talking about adult stem cells , the only truly effective stem cell therapies developed thus far (see Adult Stem Cells Spur Rush to Market, Avoid Bush’s Embryo Ban).

The Church has no problem with the use of adult stem cells or cord blood stem cells (if the baby has not been aborted), but there are those who will latch onto “the many uses of stem cells” and will try to make a case regarding embryonic stem cell research – all so they can benefit. They pass over the facts and draw general conclusions that make no sense – i.e., the Church is against people, the Church wants me to suffer, being beautiful and perfect is my right…

The interesting thing about these arguments is that those who take-up arms advocating for the position in opposition to life will be confounded. They argue from impatience and selfishness – and yes, killing a human being so you can benefit is always wrong.

In my opinion, this lack of patience and selfishness is rooted in a lack of faith in God, and I fully believe that those alleged Christians who advocate for abortion, embryonic stem cell research, the death penalty, and euthanasia have no faith in God. They are delusional.

To the point of the title of this post. Patience and the miracle of God’s creation provides a solution. To wit: New Source of Stem Cells (and here).

ORLANDO, Fla. (Ivanhoe Newswire) — A new source of stem cells could one day mean anyone who needs engineered tissue will have a ready source. The research is still very early, but scientists say they are excited about the potential.

Researchers from Wake Forest University School of Medicine in Durham, N.C., report stem cells capable of creating several different kinds of tissue can be taken from amniotic fluid in the wombs of pregnant women.

Stem cells have the capacity to become any kind of cell in the body. Under the right conditions, the cells can become long muscle cells, throbbing heart cells, or brain cells producing neurotransmitters.

“It’s still too early to think of these cells for human use. We’re still in the research phase,” Wake Forest researcher Anthony Atala, M.D., told Ivanhoe. “But we’re certainly working in that direction.”

Dr. Atala and his colleagues were able to separate stem cells from amniotic fluid and placentas. Researchers used left over fluid gathered from amniocentesis tests, done to certain genetic disorders in the developing fetus. Cells can also be gathered from the placenta after birth.

The successful isolation of stem cells from this source means there is a more reliable source of cells for research and potential therapies. “We are dealing with a resource that is widely available because there are over 4.5 million births per year in the [United States],” said Dr. Atala. Before now, some stem cells came from discarded embryos created for in vitro fertilization. Many oppose the use of these cells, arguing it encourages destroying unborn children.

Dr. Atala says taking cells from the placenta, or the afterbirth, causes no risk to mother or child…

Lets see – more useful, more reliable, widely available, no danger, no abortion, no death.

All I could think of is this quote:

Bring all the tithes into the storehouse, that there may be meat in my house, and try me in this, saith the Lord: if I open not unto you the flood-gates of heaven, and pour you out a blessing even to abundance. — Malachi 3:10

Our prayer and trust in God is our tithe. He asks us to try Him by placing our full trust in Him. When we do, He will keep His promise and pour out blessings upon us in abundance.

God has created life in all its richness. When we choose God’s way, which is life, all of our real needs are met, and met in abundance.

Christian Witness, Current Events, Perspective, Poland - Polish - Polonia, Political

More on the Wielgus affair

The fallout continues:

Wielgus misled Pope by failure to disclose communist-era links: reports

Ex-Warsaw Archbishop Stanislaw Wielgus in effect misled the pope by his failure to disclose the true nature of his links with the former Polish communist regime, Italian media reports say, as news breaks of the resignation of another high level church official in the late Pope John Paul II’s home diocese of Cracow.

And this is why the whole affair is so unseemly. If a man slated to be Archbishop places himself and his interests so far in front of the R.C. Church and the Pope then he really doesn’t deserve to be in a position of responsibility. This sort of thinking indicates:

  • A lack of faith – confession and forgiveness are nice for the pew sitters, but mean nothing to him
  • A lack of discipline – you can cry Pope, Pope, Pope all you want, but if you yourself don’t believe in the guy, why bother.
  • A failure to abide – rules are great for everyone else. Like celibacy (especially in Poland) is a nice concept, but I’d rather have a woman, lover, and family without being tied down by marriage. Gee bishop, she’s becoming a real pain, can you transfer me to the other side of the diocese.

Cardinal Glemp touched on a piece of the truth in his homily, the part about forgiveness and not believing every last assertion made by the secret police, but ended up flubbing that one as well.

The Cardinal had a great teaching moment thrust in front of him. He could have talked about getting the truth out, how such lies hurt all, how honesty, repentance, and forgiveness is necessary and essential for a Catholic nation. How lustration, at least in the form being practiced by right-wing zealots, will destroy the country, how Poles should come together in truth, repentance, and forgiveness. All solid Catholic teaching. Instead he focused on one man as a good guy who should be given a break. It was R.C. duck and cover (and the Polish and International press are drawing parallels to the same duck and cover that was part of the sex abuse scandals in the U.S. and elsewhere)

A new chapter begins for Voice of the Faithful – VotF – Polska.

Next up: The Rector of Wawel Cathedral has resigned for the very same reason. See: Another Polish Priest Resigns Over Secret Service Charges

The prelate of Wawel Cathedral in Krakow, Janusz Bielanski, offered his resignation to Cardinal Stansilaw Dziwisz and it was accepted immediately, TVN 24 reported…

The body count has just begun. The R.C. Church in Poland needs to do what is right by Catholic/Christian standards, not what is right politically. The Church needs to exert leadership. Otherwise the damage will be deep and more permanent, a society split – something the Nazi Germans and Russian Communists couldn’t achieve.