Category: Perspective

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

Miscellaneous political lunacy (NY Style)

Some things that have passed through my thoughts in the past month or so:

New York – Bastion of Stupid People

I guess our Legislators consider us to be so stupid that they have to put forward all kinds of weird legislation in order to protect us from ourselves. To wit from TechNewsWorld:

New York pedestrians could find themselves on the wrong side of the law just for crossing the street while chatting on a cell phone or listening to an iPod if state Senator Carl Kruger gets his way. The New York lawmaker plans to introduce legislation to make it illegal to use portable electronic devices such as a BlackBerry Get the Facts on BlackBerry Business Solutions or PlayStation Portable game console while crossing the street.

The legislation comes after the deaths of two pedestrians in Sen. Kruger’s Brooklyn district within the past five months. “iPod oblivion,” the lawmaker said, has become a term used nationwide to describe the state of compromised awareness that is a result of the huge popularity of electronic devices among users of all ages.

“You can’t be fully aware of your surrounding if you’re fiddling with a BlackBerry, dialing a phone number, playing Super Mario Brothers on a Game Boy or listening to music on an iPod,” Sen. Kruger claimed.

“This is an avoidable tragedy,” Sen. Kruger added. “If you’re so involved in your electronic device that you can’t see or hear a car coming, this is indicative of a larger problem that requires some sort of enforcement beyond the application of common sense.”

Here’s the Bill he submitted. It applies to persons in cities with a population of one million or more.

Funny thing is that there’s only one city of more than one million persons in New York, and that is New York City. The rest of the state is so economically dead that anyone who can leave does. At least they’ll get hit by a bus while listening to their iPod in warmer climes, while holding down a good paying job, and paying little if anything in taxes.

As to other moments of legislative brilliance:

I’ve already commented on Law and attempted Laws to ban trans fat and foie gras in this blog. We’re all ignorant of educational efforts promoting good eating and better health. As such good health has to be forced on us. I can’t wait for the next government hiring initiative. A cop for every citizen. You will walk that treadmill, you will do it now!

On the heels of all that is inattentive driving legislation. Put down that coffee (then they get you for driving while drowsy), cigarette, sandwich, comb, or shaver.

What really amazes me is that our elected leaders wish to protect us from ourselves in every way possible but can’t muster the courage to protect the unborn (yes, New York is rushing headlong into funding embryonic stem cell research – which doesn’t work).

They can promote so called ‘gay’ marriage, but can’t reform a corrupt legislative process wherein all state laws are agreed to behind closed doors by an oligarchy of the Governor, Assembly Leader, and Senate Majority Leader.

The New York Sun carried an article on legislation being considered which would offer an apology for slavery, and reparations. See Albany Mulls an Apology for Slavery: Reparations Study Is Being Sought.

Oooooh white guilt. I get to pay because someone in New York once owned a slave.

Wasn’t me, my family, or really anyone I’ve met. I have no guilt over slavery. My people fought against slavery in Europe, Haiti, and the United States.

When someone talks to me about their guilt over treating Polish immigrant coal miners as slaves – in the 20th century, the nativist movement, their guilt for selling Poland to the Soviet Union, or their snickering at Polish jokes, then we’ll have something to discuss. I’d also like to see a formal apology from all the states where the Klan actively targeted (and still does target) Catholics with the necessary reparations being paid to various Catholic Churches.

And a technical question. If the citizens of New York are apologizing for slavery does that mean its African-American citizens are apologizing to themselves?

Of course to answer that question you would have to understand the whole concept of citizenship.

I think rather that the people who promote such drivel and no more than self-serving stooges. They’re the ones that the family had to place in politics in order to prevent their bringing the family fortune to ruination (aka George Bush I and II).

Then, of course, NY stupidity extends overseas

See: Settlers launch first drive in U.S. to sell homes from Haaretz. One of those Americans who actually went through and bought a home in Israel’s occupied territories is Dov Hikind. He bought a home in Shomron. As one commentator on a blog said, he should make aliyah now. I agree and that’s his right, especially if that is where his heart is.

Why stupid? Because Mr. Hikind is fermenting continued bloodshed over land Israel has no right to occupy (unless of course you’re a dispensationalist) and he’s doing so as an elected representative of the people of New York.

That’s right, Mr. Hikind is a New York State Assemblyman representing the 48th District. You know, sworn to serve this country and this state.

Oy, he could have had a nice place in the Catskills with no problem.

Perspective, Political

And she’s an intellectual?

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on today’s bombing of the Iraqi Parliament in the heavily fortified ‘Green Zone’ in Baghdad as reported by the Guardian in Bush Condemns Green Zone Attack:

At the State Department, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said the attack showed terrorists were determined to destroy the Iraqi people’s dreams of democracy, but did not mean that Bush’s troop increase in Iraq had failed.

“This is still early in the process and I don’t think anyone expected that there wouldn’t be counter-efforts by terrorists to undermine the security presence,” she said.

Don’t admit failure or mismanagement for any reason, and portray yourself and the Administration you belong to as so exceedingly stupid as to say “I don’t think anyone expected that there wouldn’t be counter-efforts by terrorists…”

R i g h t…

…and fish don’t swim, and birds don’t fly, and Ms. Rice received her degree from Bob and Larry’s School of Secretarial Science.

Current Events, Perspective

The spirit of the age

Just when you thought that the spirit of the age was only infecting Episcopalians and the Roman Catholic Church in the U.S. you run across the following from the AP via ABC News: Some Polish Jews Embrace Liberal Worship

Some Polish Jews Turn to Liberal Worship As They Embrace Their Roots

WARSAW, Poland – Ludmila Krzewska abandoned Judaism after enduring anti-Semitic childhood taunts, and warnings from her parents that it wasn’t safe to be Jewish in Poland.

The 25-year-old biology student decided to reclaim her heritage five years ago in the face of declining anti-Semitism. But she met a different kind of rejection. She was discouraged from joining Warsaw’s Orthodox Jewish community by one member because her husband isn’t Jewish, she recalled.

So Krzewska turned to Warsaw’s fledgling Progressive Jewish community, becoming one of a growing number of eastern European Jews embracing a modern, liberal stream of Judaism amid a larger rebirth of a Jewish community, once Europe’s largest, that was devastated by the Holocaust.

Many are drawn to Progressive Judaism known in the U.S. as Reform Judaism because they consider it more in tune with modern life, and say it allows them to remain more a part of the non-Jewish world.

“There’s been a tremendous resurgence of (Progressive) Jewish life,” said Rabbi Joel Oseran, vice president of international development with the World Union for Progressive Judaism in Jerusalem. “We see young people searching for Jewish meaning, people who have come anew to their own Jewish identities. And Poland is the best example of that.”

It is tricky to live an Orthodox life in this staunchly Roman Catholic country of 38 million, where there are perhaps 30,000 Jews, according to some estimates. Pork sausages and other non-kosher foods crown most menus. There’s only one kosher butcher in the entire country, in Bialystok, 110 miles northeast of Warsaw. Sundown comes at 3 p.m. in the deep of winter, meaning Jews who observe the Sabbath must cease work in the middle of the work day on Fridays not an option in most jobs.

Unlike the Orthodox, Reform Jews travel on the Sabbath, sit with the opposite sex during services and don’t necessarily adhere to all dietary laws.

“It gives you more independence and a spectrum of choice,” said Krzewska, whose husband eventually converted. “And it makes it easier to have non-Jewish friends, homosexual friends, people who are different.”

Before World War II, Poland was home to a vibrant Yiddish-speaking Jewish community of nearly 3.5 million. Following Nazi Germany’s invasion in 1939, most were murdered in Nazi [German] -run death camps, such as Auschwitz, that dotted the land that had been their home for a thousand years.

Of those who survived, many fled in reaction to anti-Semitic violence or repression under communism. Those who remained often turned their backs on the faith though their last names sometimes prevented them from hiding their heritage and many intermarried with the Roman Catholic majority.

But now, with post-Cold War democracy nurturing a new tolerance and security, many Jews are increasingly returning to their roots, in many cases discovering only very recently they have Jewish ancestry.

Reform Judaism was founded in 19th-century Germany, but came to maturity in North America, where it has grown into the world’s largest Jewish denomination. It faces challenges in other countries, particularly Israel, where religious life is dominated by the Orthodox.

Liberal Jews in central Europe face a similar struggle for acceptance from the Orthodox, some of whom hold that they aren’t real Jews because they reject some of the 613 Jewish mitzvot, or commandments.

That offends people like Emil Jezowski, a 17-year-old whose father was born Jewish but whose mother was raised Protestant.

He was raised Protestant but converted along with his mother and three of his five siblings last summer. He was circumcised in a Warsaw hospital with a group of adult males from Beit Warszawa, Poland’s only progressive community and celebrated his bar mitzvah on Saturday.

“I am who I think I am I am Jewish,” said Jezowski.

Another problem for Polish Progressive Jews is that the state only recognizes the Orthodox community, which it inherits synagogues and other communal Jewish property seized by the Nazis, taken over by the communists and now being slowly returned.

The Orthodox community worships in the Nozyk synagogue, the only one to survive the war in the capital. Beit Warszawa’s members meet in a modern house in the city outskirts, filled with abstract art and Ikea furniture.

Basically social Jews. The bling of Judaism with few if any obligations (like keeping kosher, full observance of the Law) and the added fun of being exotic, out there, and ticking off grandma and grandpa.

That’s the real spirit of the age, religion (as opposed to faith) as an accessory.

Current Events, Media, Perspective

Just in time for Holy Week

From WorldNetDaily: Pastor: Idea Christ died for sins ‘insane’

Calls Easter message ‘repulsive’ —“ makes ‘God sound like a psychopath’

Church of England traditionalists, wearied by the battles over homosexuality in the church and the clergy, are about to take it on their spiritual chins once again when a leading “gay” cleric will tell listeners to BBC Radio 4 that Christianity’s traditional teaching on Christ’s crucifixion for the sins of mankind is “repulsive,” “insane” and makes “God sound like a psychopath…”

What’s left to say to the folks who own a Church’s message to the extent such theological amateurs do. It’s not even the ‘gay’ thing. It’s the whole idea that any god would forfeit their lofty throne to become human, with all the requisite suffering inherent in humanity, and why?

And once a god commits to such an undertaking, wouldn’t he wish to free those whose suffering he shares in? Would he not only wish to free them, but also wish to give them hope? And, should he suffer an ignominious death, wouldn’t he wish it (being a god and all) to be meritorious.

Thankfully such a god exists, God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

I guess some folks, trained in seminary and all, just can’t connect those dots. Of course, you need faith. Otherwise, you fashion for yourself a god who is a psychopath (or you’re a gnostic).

Christian Witness, Current Events, Perspective

Chocolate Jesus

Seems the problem really was, according to the earliest press release, that, (HORRORS!) Jesus was depicted naked… you know like it really happened

From Huw Raphael in Catholic League has trouble w/ reality.

I read about this, and that was the first thing that came to my mind as well. People are scandalized by Jesus Christ’s manner of death.

For Jews demand signs and Greeks seek wisdom,
but we preach Christ crucified, a stumbling block to Jews and folly to Gentiles,
but to those who are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God.
For the foolishness of God is wiser than men, and the weakness of God is stronger than men.

I don’t really care what the artist’s motivations are, and obviously Mr. Donohue only represents a limited number of Roman Catholics. But I would suggest to anyone who calls him or herself a Christian that they reflect on the image of the crucified Christ, in all its horror, disgrace, and indignity and as we pray in one of the versions of the Stations of the Cross we do in our parish, say together: “This is for me.”

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

Terror for the sake of terror

Terrorized by ‘War on Terror’ – How a Three-Word Mantra Has Undermined America by Zbigniew Brzezinski which appeared in this Sunday’s Washington Post. The text was also made available by the Polish American Congress.The text was provided to the Polish American Forum by the PAC. This is interesting in that the PAC is a rather conservative Republican leaning organization. The article definitely goes against the claims made by President Bush and his Administration. I believe it is an indicator that the current Administration has lost all but the most rabid of its supporters. Conservatives are going back to what they should be, conservative. In our heart-of-hearts we Poles and Polish-Americans balk whenever freedom is threatened. We’ve seen it up close and personal.

The “war on terror” has created a culture of fear in America. The Bush administration’s elevation of these three words into a national mantra since the horrific events of 9/11 has had a pernicious impact on American democracy, on America’s psyche and on U.S. standing in the world. Using this phrase has actually undermined our ability to effectively confront the real challenges we face from fanatics who may use terrorism against us.

The damage these three words have done — a classic self-inflicted wound — is infinitely greater than any wild dreams entertained by the fanatical perpetrators of the 9/11 attacks when they were plotting against us in distant Afghan caves. The phrase itself is meaningless. It defines neither a geographic context nor our presumed enemies. Terrorism is not an enemy but a technique of warfare — political intimidation through the killing of unarmed non-combatants.

But the little secret here may be that the vagueness of the phrase was deliberately (or instinctively) calculated by its sponsors. Constant reference to a “war on terror” did accomplish one major objective: It stimulated the emergence of a culture of fear. Fear obscures reason, intensifies emotions and makes it easier for demagogic politicians to mobilize the public on behalf of the policies they want to pursue. The war of choice in Iraq could never have gained the congressional support it got without the psychological linkage between the shock of 9/11 and the postulated existence of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction. Support for President Bush in the 2004 elections was also mobilized in part by the notion that “a nation at war” does not change its commander in chief in midstream. The sense of a pervasive but otherwise imprecise danger was thus channeled in a politically expedient direction by the mobilizing appeal of being “at war.”

To justify the “war on terror,” the administration has lately crafted a false historical narrative that could even become a self-fulfilling prophecy. By claiming that its war is similar to earlier U.S. struggles against Nazism and then Stalinism (while ignoring the fact that both Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia were first-rate military powers, a status al-Qaeda neither has nor can achieve), the administration could be preparing the case for war with Iran. Such war would then plunge America into a protracted conflict spanning Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and perhaps also Pakistan.

The culture of fear is like a genie that has been let out of its bottle. It acquires a life of its own — and can become demoralizing. America today is not the self-confident and determined nation that responded to Pearl Harbor; nor is it the America that heard from its leader, at another moment of crisis, the powerful words “the only thing we have to fear is fear itself”; nor is it the calm America that waged the Cold War with quiet persistence despite the knowledge that a real war could be initiated abruptly within minutes and prompt the death of 100 million Americans within just a few hours. We are now divided, uncertain and potentially very susceptible to panic in the event of another terrorist act in the United States itself.

That is the result of five years of almost continuous national brainwashing on the subject of terror, quite unlike the more muted reactions of several other nations (Britain, Spain, Italy, Germany, Japan, to mention just a few) that also have suffered painful terrorist acts. In his latest justification for his war in Iraq, President Bush even claims absurdly that he has to continue waging it lest al-Qaeda cross the Atlantic to launch a war of terror here in the United States.

Such fear-mongering, reinforced by security entrepreneurs, the mass media and the entertainment industry, generates its own momentum. The terror entrepreneurs, usually described as experts on terrorism, are necessarily engaged in competition to justify their existence. Hence their task is to convince the public that it faces new threats. That puts a premium on the presentation of credible scenarios of ever-more-horrifying acts of violence, sometimes even with blueprints for their implementation.

That America has become insecure and more paranoid is hardly debatable. A recent study reported that in 2003, Congress identified 160 sites as potentially important national targets for would-be terrorists. With lobbyists weighing in, by the end of that year the list had grown to 1,849; by the end of 2004, to 28,360; by 2005, to 77,769. The national database of possible targets now has some 300,000 items in it, including the Sears Tower in Chicago and an Illinois Apple and Pork Festival.

Just last week, here in Washington, on my way to visit a journalistic office, I had to pass through one of the absurd “security checks” that have proliferated in almost all the privately owned office buildings in this capital — and in New York City. A uniformed guard required me to fill out a form, show an I.D. and in this case explain in writing the purpose of my visit. Would a visiting terrorist indicate in writing that the purpose is “to blow up the building”? Would the guard be able to arrest such a self-confessing, would-be suicide bomber? To make matters more absurd, large department stores, with their crowds of shoppers, do not have any comparable procedures. Nor do concert halls or movie theaters. Yet such “security” procedures have become routine, wasting hundreds of millions of dollars and further contributing to a siege mentality.

Government at every level has stimulated the paranoia. Consider, for example, the electronic billboards over interstate highways urging motorists to “Report Suspicious Activity” (drivers in turbans?). Some mass media have made their own contribution. The cable channels and some print media have found that horror scenarios attract audiences, while terror “experts” as “consultants” provide authenticity for the apocalyptic visions fed to the American public. Hence the proliferation of programs with bearded “terrorists” as the central villains. Their general effect is to reinforce the sense of the unknown but lurking danger that is said to increasingly threaten the lives of all Americans.

The entertainment industry has also jumped into the act. Hence the TV serials and films in which the evil characters have recognizable Arab features, sometimes highlighted by religious gestures, that exploit public anxiety and stimulate Islamophobia. Arab facial stereotypes, particularly in newspaper cartoons, have at times been rendered in a manner sadly reminiscent of the Nazi anti-Semitic campaigns. Lately, even some college student organizations have become involved in such propagation, apparently oblivious to the menacing connection between the stimulation of racial and religious hatreds and the unleashing of the unprecedented crimes of the Holocaust.

The atmosphere generated by the “war on terror” has encouraged legal and political harassment of Arab Americans (generally loyal Americans) for conduct that has not been unique to them. A case in point is the reported harassment of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) for its attempts to emulate, not very successfully, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). Some House Republicans recently described CAIR members as “terrorist apologists” who should not be allowed to use a Capitol meeting room for a panel discussion.

Social discrimination, for example toward Muslim air travelers, has also been its unintended byproduct. Not surprisingly, animus toward the United States even among Muslims otherwise not particularly concerned with the Middle East has intensified, while America’s reputation as a leader in fostering constructive interracial and interreligious relations has suffered egregiously.

The record is even more troubling in the general area of civil rights. The culture of fear has bred intolerance, suspicion of foreigners and the adoption of legal procedures that undermine fundamental notions of justice. Innocent until proven guilty has been diluted if not undone, with some — even U.S. citizens — incarcerated for lengthy periods of time without effective and prompt access to due process. There is no known, hard evidence that such excess has prevented significant acts of terrorism, and convictions for would-be terrorists of any kind have been few and far between. Someday Americans will be as ashamed of this record as they now have become of the earlier instances in U.S. history of panic by the many prompting intolerance against the few.

In the meantime, the “war on terror” has gravely damaged the United States internationally. For Muslims, the similarity between the rough treatment of Iraqi civilians by the U.S. military and of the Palestinians by the Israelis has prompted a widespread sense of hostility toward the United States in general. It’s not the “war on terror” that angers Muslims watching the news on television, it’s the victimization of Arab civilians. And the resentment is not limited to Muslims. A recent BBC poll of 28,000 people in 27 countries that sought respondents’ assessments of the role of states in international affairs resulted in Israel, Iran and the United States being rated (in that order) as the states with “the most negative influence on the world.” Alas, for some that is the new axis of evil!

The events of 9/11 could have resulted in a truly global solidarity against extremism and terrorism. A global alliance of moderates, including Muslim ones, engaged in a deliberate campaign both to extirpate the specific terrorist networks and to terminate the political conflicts that spawn terrorism would have been more productive than a demagogically proclaimed and largely solitary U.S. “war on terror” against “Islamo-fascism.” Only a confidently determined and reasonable America can promote genuine international security which then leaves no political space for terrorism.

Where is the U.S. leader ready to say, “Enough of this hysteria, stop this paranoia”? Even in the face of future terrorist attacks, the likelihood of which cannot be denied, let us show some sense. Let us be true to our traditions.

Zbigniew Brzezinski, national security adviser to President Jimmy Carter, is the author most recently of “Second Chance: Three Presidents and the Crisis of American Superpower” (Basic Books).

Perspective,

Good health, science, dead babies

I received the occasional E-mail newsletter I get from the American Diabetes Association (ADA). As I’ve mentioned here before, I am a diabetic.

Their lead story was: NIH Chief: Stem Cell Ban Hobbles Science

Lifting the ban on taxpayer funding of research on new stem cells from fertilized embryos would better serve both science and the nation, the chief of the National Institutes of Health told lawmakers Monday. Allowing the ban to remain in place, Dr. Elias A. Zerhouni told a Senate panel, leaves his agency fighting “with one hand tied behind our back.”

“It is clear today that American science will be better served – the nation will be better served – if we allow our scientists to have access to more cell lines,” Zerhouni told two members of the Senate health appropriations subcommittee during a hearing on the NIH’s proposed 2008 budget. The NIH, with a nearly $29 billion annual budget, is the main federal agency that conducts and funds medical research…

Stem cells are created in the first days after conception and typically are culled from frozen embryos, destroying them in the process. Because they go on to form the body’s tissues and cells – Zerhouni called them “software of life”…

The ADA has a position paper on stem cells. Because of their position I do not support the ADA, and I strongly encourage people to drop any financial support they offer the ADA.

The testimony of Doctor ‘Mengele‘ Zerhouni is chilling. Human babies as software. Killing babies to “serve both science and the nation“. The man is as murderous as Dr. Mengele. He even uses the same excuses:

The subjects of Mengele’s research were better fed and housed than ordinary prisoners and were for the time being safe from the gas chambers. To Mengele they were nevertheless not fellow human beings, but rather material on which to conduct his experiments. On several occasions he killed subjects simply to be able to dissect them afterwards.A quote from Doctor Miklós Nyiszli’s book Auschwitz: A Doctor’s Eyewitness Account, emphasis mine.

Current Events, Perspective

Peace, thy name is million

One Million Blogs for Peace has officially launched today, the fourth anniversary of the Iraq ‘war.’ Yours truly is one of the two-hundred seventeen inaugural blogs, or as the site refers to us the inblogurals.

Each Tuesday a special topic for discussion will be posted. This week’s is:

Think back four years ago, to when you first heard that the Iraq War had started.

Were you for or against the war at the time?

Against.

If you were for it, what has changed your mind over the last four years?

N/A

If you were against it, why were you against it?

In a word, contrived. There was such a stunning lack of international unity on the issue. Those who were with the United States were cobbled together. Beyond Great Britain, Australia, and Poland, the others seemed to be there only for the quid-pro-quo.

Even Poland, sadly, was not strong in that regard. The funny thing was that the quid-pro-quo was never completed. Poland was no better off for having participated. You know what they say about shaking hands with the devil, make sure you still have a hand afterward.

These days things don’t happen like that. We’ve moved beyond the stage where anyone with a brain believes the USA has all the secret data and the rest of the world is filled with bumbling secret agents (Inspector Jacques Clouseau style). If the threat were real no country and no leader in striking distance of Saddam’s weapons would have been reticent.

More than the contrived nature of the whole thing, any student of propaganda saw the run up. Us against the mean bad man… Those who are not with us are against us… Those crazy (ignorant, bumbling, disloyal, self interested, greedy, armpit hair wearning ) foreigners, especially the French… Iraq, half starved and poor (except for the elite) had the wherewithal to devastate the United States… The press jumping in with both feet – USA, USA, USA, like a hockey game…

My question would be, were people drunk when they took the government’s and the media’s word for it? Did people believe Colin Powell orating at the UN on this issue? He will forever be a sellout and requisite liar. He’s certainly smart enough not to have had the wool pulled over his eyes by President Bush etal.

The other word is smarmy. President Bush is smarmy. A poor businessman, a weak intellect, riding the crest of a family with money and power. Someone like President Reagan would have stayed on-point. Go after Al-Qaeda, hit them, do what needs doing to protect the US. The Bush administration used Al-Qaeda as a reason, once their initial reason fell apart, and the whole tie-in was, well, smarmy, self-serving, and irrelevant.

Now, here we are, thousands of our sons and daughters dead, tens of thousands physically and mentally destroyed (and those are just our citizens – magnify that by 10, 20, or 30 times for Iraqis), for a smarmy leader leading us into a contrived war.

Sad, regrettable, lowest point, waste… all words to describe what we have done. Mistake, as President Bush has said, is not one of those words. It was no mistake. It was intentional.

Christian Witness, Current Events, Perspective

Om – and that thing the Pope said

From New Delhi Television (NDTV) Borrowing in faith: Kerala church creates ripples

A new church in Kollam district in Kerala has adopted the motifs and religious practices of other faiths during its various ceremonies.

It is an attempt on part of the Latin Catholic church to promote inter-faith dialogue and understanding, but it is has been received with caution.

The Pope writing all that about being true to who Latin Rite Roman Catholics are, the Eucharist at the center, Gregorian chant, Latin should be used, etc. doesn’t seem to be playing in this part of India.

Fr Romance Antony conducts Sunday Mass at the Jagat Jyoti Mandir in Neendakara Panchayat.

Both the priest and his congregation sit cross-legged on the floor listening to bhajans. The pulpit and pews are missing. There isn’t even a crucifix behind what should have been the altar.

Christ is represented as seated in padmasana like the Buddha under the Bodhi tree.

Jesus, Buddah, Mohammad, Zoroaster… you know, the universal oneness.

“There is a paradigm shift from a closed community to a community which is able to accept other values and symbols,” said Fr Antony.

Wink, wink, nudge, nudge. It’s all a paradigm shift. Jesus is a fluid guy.

Inside the Church, there are reflections of Hinduism, Islam, Buddhism, Jainism and even Zoroastrianism. Even the Last Supper as portrayed by Da Vinci reflects a strong indigenisation.

Had to look at that one a couple times. They mean becoming indigenous. I thought they said indigestion at first. My bad.

Christ and his disciples are shown seated eating from banana leaves.

And atop the Church is a huge “Om” where there’s normally a crucifix. Father Antony insists there’s a method to this confluence of religious symbolism.

A method that only exists within the poor priest’s mind, a method that is self-serving rather than God serving.

“Most of the Rig Veda symbols are neutral. They do not pertain to any religion, not even to Hinduism. Say “Om” or the kirtans in Rig Veda – they go beyond religion and Gods. They are part of a universal religious search and can be practiced by all religions,” he added.

Public opinion is divided in this small fishing hamlet. While some see it as an attempt to convert people to Christianity, others view it as a dilution of the Christian ethos.

You see, its only an ethos – kind of like ether.

“Initially, Christians were opposed to it. Now they are slowly accepting it,” said Francis, Devotee.

That is the saddest part. The shepherd is leading the sheep astray. For my part I’m wondering why they want to refer to themselves as Catholics. No problem, be what you want, but get a new moniker. Episcopalian anyone?

And in case you can’t get to that part of India to witness this fiasco, just hie yourself over to the Hubbard Interfaith SanctuaryWhen I came to Albany I noticed an amazing trend. Roman Catholic parishes here tend to have halls, centers, schools, etc. named after their current pastors. Nothing timeless like, oh, Saints, past Bishops, long dead pastors. Nope, its always the current guy. The R.C. parish we belonged to for a while had the Fr. Toole Center – replete with kelly green throughout – a homage to the wearin ‘o the green. at the College of St. Rose right here in Albany NY. The ‘sanctuary’ at this nominally Catholic college is named after the current Roman Catholic Bishop of Albany, Howard Hubbard. There you will witness:

Buddhist Monks Create Sand Mandala, Monday – Friday, March 26-30, 2007, 9:00 AM – 9:00 PM.

As part of a weeklong celebration to mark the 10th anniversary of the Hubbard Interfaith Sanctuary, a local community of Buddhist monks will be on campus to create a sand mandala. Contact the Office of Spiritual Life. Father ChrisRev. Christopher DeGiovine, Chair of the Diocesan Committee on Ongoing Formation and Continuing Education of Priests will be happy to help.

Does this sound familiar…

Perspective, PNCC,

The Eucharist, the Pope, the Press, directions

I took a look at the Pope’s Apostolic Exhortation “Sacramentum Caritatis” (Sacrament of Charity) on the Eucharist and the press that surrounded the release of the document. Wow – how can so many have their facts so confused.

I read through one press account that was so far removed from the actuality of the document as to be a basic lie. What was worse however were the public comments attached to the article. People argued over points in the press report, proclaiming the Pope good or evil, depending on perspective, and arguing over things that existed only within the article.

On issues of religion the press scores 100% on the you can fool most of the people all of the time.

Now I have my own perspective, and would proffer the following:

  • Was this meant for the Latin Church only? I understand that the general points address the entire Church, but I saw nothing that spoke to the Eastern Churches in any particular way – addressing their Tradition or tradition. Did I miss something or was there nothing there.
  • I know the term ‘reform of the reform’ is popular, and I guess it fits that need. That being said, I do not see the needs of traditionalist Roman Catholics addressed anywhere in the document. The much vaulted Motu Proprio, coming any day, still lies in the dust of adherence to V-II norms. Whoever is at the core of the Motu Proprio leaks is really yanking peoples chains – and is without charity.
  • The discussion of proper architecture is long overdue, but the document leaves design in the hands of folks like Bishop Tod Brown, Donald Trautman, and Cardinal Mahoney. The Eucharist will continue to be relegated to the broom closet in diocese like those.
  • The Eucharist is indeed a sacrament of charity and of the graces necessary for men and women. I’ve addressed this point in this blog before. The continued exclusions and prohibitions outlined in the Exhortation fall short of attaching Eucharistic reality to practice. The R.C. model continues to be prescriptive. As such, it limits and restricts the healing grace, present in the gift of the Eucharist.
  • The discussion of the celibacy issue continues to mix metaphors. Tying a man made rule to a Divine mandate, and demanding of the Lord a grace that only the Lord can give, is not working for the building up of the Church. As God’s grace must flow freely into the hearts of men and women from Eucharistic reception, with those men and women, and thus Church, reaping its benefits, so too must the Church be trusting of the graces given to men for presbyteral service – whether married or not.
  • The Latin issue is a non-issue. As far as I’m concerned everyone should learn a little. For folks in the U.S., it will provide some insight into the origins of parts of the English (and a lot of the Spanish) language. It is also part and parcel of a vast repertoire of fantastic Church — and secular — music. Expand the mind and be open. All the complaining over Latin being restrictive is ironic coming from those whose minds are shut to learning anything of their heritage and history.

Of course the PNCC has a different take on reception of the Eucharist, celibacy, architecture, T/tradition, and language. We were ahead of the curve by about 60 years on all the truly positive aspects of V-II without loosing proper praxis. As I’ve noted before, the damage done in the 10 years following V-II will take 3-4 right thinking Popes about 100 years to fix.

In all, this is a good first step, giving a slight nudge to the people of the Roman Church, turning them ever so slightly onto the right road. I hope it continues.