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Iraq Cancels Christmas
Wearing a gas mask, Santa strolls down the streets of Baghdad. He carefully treads through flurries of shredded trash strewn across dirt blackened by nearly three months of ongoing protests. Iraq’s churches declared Christmas cancelled—so Santa walks the streets early, distributing offertory roses of peace among protesters.
Bridges, also a symbol of peace, have become defined by some of the deadliest scenes of violence throughout Iraq’s protests. Christians and Muslims gather, their religious differences reconciled as they stand together with a unified voice: no more corruption, no more sectarianism, protect our rights. Instead, the government met them with violence. An estimated 400 dead, and 15,000 injured.
Though many churches have had to cancel services since the start of the protests, canceling Christmas throughout Iraq is a statement of solidarity. Cardinal-Patriarch Louis Sako explained the decision, “Canceling Christmas and New Year celebrations are respecting the blood of the martyrs which has been shed. We also feel the pain of their parents. We will not receive guests for Christmas at the Patriarch office this year. We will only do mass and pray for our martyrs and the victims of violence. Also we will pray for healing for the injured ones.”
He added, “We hope life goes back to normal and Iraq can host all of its religions and ethnic groups. We hope a country can maintain rights of equality, respect, nationalism, and life with dignity.”
The protests have inspired a new hope for Christians that life is possible in Iraq, and that Muslims will support their place in society. But the violence of the government toward protesters is both shocking and alarming. No one knows if the protesters will succeed. It is hard to celebrate Christmas while blood runs through the streets.
“Christmas and New Year’s celebrations being canceled a kind of support to our brothers and sisters who are protesting,” said one believer from northern Iraq. “I am so sorry for what is happening in Baghdad and the southern parts of Iraq. I wish I can celebrate at Tahir Square with the protesters.”
This pain is felt by many Christians. Watching their countrymen stand for equal rights—and paying the ultimate price—is like a surreal dream. “We are not happy enough to celebrate as we do every year. What we are witnessing on the ground is very depressing. The blood shed is valuable,” added one.
“2019 was a sad year, now it is toward the end and we have a slice of hope,” shared another. “We lost a lot of young people and we are looking for a solution for the foundation, not the branches. I will not celebrate this year, and will not even have a Christmas tree unless I see true government change.”
The symbolism of canceling Christmas has resonated deeply with Muslims, who are further encouraged to continue asking for equality of rights in Iraq. “We appreciate what Sako did by cancelling the celebrations,” one Muslim woman supporting the protests shared. “This is a great support for the parents who lost a member. Christians are well known with their courage and respecting others. I am happy to live among Christians. I hope we have a Christian prime minister or president one day!”
Santa—a Christian symbol—walking through the streets of Baghdad was an encouragement for protesters to continue asking for these kinds of changes. “Santa used to be a sign of joy,” observed one local Muslim. “Not this year. I believe Santa this year is a sign of hope of a better future.”
His presence on the streets showed how, even while officially the country is not celebrating Christmas, the occasion will be acknowledged, not forgotten. One Syriac priest explained, “There will be a mass on Christmas. It is an extraordinary occasion. Christ has born, but there is a wound in our hearts. It is the wound of the country. The young people who fall down because of violence; we will not celebrate as normal.”
“I am one of them who will celebrate Christmas service as normal. The revelation continues! We will pray for victory against the corrupted parties,” an evangelical Christian also shared.
So much uncertainty swirls throughout Iraq. Will the protesters truly achieve victory?
But one thing is certain: when Christmas day finally dawns in Iraq, a silent prayer will be gathering within the hearts of many citizens, regardless of religion. A prayer for peace. A prayer for equality. A prayer for a new way of life in their country.
Sources: Persecution.
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‘Something Demonic in That’: The Real-Life Evil Driving Slaughter, Horror of Global Persecution
By all accounts, Christian persecution is worsening across the globe. Joel Veldkamp, head of international communications at Christian Solidarity International, is among those who know the full extent of the issue, often observing its evils firsthand.
And these diabolical infractions — from killings to land seizure to discrimination — have a rooting, Veldkamp believes, in the overarching spiritual battle between good and evil.
“I think the way the Bible speaks about how the powers and the principalities operate is very important, because, what drives the powers and the principalities of the air — you might say, the evil spiritual powers of the world — is a desire to unseat God and to be the most powerful, the most important thing in the universe,” he said. “And we see a lot of the temporal powers, so states, governments, terrorist groups, are driven by a similar desire — a desire for supremacy, a desire to remake the world the way they want to see it be remade.”
These individuals and groups will essentially “give themselves over to evil” to achieve their stated goals and aspirations. The result of these tragic quests can often be seen in the deadly persecution observed in various nations across the globe.
Among other examples, Veldkamp cited Nagorno-Karabakh, a small, landlocked region between Armenia and Azerbaijan that had long been steeped in Christian history and was populated by mostly Armenian Christians.
“This is a place where there’s 1,700 years of uninterrupted Christian history,” he said. “This is a place where some of the first translations of the Bible were made into languages outside of Greek. This is a place where just generations and generations of people have carried on the faith, and last year it was destroyed.”
Veldkamp decried “an ethnic cleansing campaign by the dictatorship of Azerbaijan,” which included a siege and military attack that eventually drove out the entire population.
“Again, I think there’s something demonic in that we had a nine-month lead time on this,” Veldkamp said. “Everyone could see it happening. We could see it coming down the pike. We knew how this was going to end. And no one in the world seemed to be able to muster the political will to do anything about it.”
The end result is the exile of these Armenian Christians and a loss of Christian history, with many lives upended in the process. Veldkamp said coping with so much suffering can be difficult.
“Sometimes [I] get messages from people who have family members who are being held hostage in Azerbaijan right now,” he said. “And I feel really helpless, and at a loss of what to say — to comfort them. It can be difficult.”
Yet Veldkamp finds solace in the Bible, where he sees people hundreds — and even thousands — of years ago facing the same pressures believers face today.
Veldkamp described Scripture as often telling the “story of the people of God under pressure.” And those pressures are still unfolding today in countries like North Korea, China, and Nigeria, among many others. And, tragically he said the problem is worsening.
“It’s getting worse for a few specific reasons,” he said. “But mostly having to do with the increased competition and even wars that we’re seeing between the superpowers now — between the U.S., Russia, and China, that are always competing for influence in different parts of the world.”
Veldkamp said the “illusion of an international order” that once persisted in the 1990s and beyond is “starting to come apart.”
“Dictators and terrorists feel fewer compunctions about carrying out their programs,” he said. “So, in places like South Asia and Southeast Asia, we’re seeing a lot of governments take steps to really restrict free practice of religion in ways they wouldn’t have before. In Africa, we see that jihad is spreading from country to country, really piggybacking off of the conflict between Russia, and the U.S., and China for influence in Africa.”
Unfortunately, the safeguards that once “restrained human evil” are no longer holding back the chaos, leading to a situation that gives little more than a “grim outlook,” according to Veldkamp.
Whether it’s addressing Azerbaijan’s horrors or deadly persecution in Nigeria, Veldkamp encouraged Christians and Americans more broadly to stand up and speak out.
“Often, U.S. policy towards these countries will just get set, and it’s very difficult to change the policy once it’s set,” he said. “But we’re in a moment now where we can have some influence because we have a new president … there will be new policies, new policies are being formulated, and now is the time to raise our voice.”
Veldkamp continued, “I would really encourage Christians, especially Christians who voted for President Trump to make their voices heard … tell [his team], ‘I care about Nigeria. I care about Armenia. I care about Christians in Syria. I care about this issue.’”
Sources:faithwire
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സീനിയർ പാസ്റ്റേഴ്സിനെ ആദരിച്ചു
ചിക്കാഗോ: കഴിഞ്ഞ അര നൂറ്റാണ്ടോളം ചിക്കാഗോയിൽ സഭാ പ്രവർത്തനരംഗത്ത് പ്രശംസനീയമായ നേതൃത്വം കൊടുത്ത നാല് സീനിയർ പാസ്റ്റർമാരെ ചിക്കാഗോ ഗോസ്പൽ മീഡിയ അസോസിയേഷന്റെ ആഭിമുഖ്യത്തിൽ നടത്തപ്പെട്ട സമ്മേളനത്തിൽ ആദരിച്ചു.
സീനിയർ പാസ്റ്റർമാരായ റവ പി വി കുരുവിള, റവ ജോസഫ് കെ ജോസഫ്, റവ പി സി മാമ്മൻ റവ ജോർജ് കെ സ്റ്റീഫൻസൻ എന്നിവരെയാണ് വിശ്വാസ സമൂഹം ആദരിച്ചത്. സിജിഎംഎ ജനറൽ സെക്രട്ടറി കുര്യൻ ഫിലിപ്പ് യോഗനടപടികൾക്ക് നേതൃത്വം നൽകി. രക്ഷാധികാരി കെ എം ഈപ്പൻ,പ്രസിഡന്റ് ഡോ അലക്സ് ടി കോശി, വൈസ് പ്രസിഡന്റ് ഡോ ടൈറ്റസ് ഈപ്പൻ, ജോയിൻ സെക്രട്ടറി ഡോ ബിജു ചെറിയാൻ, ട്രഷറർ ജോൺസൺ ഉമ്മൻ എന്നിവർ സംഘടനയുടെ പുരസ്കാരം പാസ്റ്റർമാർക്ക് നൽകി.
എഫ്പിസിസിയുടെ ഉപഹാരം കൺവീനർ ഡോ വില്ലി എബ്രഹാം സമ്മാനിച്ചു. ജെയിംസ് ജോസഫ്, ബ്യൂല ബെൻ എന്നിവർ എംസി മാരായിരുന്നു റെവ ജോർജ് മാത്യു പുതുപ്പള്ളി മുഖ്യാതിഥിയായിരുന്നു.
Sources:nerkazhcha
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അമേരിക്കയെ വീണ്ടും മഹത്തരമാക്കാൻ ദൈവം എന്നെ സംരക്ഷിച്ചു: ഡൊണാൾഡ് ട്രംപ്
“അമേരിക്കയെ വീണ്ടും മഹത്തരമാക്കാൻ ദൈവം എന്നെ സംരക്ഷിച്ചു” എന്നു പറഞ്ഞുകൊണ്ട് തനിക്കു നേരിട്ട രണ്ടു കൊലപാതകശ്രമങ്ങളെ അതിജീവിച്ചതിന് ഡൊണാൾഡ് ട്രംപ് ദൈവത്തിനു നന്ദി പറഞ്ഞു. ജനുവരി 20 ന് അമേരിക്കയുടെ നാല്പത്തിയേഴാമത് പ്രസിഡന്റായി അധികാരമേറ്റ ട്രംപ് തന്റെ ഉദ്ഘാടന പ്രസംഗത്തിലാണ് ഇപ്രകാരം അനുസ്മരിച്ചത്.
പ്രസിഡന്റ് ജോ ബൈഡന്റെ കഴിഞ്ഞ നാല് വർഷത്തെ അമേരിക്കൻ ‘വിമോചന ദിനം’ എന്ന് തന്റെ പ്രസംഗത്തിൽ വിശേഷിപ്പിച്ച ട്രംപ് ഇപ്പോൾ മുതൽ അമേരിക്കയുടെ സുവർണ്ണകാലം ആരംഭിക്കുന്നുവെന്നും ഇതിനുവേണ്ടിയാണ് എന്റെ ജീവൻ സംരക്ഷിക്കപ്പെട്ടതെന്നും പങ്കുവച്ചു. “ഇന്ന് മുതൽ, നമ്മുടെ രാജ്യം അഭിവൃദ്ധി പ്രാപിക്കുകയും ബഹുമാനിക്കപ്പെടുകയും ചെയ്യും. നമ്മെ മുതലെടുക്കാൻ ആരെയും അനുവദിക്കില്ല. എന്റെ ഭരണനാളുകളിൽ അമേരിക്കയെ ഞാൻ ഒന്നാമതെത്തിക്കും” അദ്ദേഹം ഉറപ്പുനൽകി.
നമ്മുടെ രാജ്യത്തെയും ഭരണഘടനയെയും ദൈവത്തെയും മറക്കുകയില്ല എന്നും അദ്ദേഹം തന്റെ ഉദ്ഘാടനപ്രസംഗത്തിൽ ഉറപ്പുനൽകി.
Sources:azchavattomonline.com
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