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Posts Tagged ‘Benedict XVI’

Catholic bank owned pill shares

Contraceptive pill

A Roman Catholic bank in Germany has apologised after admitting it bought stocks in defence, tobacco and birth control companies.

Der Spiegel newspaper discovered the bank had invested 580,000 euros (£495,310, $826,674) in British arms company BAE Systems.

It also invested 160,000 euros in American birth control pill maker Wyeth and 870,000 euros in tobacco companies.

The bank apologised for behaviour "not in keeping with ethical standards".

Pax Bank has previously advertised ethical investment funds, specifically claiming to avoid arms and tobacco companies along with organisations that do not adhere to Catholic beliefs.

Since 1968 the Catholic church has condemned contraception – a view emphatically upheld by current Pope Benedict XVI.

In the past he has called birth control a "grave sin".

A spokesman for Pax Bank said: "We will rectify the mistakes immediately without negative consequences for our clients.

"Unfortunately in a few internal reviews, the critical investments in question were overlooked – we deeply regret this."

The spokesman thanked journalists for bringing the controversial investments to its attention. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

The Vatican’s got talent: Pope voice on album

By Colin Paterson
Entertainment reporter, BBC News

Pope Benedict XVI

Pope Benedict XVI will be heard singing and speaking on an album to be released on the record label that was home to Nirvana and Guns N’ Roses.

The pontiff is to release Alma Mater, an album of Lauretan litanies and prayers with musical accompaniment, through Geffen Records.

The label said listeners would be "shocked" by his "incredible voice".

The album, which features the Pope using five different languages, will be released on 30 November.

The project came about after the label learned earlier this year that Benedict XVI had been working on an album with the Choir of the Philharmonic Academy of Rome.

‘Very happy’

Colin Barlow, president of Geffen UK, explained: "We travelled to Rome, heard some of the music and realised it was a beautiful piece of music and something that actually could be an incredible record for us to work on.

"It’s very much about delivering a really brilliant piece of music and making sure we treat it with the respect it deserves."

The album will contain eight pieces of music, one featuring Pope Benedict singing and the others providing accompaniment to his recitals of passages and prayers.

GEFFEN RECORDS

  • First signing was Donna Summer
  • Launched a $3m (£1.8m) lawsuit against Neil Young in 1983 for not making commercial records
  • In 1994, three Geffen acts – Nirvana, Beck and Counting Crows – occupied the top three in the US modern rock chart.

But Pope Benedict did not go into the studio – the Vatican supplied recordings of his vocals made at official services and also from speeches he made on his foreign trips.

The choir recorded their parts in St Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City, while the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra recorded the classical backing track in London’s Abbey Road Studios.

Barlow said the Pope was pleased with the progress of the recording.

"We’ve had a letter from the Vatican saying that he’s heard the music so far and he’s very happy with what he’s heard," he added.

Proceeds will help to to providing music education for underprivileged children around the world.

Geffen Records was founded in 1980 and had its first number one album with John Lennon’s Double Fantasy.

By the end of the decade it started to specialise in rock music, signing the likes of Guns N’ Roses, Aerosmith and Nirvana.

Geffen also recently signed Dame Shirley Bassey.

The albums of Dame Shirley and the Pope will both be out in time for Christmas.

It is not the first time a Pope has released an album.

In 1982, John Paul II reached number 71 in the charts with The Pilgrim Pope, and, in 1994, his recording of The Rosary peaked at number 50.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Tom Gregory: Vatican Bombshell!: Goldman Sachs IS The Holy Ghost!

(Reuters – Rome): L’Osservatore Romano is reporting that The Vatican has declared Goldman Sachs to be The Holy Ghost. The revelation has inspired hordes…

Jens Voigt crash in Stage 16 of the Tour de France

BOURG-SAINT-MAURICE, France (AP) — Alberto Contador rode hard to keep the Tour de France’s yellow jersey in the Alps on Tuesday, while teammate Lance Armstrong produced a dazzling burst of speed to remain in second place.
Mikel Astarloza of Spain won the 16th stage, a 99-mile route from the Swiss town of Martigny to Bourg-Saint-Maurice. Contador [...]

Pope ‘Can’t Pray’ With Wrist In Cast

LES COMBES, Italy — Pope Benedict XVI spent a calm night after breaking his wrist in his Alpine vacation chalet and is learning to cope with the cast on his right arm, the Vatican said Saturday.

Benedict, 82, will stick to his schedule of pu…

Pope leaves hospital after wrist surgery

Pope discharged after successful surgery on wrist broken during fall at his holiday chalet in the Italian Alps

The pope has left hospital after surgery on a wrist broken during a fall at his holiday chalet in the Italian Alps.

Pope Benedict, 82, smiled broadly and waved to the crowd with his left hand as he climbed into his car outside the hospital in the north-western Italian town of Aosta. His right arm hung by his side, the cast hidden by his white vestments.

Surgeons performed a 20-minute operation to reduce the fracture, a procedure to realign the broken bone fragments. The surgery was performed under local anaesthetic.

A Vatican statement said the pope fell in his room in a nearby chalet overnight. Despite the accident, he celebrated mass and had breakfast before going to hospital.

The Ansa news agency reported that he had arrived at the hospital by car and walked into the first-aid ward accompanied by an aide.

Benedict XVI has been healthy during his five-year pontificate. The pontiff has been staying at a chalet in the village of Les Combes, in the Valle d’Aosta region near the French border, since Monday.

His predecessor, Pope John Paul II, also spent several summers at Les Combes. While John Paul liked to hike, Benedict spends most of his time inside the chalet, which looks out on Mont Blanc, the highest peak in the Alps.

Pope Benedict has spent two summers at Les Combes in recent years, and said upon arrival that he expected to rest and work during his vacation.

The pope is due to be away until 29 July, making at least two public appearances in the Valle d’Aosta area, including the traditional Angelus prayer on Sunday. He is expected to stick to his schedule despite the accident.

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Pope breaks right wrist in fall

Pope Benedict XVI. File photo

Pope Benedict XVI has been admitted to hospital after a fall while on holiday in northern Italy, but the Vatican says he was not seriously hurt.

The Pope, 82, went for a check-up at a hospital in the alpine town of Aosta.

"It is nothing serious," Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi was quoted as saying.

Reports say the Pope walked into the hospital with an aide. Pope Benedict, elected pontiff in 2005, was formerly Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger.

The Pope is reported to have injured one of his wrists. A Vatican statement is expected after the medical checks.

The Pope has been staying at a modest house with a view of Mont Blanc, in the village of Les Combes in the Valle d’Aosta region. It was a favourite vacation spot for his predecessor, Pope John Paul II.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Faith, economics and ecology: New sins, new virtues

As the world heats up and economic dislocation ravages the poor, religious leaders offer up their diagnoses and prescriptions

GLOBALISATION, technology and growth are in themselves neither positive or negative; they are whatever humanity makes of them. Summed up like that, the central message of a keenly awaited papal pronouncement on the social and economic woes of the world may sound like a statement of the obvious.

But despite some lapses into trendy jargon, Caritas in Veritate (Charity in Truth), a 144-page encyclical issued by Pope Benedict XVI on July 7th, is certainly not a banal or trivial document. It will delight some people, enrage others and occupy a prominent place among religious leaders’ competing attempts to explain and address the problems of an overheated, overcrowded planet. …