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Posts Tagged ‘Orthodox’

New patriarch to be elected Jan. 22

The new head of the Serbian Orthodox Church (SPC) is expected to be elected on January 22, reports say. The Holy Synod of the SPC announced today in Belgrade that the Conclave of the Serbian Orthodox Church will meet on that day.

Religious leaders react to patriarch’s passing

In the wake of the news that His Holiness Patriarch Pavle had died, numerous leaders of religious communities in the country and region sent their condolences. Representatives of both Islamic communities sent telegrams of condolences to the Serbian Orthodox Church and the Serb Orthodox believers.

Ambassador on “Slavic, Orthodox ties”

Serbia should join the EU, but it should also cooperate with Russia, says Russian Ambassador Aleksandr Konuzin. In a lecture entitled “Russia and the Modern World” given at Belgrade’s Megatrend University, the diplomat noted that Serbia should also “not forget it is a Slavic and Orthodox country”.

Patriarch asserts Russian primacy

Patriarch Kirill (28 July 2009)

The head of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Kirill, has told worshippers in Ukraine their breakaway Church must reunite with Moscow.

After leading prayers at the Monastery of the Caves in Kiev, he appealed to them to "return to the father’s house".

The Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Kiev Patriarchate broke away from the Moscow Patriarchate in the early 1990s.

Thousands marched through the Ukrainian capital on Tuesday to protest against the patriarch’s visit.

Demonstrators carried placards denouncing what they see as Russian interference in their country, and in support of the Kiev Patriarchate.

Independence aspirations

The protest coincided with a service at the Pechersk Lavra marking the 1,021st anniversary of the conversion to Christianity of Kievan Rus, the ancient state that gave rise to modern-day Ukraine and Russia.

"The aspiration to brotherly unity has not melted among Orthodox Ukrainian people"

Patriarch Kirill

During the ceremony, Patriarch Kirill called on the Kiev Patriarchate to reunite with the Moscow Patriarchate, which considers it schismatic.

"Not all our brothers of the same faith share this holiday today," he said. "Some find themselves outside the Church’s saving fence, outside its precious unity."

"The aspiration to brotherly unity has not melted among Orthodox Ukrainian people. I saw it myself today when I was looking at you all," he added.

The Kiev Patriarchate broke away from the Moscow Patriarchate in 1991, when Ukraine gained its independence.

It has sought the status of a legitimate, independent national Church, not answering to Moscow, from the ultimate spiritual authority in the Orthodox world, Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople. But he has provided no clear response.

Protesters against Patriarch Kirill's visit hold up a banner saying: "Down with the Moscow coloniser!"

Its efforts are also strongly backed by Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko, who believes a recognised independent church is a key part of strengthening Ukraine’s national identity.

However, BBC Russian affairs analyst Steven Eke says the Russian Orthodox Church wields considerable political weight, and plays a role in the Kremlin’s policies aimed at strengthening the Russian state and its influence abroad.

This is what makes Patriarch Kirill’s visit to Ukraine so divisive, our correspondent says.

Nationalist groups, many Ukrainian-speakers and the congregations of the Kiev Patriarchate see him less as a religious pastor, and more as a political activist seeking to boost the Kremlin’s influence in their land, he adds.</p


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

Orthodox Jews stand firm

The Haredi population believe in big families and reject TVs, computers, and Zionism

The headlines declared it a holy war, an almighty stand-off between the city’s religious and secular residents. For weeks West Jerusalem has been rocked by fierce street battles as ultra-religious Jewish protesters have clashed with police, resulting in countless injuries, dozens of arrests and thousands of pounds damage.

Protests first erupted over the opening of a municipal car park on Saturdays, seen as a desecration of the Sabbath. Then riots flared again at the arrest of an ultra-religious woman accused of starving her toddler son, which protesters viewed as heavy-handed police interference. These furious protests have been reported as the actions of a tiny minority, supporters of a violent and backward religious fundamentalism. The ultra-Orthodox counter that they have been cast as monsters, as usual – victims of religious intolerance.

“They lie to make us seem small and extreme,” says Yoel Kraus, one of the demonstrators. “We are a quarter of the Jewish population here – and you can’t fight that.” Kraus, 37, is from Eda Haredit, an anti-state grouping within the ultra-Orthodox sector, which organised many of the recent protests in the city. In total, the ultra-orthodox sector – known as “Haredi” or “God-fearing” – forms around half of the Jewish population in Jerusalem. The recent clashes have taken place against the background of a rapidly expanding, low-income Haredi population perceived to be taking over the city.

The past decade or so has seen a steady exodus of secular residents who feel that they have been squeezed out of an increasingly religious city, while the ultra-Orthodox population has spread to previously non-religious neighbourhoods, so that more of West Jerusalem feels religiously observant.

Kraus, 37, lives with his wife Rachel, 36, and their 11 children in Mea Shearim, a Haredi neighbourhood of Jerusalem dating back to the 19th century. Insular and devout, the area is home to predominantly European-origin residents, and resembles an old shtetl (traditional 19th century Jewish town in eastern Europe). Winding stone streets bear signs reminding visitors to dress modestly, act respectfully, and don’t come in big groups. Placards mark Israel’s 61st anniversary as a holocaust for the Jewish people. For some groups, including Eda Haredit, the creation of the Jewish state goes against God’s will.

As a secular ideology, Zionism is considered heretic and is accused of pretending to end Jewish exile which the ultra-Orthodox believe can only cease with the messiah’s arrival.

The Kraus family’s 150-year-old stone building is a renovator’s dream project, but inside it is plain and peeling – a modest, two-room home with an extra room for the elder boys in the cellar. The furniture is basic: a simple dining table, a second-hand fridge, two large sofabeds that roll out for the older children; single beds for the parents and cots for the younger kids. The books are holy, and the walls are bare except for a few framed religious texts and an old pendulum clock, which has stopped.

“The purpose of life is to serve God, to fulfil religious obligations – not to live in modern luxury,” says Yoel Kraus, a religious student who works part-time at a slaughterhouse. “Every day we see the world getting worse, more aggressive. We see the dangers and are trying to preserve a few things.”

As is typical within this community, the Klaus family do not own a TV, or computer, or read newspapers, seen as time-wasting, brain-destroying activities. Yoel now owns a “kosher” mobile phone, which doesn’t text or dial certain numbers. The family rarely ventures beyond the neighbourhood and do not have dealings with what Yoel calls the “Zionist state” – no national insurance or healthcare or education services. Many Haredi families do take welfare benefits and stipends for religious study, to the annoyance of sections of secular society. But Yoel says: “We don’t want one shekel from the state, and because of that I can fight them more freely.”

The couple’s six sons and five daughters range in age from 14 to a one-year old girl, a typically large Haredi family. “A Jewish mother has a purpose in life, to educate the next generation of Jewish people,” says Rachel. “She has a role, responsibility, she has to be an example and to focus on what she is doing – she prays a lot for guidance.”

Because of this custom of big families and the material poverty in which they live, the ultra-Orthodox often face accusations of negligence. “We don’t have this empty hole that secular people do, of always wanting more,” says Rachel. “Secular children are like that too: the more you give them, the more they want. We fill that hole in childhood with something spiritual and permanent, so they do not feel they are lacking.”

The children attend religious schools and do not have summer holidays: schools break according to the religious calendar. From the age of six boys are at school all day, while girls finish at lunchtime. The Klaus family communicates in Yiddish – none of the children learns Hebrew at school, as its everyday usage is deemed another Zionist abomination. Exposed to Hebrew in the neighbourhood, the parents and some of the elder children do now speak the language. But Rachel says: “Yiddish is our way of preventing assimilation. It’s our wall.”

They are well aware of how the outside world sees them. “If you don’t live it, this life looks impossible,” says Rachel. “But we don’t do it out of force, or with any difficulty. We feel the closeness of God and we are content, because we have fulfilment.”

Some commentators have seen the current protests as a show of ultra-religious power, a flexing of muscles to counter a recently elected secular mayor of Jerusalem who seems determined to reverse the secular brain drain from this poverty-stricken city. Elected in November 2008, when he ousted an ultra-religious mayor, Eli Barkat says he wants to attract tourists and day-trippers to Jerusalem. But that would involve what the ultra-Orthodox view as more Sabbath desecrations, as more shops and restaurants would open on Saturdays to accommodate the influx.

The protests in Jerusalem have consumed the Israeli media, but the Haredi community have a wider perspective, seeing it all as a historic battle between self-styled defenders of the Jewish faith and a secular state seeking to destroy it.

For the Kraus family, there is no way to relate to the non-religious world, or its concerns. “A secular person will never understand me, and I will never understand him,” says Yoel. “I see him stressed and angry all day long … and I think I have a better life than most. What am I lacking?”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Ultra-orthodox Jews visit Hamas

Anti-zionist ultra-orthodox Jews in front of a picture of Dome of the Rock mosque, during Gaza visit

Four members of a group of ultra-Orthodox Jews opposed to the existence of Israel have visited Hamas in Gaza.

The men, clad in the traditional ultra-Orthodox garb of black hats and coats and with long side-curls in their hair, met Hamas leader Ismail Haniya.

The Neturei Karta believe that a Jewish state can only be established by the Messiah and thus denounce Israel as heretic and embrace its enemies.

Mr Haniya welcomed them, saying Hamas rejects Zionist ideology, not Jews.

"We feel your suffering, we cry your cry," the Associated Press quoted Rabbi Yisroel Weiss as saying.

"It is your land, it is occupied, illegitimately and unjustly by people who stole it, kidnapped the name of Judaism and our identity."

The representatives entered Gaza, which is under a strict Israeli embargo, with a convoy of activists who travelled through Egypt.

‘Heroes’

Neturei Karta, Aramaic for "Guardians of the City" was founded some 70 years ago in Jerusalem.

Estimates of the group’s size range from a few hundred to a few thousand – some in Israel, others in the UK and US.

Members have praised Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for saying Israel should be erased from the pages of history – sometimes translated as "wiped off the map".

They have also attended a Holocaust denial conference in Tehran and held a prayer vigil for the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat as he lay on his death bed.

Mr Haniya described the men as "heroes", according to Palestinian media reports.

"Our problem is with the occupation, that stems from the Zionist ideology and its desire to disperse all the Palestinians," he said.

"Those religious figures that express their objection to the siege, the aggression and the crimes – we can’t help but respect them and for their beliefs and their culture."

Israel and most Western countries regard Hamas as a terrorist group and refuse to deal directly with it.

The movement is sworn to the destruction of Israel in its charter and backs attacks on Israeli civilians, although has offered a long-term ceasefire in exchange for a Palestinian state on the full territory of the West Bank and Gaza.</p


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

Orthodox strife grips Jerusalem

Ultra-Orthodox Jewish man argues with Israeli police

Israeli police have closed off areas of Jerusalem where ultra-Orthodox Jews have been staging violent protests.

Haredi demonstrators set fire to rubbish bins and threw stones at police in protest at perceived interference by the authorities in their community.

The latest incidents followed the arrest of an ultra-orthodox woman for alleged abuse of her young son.

At least 15 protesters have been arrested and Mayor Nir Barkat ordered some municipal services be cut off.

The protests are taking place in two ultra-Orthodox neighbourhoods, Mea Shearim and Bar-Ilan.

There were reports of renewed violence between black-garbed Haredim and police using horses and water cannon.

Anger is high at what has been seen as the "unjust" arrest of the mother, who is said to be suffering from a mental disorder and who is alleged to have deliberately starved her three-year-old son.

Another current Haredi grievance has been the Sabbath opening of a private car park near the religiously sensitive Old City area, when Orthodox Jews abstain from work.

Jerusalem is home to large Orthodox communities whose strict adherence to Jewish law sometimes puts them at odds with more secular Jews.</p


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