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Demonstration to Be Held in Berlin in Support of Assyrian Monastery

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  • Demonstration to Be Held in Berlin in Support of Assyrian Monastery

    Assyrian International News Agency AINA
    Jan 24 2009


    Demonstration to Be Held in Berlin in Support of Assyrian Monastery


    Tens of thousands of Armenians across Europe are preparing for a huge
    demonstration to take place in Berlin on Sunday -- Women and married
    men are to play a bigger role in France's Catholic Church -- A private
    high school in Cologne takes special care of immigrant children --
    Some ancient laws in Britain concerning inter-religious relations are
    up for change

    "Save the monastery of Mor Gabriel, save Christendom in Turkey" --
    that is the slogan of a huge demonstration planned for Sunday,
    Jan. 15, in Berlin. Its aim is to help safeguard the existence of Mor
    Gabriel -- also known as the Monastery of St. Gabriel -- which is the
    spiritual center of Syrian-Orthodox Christians in Turkey. Founded in
    397, it is the oldest surviving Syriac Orthodox monastery in the
    world. It is located on the Tur Abdin plateau in Southeastern Turkey,
    the motherland of the Syriac people. Its main purpose is to keep
    Syriac Orthodox Christianity alive in the land of its birth by
    providing schooling and the ordination of native-born
    monks. Throughout its long history, it has also provided physical
    protection to Turkey's Christian minority. The so-called "Action Mor
    Gabriel" was founded by S.E. Mor Julius Dr. Hanna Aydin, the
    Archbishop of the Syrian-Orthodox church of Antiochia in Germany in
    November 2008. It unites six organizations, namely the Archdiocese of
    Syrian-Orthodox Churches in Germany, the umbrella organization of Tur
    Abdin, the European Syriac Union, the Federation of Armenians in
    Germany, the Federation Survoye and the Central Council of Assyrian
    Associations in Germany. The managing director of the "Action Mor
    Gabriel" is Raid Gharib, a German citizen of Turkish descent. He is a
    political scientist working at the university of Tübingen on a
    Ph.D. entitled "Nation and identity of the Syriac Christians: The
    quest for a feasible societal model."

    The President of the French Bishops' Conference André Vingt-Trois
    launched towards the end of last year an unprecedented campaign to
    recruit more priests. This must be, said the Cardinal, the daily
    preoccupation of French churchmen and women. Even President Sarkozy
    has said it is a problem for his country. There were 41,000 French
    priests in 1965. There are half that number today. And now mass is
    said never or very rarely in most country churches. Although there is
    no sign that the Vatican is about to reform the celibacy rule or admit
    women to the priesthood, it is allowing women and married men to play
    a much bigger role -- with potentially far-reaching consequences for
    the future.

    For young people in Germany with an immigration background, one of the
    biggest challenges is preserving their cultural heritage, while still
    preparing for life as adults in German society. Over the past few
    years, a number of high schools have been set up with just that
    challenge in mind. One of them is the Dialogue Private High School in
    Cologne, which opened in 2007. Though its students are predominantly
    Muslims, the school doesn't see itself as a religious institution. The
    school's top priority is to give its students the chance to take and
    pass the national college entry exams.

    In Britain, a new attempt is being made to change ancient laws which
    bans the monarch from marrying a Catholic. The Act of Settlement,
    introduced by King William III in 1701 states anyone who marries a
    Catholic cannot become king or queen. It also gives legal precedence
    to male heirs in the line of succession, and it is these two aspects
    that a British lawmaker wants to change. Dr. Evan Harris, from the
    country's third political party the Liberal Democrats says this
    blatant religious and sex discrimination is outdated and must go.

    www.dw-world.de
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