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  #31  
Old 09-18-2006, 10:09 PM
Victor Ziegler Victor Ziegler is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RACooper View Post
A variety of sources, including interviews and theological papers he's written (remember he did teach as a professor for a while) - one of the primary sources would be his views on rejecting membership to Turkey into the EU because of their Muslim culture and faith...

However there are a number of academic papers he has written with regards to the theological history of the Church during the Crusades; some published in Speculum under his secular name (prior to his Cardinalship), and others circulated to centres of Mediaeval study & research (such as PIMS - Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies). After becoming Pope, many of these articles and published views were examined in a series of seminars and lectures presented by PIMS... to which I was both an attendee, and the host in some cases...
Ah, cool! So you're not one of the people who gets all of their info from Reuters. I'm glad to stand corrected on that.
I'm sure you understood my concern, though - the biggest source of misunderstanding on topics like this is the dreaded sound-bite.

When I have a month or so I'll try to delve into the speech I linked to above. Then maybe I'll fell comfortable diving into the topic.

Have a good night.
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  #32  
Old 09-18-2006, 10:14 PM
RACooper RACooper is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Victor Ziegler View Post
Ah, cool! So you're not one of the people who gets all of their info from Reuters. I'm glad to stand corrected on that.
I'm sure you understood my concern, though - the biggest source of misunderstanding on topics like this is the dreaded sound-bite.

When I have a month or so I'll try to delve into the speech I linked to above. Then maybe I'll fell comfortable diving into the topic.

Have a good night.

Thanks,

Anyways it was one of the concerns raised at some of these seminars, that the new Pope's theological and personal feelings would differ significantly enough from JPII's, that the reaching out to other faiths and inter-faith dialouge would suffer.
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  #33  
Old 09-19-2006, 01:17 PM
jon1856 jon1856 is offline
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From the Op-Ed pages around the world:
http://cagle.com/news/PopeRemarks/main.asp

Last edited by jon1856; 09-19-2006 at 11:38 PM.
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  #34  
Old 09-21-2006, 11:19 AM
_Opi_ _Opi_ is offline
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Slain nun was willing to die to help Somalia's poor, colleagues say

By ELIZABETH A. KENNEDY/Associated Press Writer
Published: Thursday, September 21, 2006 8:02 AM CDT
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NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - Sister Leonella Sgorbati, who was slain outside a hospital where she worked as a missionary in Somalia's restive capital, was remembered Thursday as a devoted nun who was willing to die to help the starving and sick in Africa.

The 65-year-old nun was shot in the back four times Sunday in attack possibly linked to worldwide Muslim anger toward Pope Benedict XVI, who had quoted a Medieval text that characterized some of the teachings of Islam's founder as ‘‘evil and inhuman.'' Her bodyguard also was killed.

‘‘She was ever so generous,'' Sister Rose, her colleague at the Consolata Sisters of Kenya, said at a funeral that drew hundreds of mourners. ‘‘In the end, she gave her whole life. May the sacrifice of her life contribute to the peace of the world and of Somalia in particular.''

The nun's death, followed a day later by Somalia's first suicide bombing, raised fears of rising extremist violence in Somalia after more than 15 years of anarchy. The Islamic fundamentalists who control Mogadishu and much of southern Somalia have denied responsibility.

Born Rosa Sgorbati in Italy, Sister Leonella had lived and worked in Kenya and Somalia for 38 years. She and her bodyguard were shot as the two walked the 30 feet from the Mogadishu hospital to the sister's home, where three other nuns were waiting to have lunch with her.

There was no claim of responsibility for the attack, which came hours after a leading Somali cleric condemned the pope's Sept. 12 remarks.

Bishop Giorgio Bertin of Djibouti, who also serves as the apostolic administrator of Mogadishu, said Sister Leonella had a sense of naiveté, but she knew the dangers of her job. She used to joke that there was a bullet with her name engraved on it.

‘‘We can call her a martyr,'' Bertin said of the nun, who witnesses say muttered the words ‘‘I forgive, I forgive,'' in Italian after being shot. ‘‘Of course, she is not the only martyr, at least in my experience, in Somalia. But I hope she will be the last of the martyrs for Somalia.''

The increasing power of Somalia's fundamentalist rulers has coincided with a wave of killings of foreign workers and moderate Somali intellectuals.

Among them were Swedish journalist, Martin Adler, who was killed in June during a demonstration in Mogadishu and prominent Somali peace activist Abdulkadir Yahya Ali, who was slain a month later. BBC journalist Kate Peyton was shot to death last year.

The Islamic group, which is accused of having ties to al-Qaida, has all but wrested control from the weak and factional Somali government. With it has come a hard-line Taliban-style rule complete with public floggings and executions. Its leaders have pledged to wage holy war against a peacekeeping force that is supposed to arrive early next month to help stabilize the country.

The United States has accused the Islamic group of sheltering suspects in the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. Al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden has portrayed Somalia as a battleground in his war on the U.S.
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