Sunday, December 23, 2007

Tita Nil's Nativity Scene

 

 

 

 

A very good find, and very good buy from Costco, at least 4 years ago.

I think Tita Nil started her Christmas decorations in early November this year. This way, according to her, we can enjoy the Christmas decor and Christmas spirit (both spiritual and visceral)longer.
Posted by Picasa

Desktop real estate space

 
 

Trade-off - increased in PC desktop real estate, decrease in desktop, tabletop real estate space- as you can see ;-)
Posted by Picasa

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Waterboarding, not a water sport

What the heck is water boarding - untutored (or was it untortured)minds want to know ;-) Definitely nothing in common with water polo or any water sports for that matter.

I was flipping through my Yahoo front page when I noticed an article with CIA, al-Qaida and Water boarding on the first couple of lines.

According to Wikipedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterboarding
Waterboarding is a torture technique that simulates drowning in a controlled environment. [ read the rest of the article ]

Link to the article entitled: "Ex-CIA agent: Waterboarding OK'ed at top"

Sunday, December 09, 2007

Baghdad Christians celebrate Sunday Mass





By SAMEER N. YACOUB, Associated Press Writer 1 hour, 49 minutes ago

BAGHDAD - The worshippers were searched at the door and snipers stood guard on the roof, but Sunday's Mass was a joyful one for more than 200 Iraqis who packed a church in eastern Baghdad to see the first Iraqi cardinal.
PUBLICITÉ

Under heavy guard and broadcast live on Iraqi state television, the service was capped by a handshake from a visiting Shiite imam — a symbolic show of unity between Iraq's majority Muslim sect and its tiny Christian community.

Cardinal Emmanuel III Delly, leader of the ancient Chaldean Church, celebrated the two-hour Mass three weeks after Pope Benedict XVI elevated him to the top ranks of the Roman Catholic hierarchy.

Delly presided over other services this week in Baghdad and the northern Kurdish city of Irbil, spreading his message of unity and forgiveness among Iraq's Christians.

"We are of one family, everyone should work for the progress of this country," he said during his sermon.

The frequent target of Islamic extremists, Iraq's Christians have been forced to flee by the tens of thousands or to isolate themselves in barricaded neighborhoods if they choose to remain.

"We pray today for the sake of each other and to forgive each other, as well to be directed to do good deeds," Delly said. "That is my demand for the Iraqis, moreover I urge the return home for displaced people and immigrants to their ancestral land."

Delly, 80, has been outspoken in the past about the need to protect Christians, who comprise less than 3 percent of Iraq's 26 million people.

Many people who filled the pews at the elegant brick Church of the Virgin Mary said they were taking advantage of a lull in violence to attend services and to congratulate Delly. The imam of a nearby Shiite mosque shook hands with him in the church's courtyard after the service.

"I came here to show the unity of the Iraqi people," said the black-turbaned imam, Jassim al-Jazairi. "We are happy with the cardinal. We are very proud of any person, whether Christian or Muslim, who raises the name of Iraq in the international arena."

The high attendance at the church in mainly Shiite eastern Baghdad was among several recent signs of normalcy in Iraq. Still, the security situation remains fragile in the city, where many Iraqis are still afraid to venture outside the concrete barriers erected by the U.S. military to protect volatile communities.

In a reminder of the dangers, armed policemen wearing helmets and blue uniforms were stationed on the church's roof and others searched worshippers walking toward the stately brick building on Palestine Street, a major thoroughfare in eastern Baghdad. Several police pickup trucks and Iraqi armored vehicles blocked the street.

Church officials said the weekly afternoon Mass has been more crowded and was extended by an hour as Iraqis are less fearful about being out on the streets late in many areas of the capital.

"We are proud of this," said Hibba Nasser, a 26-year-old housewife. "We came here to this church in order to tell the terrorists that we are not afraid of them."