Monday, June 29, 2015

1000-Year Old Rift in Christianity Likely to be Bridged by Pope Francis

Pope Francis, Russian Orthodox Church head may meet soon


Image result for Patriarch Kirill and Pope Francis images


It will go a long way in healing a 1000-year-old rift 

An historic meeting between Pope Francis and Patriarch Kirill of the Russian Orthodox Church is “getting closer every day,” a senior Orthodox prelate said in an interview published on Sunday.
The unprecedented meeting would be a significant step towards healing the 1,000-year-old rift between the Western and Eastern branches of Christianity, which split in the Great Schism of 1054.
“Now such a meeting is getting closer every day but it must be well prepared,” Metropolitan Hilarion, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church's foreign relations department, said in an interview with Italy’s Corriere della Sera newspaper.
He said the meeting between the head of the 1.2 billion member Roman Catholic Church and the head of Russian Orthodox Church — which counts some 165 million of the world’s 250 million Orthodox Christians — would take place in a “neutral” country, not in Moscow or the Vatican. Austria or Hungary were possibilities, he said.
Hilarion, one of the most influential people in world Orthodoxy, said he could not say if the meeting could take place as early as this year, but there was currently “a good dynamic” between the two Churches.
Pope Francis told reporters on the plane returning from a trip to Turkey last year that he had sent word to Kirill that he was willing to meet the Russian patriarch “wherever you want, you call me and I’ll come.” The Russian Orthodox Church has accused Catholics of using their new freedoms of religion following the break-up of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s to try to convert people from the Orthodox, a charge the Vatican has denied. —Reuters

Monday, June 22, 2015

16th Century Idgah in the Qutb Shahi Tombs Getting Ready for a Makeover

Back to its grandeur

  • J.S. IFTHEKHAR




Scaffolding erected to reach the 6 m-high Idgah
restoration in progressThe double-storeyed, octagonal tomb of Jamshed Quli Qutb Shah is scaffolded for repairs inside the Quli Qutb Shah Archaeological ParkPhotos: Nagara Gopal
Restoration in progressThe double-storeyed, octagonal tomb of Jamshed Quli Qutb Shah is scaffolded for repairs inside the Quli Qutb Shah Archaeological ParkPhotos: Nagara Gopal

The 16th Century Idgah in the Qutb Shahi tombs is set to regain its original grandeur, in time for Id prayers this year


It will be a perfect Id gift. When the faithful gather next month to offer Id prayers capping 30 days of fasting, they will be in for a pleasant surprise. Most would wonder whether it is the same Idgah they have been praying at year after year.

Yes, the 16th Century Idgah in the Qutb Shahi tombs is going to offer a different experience this time. For the first time in the last 400 years one can see the Idgah in its original grandeur — complete with the lime stucco ornamentation and intricate flower pattern.

Thanks to the Agha Khan Trust for Culture (AKTC), the ancient place of worship is fast regaining its past glory. By next month it will be ready for the worshippers to pray in an ambience reminiscent of the Qutb Shahi era.

The AKTC, which is undertaking conservation and landscape restoration of the sprawling Qutb Shahi Heritage Park, is working overtime to refurbish the Idgah for next month’s Id-ul-Adha namaz. “This Idgah posed a big challenge as it is all covered up in layers of paint over the years. We have removed at least 50 layers which were 4 to 5 inches thick,” says Ratish Nanda, project director, AKTC.

About 20 expert craftsmen drawn from Delhi and Rajasthan are working on the Idgah for the last six months. They have carefully chipped off the green and white paint on its wall and minarets exposing the highly ornate stucco plaster patterns on the medallions and merlons.

The elaborate flower design and craftsmanship bearing Turko-Iranian influence, draws sighs of ecstasy. There are ten minarets flanked by two turrets on either ends. Some of the minarets had tilted dangerously and would have probably fallen had not the AKTC stepped in. Now all of them have been carefully straightened.

There are seven arches with the ‘mihrab’, where the Imam leads the prayers, in the centre. They too are restored. Huge scaffolding is erected to reach the Idgah which is 6 meters high and 31 meters wide.
What is the material being applied? It is lime, white marble powder, molasses, belgiri (wood apple) and tesu flower which gives the yellow taint. “All these are finely ground along with sand of 600 microns,” explains Rajpal Singh, chief engineer, and adds that the work done now will last for another 500 years.
In keeping with the tradition of building Idgahs outside the town, Sultan Quli Qutb Shah, founder of the Qutb Shahi dynasty, built the Idgah away from the main basti, Mohammadnagar. The Qutb Shahis were men of refined taste and culture. The decking up of a simple functional building like Idgah only reinforces this trait.

http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-features/tp-metroplus/back-to-its-grandeur/article7339933.ece

Friday, June 19, 2015

Teaching About the Holocaust to Muslim Germans

To teach the Holocaust to Muslim Germans, or not?

A proposal in Bavaria for all eighth-or ninth-graders to visit a former concentration camp has stoked controversy

A photo taken on May 27, 1944, in Oswiecim, shows Nazis selecting prisoners on the platform at the entrance of the Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp. A conservative lawmaker’s suggestion that Muslim pupils would need special preparation before visiting concentration camps as part of school trips has sparked off a heated debate in the country.— File Photo: AFP/Yad Vashem Archives
A photo taken on May 27, 1944, in Oswiecim, shows Nazis selecting prisoners on the platform at the entrance of the Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp. A conservative lawmaker’s suggestion that Muslim pupils would need special preparation before visiting concentration camps as part of school trips has sparked off a heated debate in the country.— File Photo: AFP/Yad Vashem Archives
In Germany’s ever-swirling debate about its past, it is a relatively recent, always delicate question: how do you teach Muslim Germans about the Nazis and the Holocaust?
The topic has bubbled up in recent weeks, after discussion in Bavaria about a proposal for all eighth-or ninth-graders there to visit a former concentration camp or the newly opened centre in Munich documenting Nazi crimes.
In Bavaria today, only pupils in a gymnasium, the top rank of high school, are required to make such visits. As the 70th anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camps in Poland approached in January, and as the number of reported anti-Semitic incidents has increased, Josef Schuster, the head of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, has suggested that all ninth-grade students make such trips.
Education in Germany is a matter under the jurisdiction of the country’s 16 states. When the Free Voters, a small group in Bavaria’s legislature, took up Schuster’s suggestion, they ran into resistance from the conservative Christian Social Union, long the states governing party.
One conservative lawmaker, Klaus Steiner, praised the intent, but he suggested that Muslim pupils would need special preparation and implied that some might be exempted.
Lower-ranked secondary schools, he said, have a higher proportion of immigrant pupils, often recent arrivals whose parents sought refuge from war and hardship. “Many are from Muslim families,” Steiner said. “These children and their parents will need time before they can identify with our past.” He further questioned whether anti-Semitism, which is certainly latent here and there, could really effectively be countered with obligatory visits to former camps.

A citizen’s duty
Leftist deputies countered Steiner’s position, invoking the president of Germany, Joachim Gauck, who has said that Holocaust remembrance is a matter for every citizen. To illustrate the importance of teaching all teenagers about the Holocaust, especially as the number of survivors dwindles, these deputies cited research showing that Germans are tired of hearing about persecution of Jews.
Gisela Sengl, a lawmaker for the Greens, argued that it was precisely the less educated who were susceptible to anti-foreigner, anti-Semitic chauvinism. “You can read something, and deny or ignore it,” she said. “But anyone who has been to one of these places will not go out and say: ‘All that stuff we’re told, it’s not true.’”
“Steiner’s language,” wrote the director, Shimon Samuels, “reeks at best as Holocaust denial and, far worse, a German endorsement for radical Islamists assertion that the Holocaust is a lie.” He went on to link Steiner’s behaviour to Germany’s recent decision to establish centres for Islam at a number of major universities, part of a program to train educators and scholars to serve the estimated 4 million Muslims now in Germany.

Radical Islam
That program is intended to counter what many experts see as radical Islam propagated at some mosques in Germany, given that the September 11, 2001, attacks were conceived and perpetrated in part by Muslims who met in Hamburg. Mouhanad Khorchide, a Palestinian from Beirut, Lebanon, and a professor of Islamic studies in Muenster, said any question about teaching Muslim students about Nazi crimes against Jews is an extension of Middle East politics. “If there was no Israeli-Palestinian conflict, it would look different,” he said by telephone. “The idea of Muslim Germans visiting former concentration camps is more and more strongly accepted,” Khorchide said. “Still,” he said, “you notice among the students that they say, ‘We stand for talking about Jewish history, and the crimes that were committed, but why don’t we talk about the Palestinians? Where is the justice here?’”-- New York Times News Service

Marking the 200th Anniversary of Waterloo

Waterloo unites, yet divides Europe

The battle still touches a nerve and stirs national passions

The Lion’s Mound, a monument of the Battle of Waterloo, was completed in 1826 when Belgium was part of Holland and is said to be a warning to France never to go that way again. Nearly 200,000 people are expected to flock to the site for a sound-and-light show on Thursday, followed by two days of battle re-enactments described as the largest of their kind in the world.— Photo: AFP
The Lion’s Mound, a monument of the Battle of Waterloo, was completed in 1826 when Belgium was part of Holland and is said to be a warning to France never to go that way again. Nearly 200,000 people are expected to flock to the site for a sound-and-light show on Thursday, followed by two days of battle re-enactments described as the largest of their kind in the world.— Photo: AFP
European royals and diplomats gathered in Belgium on Thursday to mark the 200th anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo, a turning point for the continent which still touches a nerve and stirs national passions.
“Waterloo, the folly and the grandeur. The horror and the genius. The tragedy and then the hope,” Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel said in an opening address under leaden skies.
The stress was on modern-day reconciliation and the sacrifice of some 47,000 dead or wounded soldiers on the fields around the small drab town just south of Brussels, the target of Napoleon’s ill-fated drive north in June 1815.
France and Germany however sent only their ambassadors to the ceremony.
Mr. Michel called for reconciliation through the “European project” and its promise of peace despite modern-day challenges of conflict on its borders in Ukraine and economic worries.
“The enemies of yesterday are the allies of today,” said Mr. Michel. “This reality, it is the European project.”
Key battle
The battle was a pivotal moment in European history, when around 93,000 French troops led by Napoleon faced off against 125,000 British, German and Belgian-Dutch forces commanded by the Duke of Wellington and Field Marshal Bluecher.
Napoleon was exiled to the island of Saint Helena in the south Atlantic Ocean, where he died in 1821. The victors redrew the map of Europe and the continent enjoyed almost a century of relative peace until the carnage of World War I tore it apart again.
Just nearby stands the Waterloo monument, a massive mound topped by a defiant lion looking south which was completed in 1826 when Belgium was part of Holland and is said to be a warning to France never to come this way again. Such sensitivities linger, especially for France which now sees itself as a pillar of the European Union alongside Germany. French Prime Minister Manuel Valls was ambiguous at best about the ceremonies. “I heard it said this morning that President [Francois Hollande] and myself should have been there so that we could shed our tears over this fearsome moment for our country,” Valls said.
A total of 2,00,000 spectators are expected to make their way to Waterloo, starting with Thursday’s commemorative service and ending with two days of battle re-enactments on Friday and Saturday.
Belgium’s King Philippe led the attendance. The absence of French President Francois Hollande and German Chancellor Angela Merkel was cause for regret. “It’s a shame,” Charles Bonaparte, a descendant of Napoleon’s brother Jerome, said. — AFP

http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/waterloo-unites-yet-divides-europe/article7331235.ece


Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Celebrating Magna Carta's 800th Anniversary

 Prime Minister David Cameron
L-R) The Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, David Cameron, the Queen and Prince Philip attend an event marking the 800th anniversary of Magna Carta in Runymede Photo: REUTERS

800 years ago at Runnymede, the Magna Carta (Great Chartar) was sealed in a boggy meadow on the banks of the Thames in Surrey. Queen Elizabeth was joined by thousands on Monday to on the occasion mark the anniversary. "The story of the British monarchy is intertwined with that of Runnymede and Magna Carta, " said the monarch.

http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/britain-celebrates-800-years-of-magna-carta/article7319757.ece

Shared Traditions of Sufism and Sikhism

Devotees at the Khwaja Moinuddin Chisti Dargah in Ajmer


M. Ashraf Haidari, deputy chief of mission, Afghan Embassy in India, traces the relationship between Sufism and Sikhism in his article, "For Peace and Harmony in South Asia, Some Lessons from Sikhism and and Sufism" published in The Hindu.

http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/open-page/for-peace-and-harmony-in-south-asia-some-lessons-from-sikhism-and-sufism/article7319033.ece