Tag Archives: Good Friday

Call for calm as Belfast suffers third night of trouble

Northern Ireland’s First Minister Peter Robinson has called for peace as riots erupted in Belfast for the third night running, injuring a police officer.

Seven officers were injured on Saturday after being attacked with petrol bombs by Protestant rioters in the Northern Irish capital, a spokeswoman said.

“It’s very important that this violence stops,” said Robinson.

“It’s very important that cool heads prevail in these circumstances and I hope people will obey the announcement and statement by the Orange Institution that people should desist from violence.

“The only kind of protest that is ever justifiable is a lawful and peaceful protest,” he added.

The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said one officer had been injured in Sunday’s clashes.

Bricks, bottles, furniture and other missiles were hurled on Saturday night by hooded youths, some with British flags covering their faces.

The seven officers injured on Saturday did not require hospital treatment and remained on duty.

On Friday night, 32 officers were injured and a leading politician was knocked unconscious by a brick.

About a thousand police officers from mainland Britain were sent to Northern Ireland in anticipation of tensions over the traditional Twelfth of July parades, the pinnacle of the Protestant Orange Order’s marching season.

Trouble flared Friday after police tried to enforce a decision by an adjudication body banning the Orange Order from marching through a Catholic republican area of Belfast.

“The scenes were both shameful and disgraceful,” Chief Constable Matt Baggott of the PSNI told reporters on Saturday.

He criticised leaders in the Orange Order who had called for protests against the decision to block their march through the republican Ardoyne area, saying they had been “reckless”.

Nigel Dodds, the member of parliament for North Belfast, was taken to hospital after being hit on the head with a brick while trying to calm the crowds down on Friday night. He was later discharged.

The July 12 parade marks the victory of Protestant king William III of Orange over the deposed Catholic king James II at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690.

It is a flashpoint for tensions between the Protestant and Catholic communities in the province, which was devastated by three decades of sectarian violence in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s.

The 1998 Good Friday peace accords largely brought an end to the unrest, known as The Troubles, although sporadic violence and bomb threats continue.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Belfast police attacked in second night of riots

Police in Belfast were attacked with petrol bombs in a second night of violence by Protestant rioters in the Northern Irish capital.

Bricks, bottles, furniture and other missiles were also hurled on Saturday following riots that left 32 officers injured and a politician hospitalised on Friday.

Hooded youths, some with British flags covering their faces, were involved in the clashes in the north of the city.

Police responded by firing baton rounds and deploying water cannon.

The unrest was not as intense as on Friday night, when crowds attacked police with petrol bombs, sticks, fireworks, bricks, bottles, masonry and even a sword.

More than 600 police from mainland Britain had been sent to Northern Ireland in anticipation of tensions over the traditional Twelfth of July parades, the pinnacle of the Protestant Orange Order’s marching season.

A further 400 were sent for Saturday following riots the night before.

Trouble flared Friday after police tried to enforce a decision by an adjudication body banning the Orange Order from marching through a Catholic republican area of Belfast.

“The scenes were both shameful and disgraceful,” Chief Constable Matt Baggott of the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) told reporters.

He criticised leaders in the Orange Order who had called for protests against the decision to block their march through the republican Ardoyne area.

“Some of their language was emotive and having called thousands of people to protest they had no plan and no control,” Baggott said.

“Rather than being responsible, I think the word for that is reckless.”

The PSNI said 32 officers were injured in Friday night’s violence. Leading Protestant politician Nigel Dodds was taken to hospital after being hit on the head with a brick and knocked out.

Dodds, who represents North Belfast in the British parliament, had been trying to calm the crowds down. He was discharged from hospital early on Saturday.

The July 12 parade marks the victory of Protestant king William III of Orange over the deposed Catholic king James II at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690.

It is a flashpoint for tensions between the Protestant and Catholic communities in the province, which was devastated by three decades of sectarian violence in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s.

The 1998 Good Friday peace accords largely brought an end to the unrest, known as The Troubles, although sporadic violence and bomb threats continue.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

N. Ireland police reinforced after night of riots

Hundreds of extra police were deployed to Northern Ireland on Saturday following a night of rioting in Belfast that left 32 officers injured and a politician hospitalised.

More than 600 police from other parts of Britain had been sent to the province in anticipation of tensions over the traditional Twelfth of July parades, the pinnacle of the Protestant Orange Order’s marching season.

A police spokesman said a further 400 were due to arrive on Saturday following the riots, in which crowds attacked police with petrol bombs, sticks, fireworks, bricks, bottles, masonry and even a sword.

Trouble flared after police tried to enforce a decision by an adjudication body banning the Orange Order from marching through a Catholic republican area of Belfast.

“The scenes were both shameful and disgraceful,” Chief Constable Matt Baggott of the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) told reporters.

He criticised leaders in the Orange Order who had called for protests against the decision to block their march through the republican Ardoyne area.

“Some of their language was emotive and having called thousands of people to protest they had no plan and no control,” Baggott said.

“Rather than being responsible, I think the word for that is reckless.”

The PSNI said 32 officers were injured in Friday night’s violence, while leading Protestant politician Nigel Dodds was taken to hospital after being hit on the head with a brick.

Dodds, a member of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), was knocked unconcious as he tried to urge the rioters to calm down. He was discharged from hospital early on Saturday.

Northern Ireland First Minister Peter Robinson, the DUP leader who shares power in the government with the Catholic Sinn Fein, urged “cool heads to prevail at this time”.

“Violence is undermining a just cause and runs totally against the wishes of the Orange Order for protest to be entirely peaceful,” he said in a statement.

The July 12 parade marks the victory of Protestant king William III of Orange over the deposed Catholic king James II at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690.

It is a flashpoint for tensions between the Protestant and Catholic communities in the British-ruled province, which was devastated by three decades of sectarian violence in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s.

The 1998 Good Friday peace accords largely brought an end to the unrest, known as The Troubles, although sporadic violence and bomb threats continue.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Pope Francis links Turin Shroud to Jesus Christ as cloth is shown on television for Easter

By hnn

Francis made his first remarks on the mysterious cloth since being elected Pope in a special video message as the shroud was shown live on television for only the second time in its history.

His remarks came on Holy Saturday, which falls between the commemoration of Christ’s crucifixion on Good Friday and his resurrection on Easter Sunday.

Francis referred to the 14ft-long strip of sepia fabric, which is imprinted with the face and body of a bearded man, as “the Holy Shroud” and asked: “How is it that the faithful, like you, pause before this icon of a man scourged and crucified? It is because the Man of the Shroud invites us to contemplate Jesus of Nazareth….

Source:
Telegraph (UK)

Source URL:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/religion/9962709/Pope-Francis-links-Turin-Shroud-to-Jesus-Christ-as-cloth-is-shown-on-television-for-Easter.html

Date:
3-30-13

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

“Rainbow Journalism” Is The New Enemy Of Children

By Kevin Banet

2013 Ford Fusion Hybrid

Dan Savage writer of sex column perverting young minds

In this column we coin the term “rainbow journalism.”

If you’re young, trendy and hip, and are strolling through downtown Minneapolis, you might grasp a copy of City Pages from the newstand. Its stories, appealing graphics, attractive restaurant ads and reviews of the local night club scene would seem to set you up for an upbeat weekend.

But look a little further, and you’ll uncover a fanatically-driven editorial policy that promotes sleeze and liberal causes. For example, “Savage Love” is a weekly sex advice column by the notorious sex activist Dan Savage. His recent advice includes using online resources to find a worker in the sex industry for a reader’s 22-year old mentally-ill brother. Ugh. The column is filled with trashy advice and crude language.

City Pages is part of a chain of 16 “alternative” free weekly papers around the country with a hefty combined circulation of 1.8 million. You wonder, an alternative to what? It’s an alternative to what is wholesome and true; City Pages promotes strip clubs, homosexuality, and condemns any moral message of Christianity. It scorns patriotism as well. One front-page display contained a mock-up photo of the Statue of Liberty with the words, “One nation under tacos.”

Screamed at readers

Around 1900, yellow journalism screamed at its readers with sensational headlines, weakly-supported facts, with a show of being legitimate by claiming to champion the underdog. Today’s yellow journalism jabs at morality, criticizes Christian organizations, all with name-calling and mockery. The only underdog it champions is the radical homosexual who demands that all of his sexual practices become codified in law, while crushing those with contrary beliefs.

It’s a kind of news adolescence that never grows up. Let’s call it “rainbow journalism.”

More than one hundred years ago, newspapers of integrity separated themselves from yellow journalism, and medical professionals likewise distanced themselves from snake-oil salesmen and abortionists. It was a time for the growing professions of the day to disavow themselves from shady and base practices.

But some news outlets never grow up. Like the crowd that shouted for Christ’s condemnation on Good Friday, City Pages relies on a lot of emotion, few facts, and is quick to slam anyone who stands for morality.

Hate-mongering

It’s no wonder then, that every few weeks New City trots out hate-mongering articles against Christian rock musician and preacher Bradlee Dean and his ministry, You Can Run International, based in Annandale, just outside of Minneapolis. (Disclosure: You Can Run International is a client of our PR firm.) New City has covered Dean’s defamation lawsuit against MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow in snarling tones. They accuse his ministry of not only gay-bashing, but now have made dangerous accusations about his family.

I don’t care what your politics are, but going after your enemy’s family is just plain evil. What could be done against the paper if it were not protected by a too-broadly defined First Amendment interpretation today that allows the big media to destroy …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Today's Top 5 Financial Stories

By John Maxfield, The Motley Fool

2013 Ford Fusion Hybrid

Filed under:

The fact that it’s Monday, doesn’t mean there’s a dearth of financial news. Here are the five biggest stories impacting the financial sector today.

1. End of first quarter
Yesterday officially marked the end of the first quarter. Generally speaking, it was a good quarter for the banking industry. As you can see below, all four of the nation’s largest banks as well as the KBW Bank Index ended the three-month stretch higher, though all of them underperformed the broader market. Shares of Citigroup led the way up by 7.3%. The nation’s third largest bank by assets was followed in quick progression by JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo , which were higher by 7.2% and 6.3%, respectively. Bank of America turned in the worst performance of the too-big-to-fail lenders with a total return of only 1.2% — though, it’s worth noting here that B of A was far and away the industry’s best-performing stock in 2012.

JPM Total Return Price data by YCharts.

2. Cyprus
The unfolding situation in Cyprus continues to capture headlines. Over the weekend, Bloomberg reported that the country may impose losses of as much as 60% on uninsured deposits at the nation’s largest banks. According to the report:

Customers will have 37.5 percent of their deposits above this amount converted into shares with full voting rights and access to any future Bank of Cyprus dividend, the Nicosia-based central bank said in an emailed statement. A further 22.5 percent will be temporarily withheld to ensure the lender meets the terms of its recapitalization, as agreed under Cyprus‘s loan agreement with international creditors, the central bank said.

The remaining 40 percent of Bank of Cyprus deposits above 100,000 euros that aren’t subject to the bail-in will be temporarily frozen to ensure the lender’s liquidity.

In addition, Russia confirmed that it won’t step in to bail out any individuals or companies that stand to lose money. Speaking on Russian state television yesterday, the country’s first deputy prime minister said: “If someone gets stuck and loses money in those two biggest banks, that’s really too bad. But the Russian government isn’t planning to do anything in this case.”

No? Perhaps other tax havens will. According to The New York Times, many of the world’s other opaque banking centers are stepping up efforts to woo bank customers that are fleeing Cyprus.

3. LIBOR lawsuits dismissed (in part)
Good Friday definitely lived up to its name for some of the world’s biggest banks. According to Reuters, a “substantial portion” of the legal claims in private lawsuits against 16 megabanks have been dismissed by a federal judge in New York. The lawsuits accused the banks — including JPMorgan, Bank of America, and others — of rigging the London Interbank Offered Rate, a “key benchmark at the heart of more than $550 trillion in financial products.”

4. SAC …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Pope Francis Holds First Easter Vigil Service In St. Peter’s Basilica

By The Huffington Post News Editors

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis celebrated a trimmed back Easter Vigil service Saturday after having reached out to Muslims and women during a Holy Week in which he began to put his mark on the Catholic Church.

Francis processed into a darkened and silent St. Peter’s Basilica at the start of the service, in which the faithful recall the period between Christ’s crucifixion on Good Friday and resurrection on Easter Sunday.

Read More…
More on Pope Francis

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Pope presides over Easter Vigil service

Pope Francis is celebrating a trimmed back Easter Vigil service after having reached out to Muslims and women during a Holy Week in which he has begun to put his mark on the Catholic Church.

Francis processed into a darkened and silent St. Peter’s Basilica at the start of the Saturday service, which recalls the period between Christ’s crucifixion on Good Friday and resurrection on Easter Sunday. One of the most dramatic moments of the Easter Vigil service — when the pope would share the light of his candle with others until the entire basilica twinkled — was shortened this year as were some of the Old Testament readings.

The Vatican has said these provisions are in keeping with Francis’ aim to not have his Masses go on too long.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Pope presides over trimmed Easter Vigil service

Pope Francis is celebrating a trimmed back Easter Vigil service after having reached out to Muslims and women during a Holy Week in which he has begun to put his mark on the Catholic Church.

Francis processed into a darkened and silent St. Peter’s Basilica at the start of the Saturday service, which recalls the period between Christ’s crucifixion on Good Friday and resurrection on Easter Sunday. One of the most dramatic moments of the Easter Vigil service — when the pope would share the light of his candle with others until the entire basilica twinkled — was shortened this year as were some of the Old Testament readings.

The Vatican has said these provisions are in keeping with Francis’ aim to not have his Masses go on too long.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Dell's SEC report describes challenges for PC makers

Dell described a bleak outlook for the PC industry on Good Friday in a document filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

The document, one of several filed by the company in connection with its move to go private, includes a laundry list of ills that pretty much defines life for computer makers in the post PC era.

That list identifies factors contributing not only to Dell’s present and future performance, but paints a picture of the uncertain world ahead for all PC makers.

Dell’s pitch

In its filing, Dell makes it sound like it would do present stockholders a favor by buying out their stock and taking the company off the stock market. By scooping up all Dell common shares in the market, it noted, stockholders will “no longer be exposed to the various risks and uncertainties related to continued ownership of Common Stock.”

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

Shroud of Turin goes on display amid new research

The Shroud of Turin has gone on display for a special TV appearance amid new research purporting to date the linen some say was Jesus’ burial cloth to around the time of his death.

Pope Francis sent a special video message to the event in Turin’s cathedral, which coincided with Holy Saturday, when Catholics mark the period between Christ’s crucifixion on Good Friday and his resurrection on Easter Sunday.

The Vatican has tiptoed around just what the cloth is, calling it a powerful symbol of Christ’s suffering while making no claim to its authenticity.

Francis toed that line Saturday, calling the cloth an “icon” — not a relic.

Many experts stand by carbon-dating of scraps of the cloth that date it to the 13th or 14th century.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Pope refers to "Muslim brothers" on Good Friday

Pope Francis reached out in friendship to “so many Muslim brothers and sisters” during a Good Friday procession dedicated to the suffering of Christians from terrorism, war and religious fanaticism in the Middle East.

The new pontiff, who has rankled traditionalists by rejecting many trappings of his office, mostly stuck to the traditional script during the nighttime Way of the Cross procession at Rome‘s Colosseum, one of the most dramatic rituals of Holy Week.

With torches lighting the way, the faithful carried a cross to different stations, where meditations and prayers were read out recalling the final hours of Jesus’ life and his crucifixion.

This year, the prayers were composed by young Lebanese, and many recalled the plight of minority Christians in the region, where wars have forced thousands to flee their homelands. The meditations called for an end to “violent fundamentalism,” terrorism and the “wars and violence which in our days devastate various countries in the Middle East.”

Francis, who became pope just over two weeks ago, chose, however, to stress Christians’ positive relations with Muslims in the region in his brief comments at the end of the ceremony.

Standing on a platform overlooking the procession route, Francis recalled Benedict XVI’s 2012 visit to Lebanon when “we saw the beauty and the strong bond of communion joining Christians together in that land and the friendship of our Muslim brothers and sisters and so many others.”

“That occasion was a sign to the Middle East and to the whole world, a sign of hope,” he said.

Friday’s outreach followed Francis’ eyebrow-raising gesture a day earlier, when he washed and kissed the feet of two women, one a Muslim, in the Holy Thursday ritual that commemorates Jesus’ washing of his apostles’ feet during the Last Supper before his crucifixion.

Breaking with tradition, Francis performed the ritual on 12 inmates at a juvenile detention center, rather than in Rome‘s grand St. John Lateran basilica, where in the past, 12 priests have been chosen to represent Jesus’ disciples.

Before he became pope, the former Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio long cultivated warm relations with Muslim leaders in his native Argentina. In one of his first speeches as pope, he called for the church and the West in general to “intensify” relations with the Muslim world.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Pope prays at Good Friday rite recalling Mideast

Pope Francis is sitting in silent prayer during this year’s Good Friday procession, which is re-enacting Christ’s crucifixion and recalling the wars and “violent fundamentalism” that are devastating the Middle East today.

The Good Friday procession at Rome’s Colosseum is one of the most dramatic rituals of Holy Week, when Christians commemorate the death and resurrection of Christ.

The 76-year-old Francis chose not to walk the procession itself, but was sitting in prayer overlooking the route and was to deliver some remarks at the end.

This year, the meditations read out at each of the stations of the cross were composed by young Lebanese faithful. Many of the prayers referred to the plight of Christians in the Middle East and called for religious freedom and an end to the terrorism.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Statement by the President on Easter Weekend

By The White House

This weekend, Michelle and I join our fellow Christians here at home and around the world in marking Good Friday and celebrating Easter. These Holy Days are a time to reflect on the momentous sacrifice that Jesus Christ made for each of us, and to celebrate the triumph of the Resurrection and His gift of grace. It is a time for renewed hope amidst continued challenges. It’s also a time to ponder the common values that unite us — to have compassion for all and to treat others as we wish to be treated ourselves. As we embrace our loved ones and give thanks for our blessings, we wish all who celebrate with us a blessed Easter.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at The White House Press Office

Good Friday Dancing Ban Has Germany in a Twist

By Mark Russell No, the “Tanzverbot” isn’t the latest German dance craze. It’s quite the opposite: the decades-old law that bans all organized dancing in Germany on Good Friday and other religious holidays. And with church attendance falling around Germany, its citizens are increasingly calling for the ban to be ended, reports the… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Great Finds

Q&A: Europe's freezing Easter and global warming

Is it Easter or Christmas? Many Europeans would be forgiven for being confused by winter’s icy grip on lands that should be thawing in springtime temperatures by now.

Britain is on track for the coldest March since 1962, according to national weather service the Met Office, which also says daily low temperatures in London are going to remain below freezing through the Easter holiday. The mean temperature in Britain from March 1-26 was 2.5 C (36.5 F) — three degrees below the long-term average.

In Berlin, Good Friday saw a new round of snowfall and temperatures just above freezing. The city’s popular lakeside beach opened for the season as planned, though it wasn’t exactly beach weather. Some visitors built a snowman and few ventured into the freezing water.

___

What’s going on?

As always when you talk about weather, natural variability is a big factor. But an increasing body of research suggests that cold spells like the one that has lingered in northern and central Europe for much of March could become more common as a result of global warming melting the Arctic ice cap.

Q: Why is it so cold in much of Europe right now?

A: Normally, European winters are kept relatively mild by wet, westerly winds from the Atlantic. But in March, the wind has been blowing mostly from the northeast, bringing freezing Arctic air down over much of Europe.

Q: So why are the winds coming from the northeast?

A: The winds are driven by atmospheric circulation patterns which in turn are affected by differences in air pressure between northern and southern latitudes. For much of March this circulation has been in a negative state, meaning the pressure difference is small. That weakens the westerly Atlantic winds and paves the way for cold air to sweep down over Europe from the Arctic and Siberia.

Q: What does that have to do with Arctic sea ice?

A: Global warming is melting the ice cap over the Arctic Ocean. Last September, it reached its lowest extent on record. Climate models show that the loss of sea ice — which acts as a …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Which Top 5 S&P 500 Performer Has the Best Shot at Outperforming in Q2

By Sean Williams, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

With investors enjoying a rare three-day weekend thanks to Good Friday, and basking in a fresh all-time closing high for the S&P 500, I thought it important to take the time to review the index’s top five performers in the first-quarter to see if they offer any clues as to which may roll its gains into the second quarter.

Netflix + 104.4%
Netflix was the best performer within the S&P 500 by a mile. Netflix more than doubled up for shareholders after showing the benefits of content streaming, both domestically, and abroad. Despite seeing a continued slowdown in its traditional DVD business, Netflix added 2 million streaming customers domestically, and an additional 1.8 million abroad. Furthermore, streaming gross margin came in higher than anyone had expected, resulting in a $0.13 fourth-quarter profit, when Wall Street had been anticipating a $0.13 loss per share. 

Best Buy + 88.4% (dividend-adjusted)
Big-box retailer Best Buy turned in a phenomenal performance in the first-quarter for a company that many had left for dead. Best Buy‘s turnaround strategy – which involves downsizing its stores, focusing on mobile products like smartphones and tablets, incentivizing its employees with sales bonuses and, most importantly, matching competitor’s prices — appears to be working like a charm. The company left its dividend untouched at $0.17 per quarter, and reversed a string of same-store sales declines by posting a 0.9% same-store sales increase over the year-ago period. 

Hewlett-Packard + 68.4% (dividend-adjusted)
Like Best Buy, HP was left for dead by shareholders at the beginning of the year after unveiling sweeping reforms and job cut plans last year. However, HP put some of those dissenters on the back burner after reporting better-than-expected first-quarter earnings in February. HP‘s revenue of $28.4 billion, and its EPS forecast for 2013 of $2.30-$2.50, was markedly higher than the $27.8 billion that the Street had expected, and the $2.10-$2.30 that HP‘s management had previous projected.

H&R Block + 59.5% (dividend-adjusted)
Tax preparation service H&R Block delivered a nearly 60% gain in the first-quarter to shareholders despite just weeks ago running into a snafu with its at-home tax preparation software that modestly delayed up to 660,000 returns. H&R Block, which derives nearly all of its profits between the end of January and April 15, anticipates filings will be up by 1%-2% this year, and CEO Bill Cobb noted three weeks ago that he felt H&R Block was outperforming its competitors.

Micron Technology + 57.3%
Memory chip maker Micron snagged the fifth-best performance within the S&P 500 this quarter in anticipation of stronger margins and decreasing costs, which should help its bottom line performance. Handily topping Wall Street‘s revenue expectations in its second-quarter results, Micron has benefited from robust smartphone and tablet sales, as well as demand for data center infrastructure.

Source: Finviz, Yahoo! Finance.

Which of these five can head higher in Q2?
It really …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Filipino Crucifixion Reenactment On Good Friday Draws Penitents And Onlookers (PHOTOS)

By The Huffington Post News Editors

SAN PEDRO CUTUD, Philippines — Devotees in villages in the northern Philippines took part in a bloody annual ritual to mark Good Friday, a celebration that mixes Roman Catholic devotion and Filipino folk beliefs and sees some reenact the crucifixion of Jesus Christ.

The crucified devotees spent several minutes nailed to crosses in Pampanga province while thousands of tourists watched and took photos of the spectacle, which the church discourages. Earlier in the day, hooded male penitents trudged through the province’s villages under the blazing sun while flagellating their bleeding backs with makeshift whips. Others carried wooden crosses to dramatize Christ’s sacrifice.

Read More…

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Catholics Nailed to Crosses in Philippines

By Matt Cantor Northern Philippines villagers commemorated Good Friday in their traditional manner , with penitents whipping themselves before some two dozen were nailed to crosses, reports Reuters . Thousands of tourists were on hand to watch and photograph the scene. A local sign painter, 52, has now performed the ritual 27 times; his screams… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home