Showing posts with label Secularism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Secularism. Show all posts

Friday, April 30, 2010

Church Warned that Flag of Jesus Is 'Religious Advertising'

THE TELEGRAPH: A vicar has been warned by council officials about flying a flag depicting Jesus Christ outside his church because it was deemed to be “religious advertising”.

Rev Mark Binney, vicar of St Andrew’s Church, Hampton, Worcs, said he had been told he needed planning permission if he wanted to fly a flag “advertising Christianity” in future.

The flag was put up outside the church in the week preceding Easter Sunday displaying the words 'This is Holy Week' and an image of Jesus on the cross. >>> Richard Savill | Thursday, April 29, 2010

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Lebanese to Stage March for Secularism

BBC: Civil society activists in Lebanon are hoping that thousands will turn up for an unprecedented rally in Beirut.

The march for secularism will call on all Lebanese to unite and work towards the abolition of the country's deeply divisive sectarian system.

The organisers say it is time to redefine what it means to be Lebanese.

They say this is because at the moment it comes second to being a Muslim or a Christian, Shia or Sunni, Catholic or Orthodox.

Eighteen groups make up Lebanon's multi-denominational system, and the civic rights of the members of these groups are determined by their religious leaders rather than the government.

Only religious authorities can register marriages, births or death or rule on matters of inheritance - so all Lebanese end up having different rights.

Muslims, for example, cannot adopt children; Maronite Christians cannot get divorced, and it is impossible for members of different sects to marry each other, while civil marriage is not an option here. >>> Natalia Antelava, BBC News, Beirut | Saturday, April 24, 2010

LE FIGARO: Le camp laïque tente une sortie au Liban : Dans un pays où les dix-huit communautés se partagent tout l'espace public, quelques milliers de personnes ont manifesté dimanche pour «desserrer l'étreinte». Sans illusions. >>> Par Sibylle Rizk | Lundi 26 Avril 2010

Thursday, January 07, 2010

New Dark Age Alert! Cardinal Says Christian Europe Is to Blame for Islamisation

THE TELEGRAPH: A leading Catholic cardinal has said Europeans only have themselves to blame for allowing Islam to "conquer" the continent.

Czech Cardinal Miloslav Vlk, the Archbishop of Prague. Photograph: The Telegraph

Czech Cardinal Miloslav Vlk, the Archbishop of Prague, said Muslims were well placed to fill the spiritual void "created as Europeans systematically empty the Christian content of their lives".

"Europe will pay dear for having left its spiritual foundations and that this is the last period that will not continue for decades when it may still have a chance to do something about it," he said.

"The Muslims definitely have many reasons to be heading here. They also have a religious one – to bring the spiritual values of faith in God to the pagan environment of Europe, to its atheistic style of life.

"Unless the Christians wake up, life may be Islamised and Christianity will not have the strength to imprint its character on the life of people, not to say society."

The 77-year-old cardinal made his remarks in an interview to mark his retirement after spending 19 years as the leader of the Czech Church.

He said he did not blame Muslims for the crisis as Europeans had brought it upon themselves by exchanging their Christian culture for an aggressive secularism that embraced atheism.

"Europe has denied its Christian roots from which it has risen and which could give it the strength to fend off the danger that it will be conquered by Muslims, which is actually happening gradually," he said. >>> Simon Caldwell | Wednesday, January 06, 2010

Buy Mark Alexander’s book: The Dawning of a New Dark Age >>>

Monday, November 02, 2009

Spanish Bishops

Watch Journeyman Pictures video here | Thursday, May 29, 2009

Monday, September 28, 2009


Benedikt XVI: Papst erwirbt Respekt im atheistischen Tschechien

WELT ONLINE: Mit seiner Tschechien-Reise versuchte das Kirchenoberhaupt, das weitgehend entchristianisierte Land zurückzuerobern. Mit Erfolg: Selbst der ausgewiesen liberale Staatspräsident Václav Klaus entdeckte einen Wertekonsens mit dem Papst. Einmal mehr gelang es Benedikt XVI. zudem, die Jugend zu begeistern.

Ginge es allein nach den Übertragungszeiten des tschechischen Fernsehens, dann müsste Papst Benedikt XVI. in den zurückliegenden drei Tagen eine Hochburg des Katholizismus besucht haben. Kein Schritt des Oberhauptes der katholischen Kirche in der Öffentlichkeit, der nicht direkt übertragen wurde. Zwischendrin Expertenrunden, die sich bemühten, die Reden und Predigten des Papstes zu erläutern und einzuordnen.

Doch der Pastoralbesuch in Tschechien galt einem der am meisten säkularisierten Länder der Welt und war für den Papst in jeder Hinsicht anstrengend. Bei einer großen Messe im Wenzel-Wallfahrtsort Stara Boleslav, zu der vor allem Zehntausende junger Menschen gekommen waren, lächelte Benedikt XVI. ein ums andere Mal befreit. „Mit euch bin ich wieder jung“, rief er den Jugendlichen zu, die zum großen Teil eine eiskalte Nacht in Zelten hinter sich hatten. „Ihr, liebe Jugendliche, seid die Hoffnung der Kirche“, sagte der Papst, der anschließend die Einladung zum Weltjugendtag in Madrid im August 2011 aussprach.

Der Papst nutzte seinen Besuch vor allem, um an den Sturz des Kommunismus vor 20 Jahren zu erinnern, den er einen „Scheidepunkt in der Weltgeschichte“ nannte. Er beklagte die Leiden der Kirche während jahrzehntelanger „skrupelloser politischer Unterdrückung“. Die Katholiken in der damaligen Tschechoslowakei hätten „unbeugsames christliches Zeugnis angesichts der Verfolgung“ gegeben, erkannte er an. Vor dem Hintergrund der nun erreichten Religionsfreiheit sollten die Tschechen die christlichen Traditionen, die ihre Kultur geprägt hätten, wiederentdecken. >>> Von Hans-Jörg Schmidt | Montag, 28. September 2009

Saturday, August 01, 2009

Liberal Saudi Intellectual Abdallah bin Bakhit Explains Advantages of Secularism and Gets Abused

Friday, May 29, 2009

From Soviet Secularism to Israeli Ultra-Orthodoxy

HAARETZ: On Lag Ba'omer, a group of merrymakers squeezed around a traditional holiday campfire in a patch of garden between two buildings in Rishon Letzion. They roasted potatoes, like everyone else, and burned an effigy of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, like everyone else. David Schechter, who served as an advisor to former minister Natan Sharansky, said he can't remember what else went up in smoke, because "the vodka flowed like water."

The guests at this campfire were all immigrants from the former Soviet Union who have become observant Jews and wear skullcaps. They are doctors and lawyers, journalists and businesspeople, and fathers and sons who meet regularly at the local synagogue, where about a quarter of the congregation is Russian-speaking. Every couple of months, they are joined by a new worshipper with the same background.

Schechter, who became religiously observant while still living in Moscow, before immigrating to Israel in 1987, is called the "rabbi of the brigade." This is a slight exaggeration, although Schechter occupies a significant role in encouraging the phenomenon of returning to religion among immigrants. And even if the trend is no tidal wave, it contradicts a stereotype. >>> By Lily Galili, Haaretz Correspondent | Friday, May 29, 2009

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Turkey's AKP Fined after PM Broke Secular Principles

THE TELEGRAPH: Turkey's prime minister made a "determined and intense" effort to undermine the country's founding principle of secularism, the country's constitutional court has ruled.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the leader of the Justice and Welfare Party (AKP) who won a sweeping election victory last year, became the first prime minister ever to face legal criticism for breaching the secular provisions of the constitution.

Turkey's highest court had been asked to ban the AKP altogether and prevent Mr Erdogan from having any role in politics for five years. The judges refrained from imposing these penalties, choosing instead to fine the AKP, which has Islamist roots.

When the Court explained its decision on Friday, the justices said that Mr Erdogan had been guilty of "determined and intense activities" against article 68 of the constitution, which establishes Turkey as a secular state. >>> By David Blair, Diplomatic Editor | October 25, 2008

The Dawning of a New Dark Age – Dust Jacket Hardcover, direct from the publishers (UK) >>>
The Dawning of a New Dark Age – Paperback, direct from the publishers (UK) >>>

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Free to Think for Themselves

THE GUARDIAN: I enjoyed a rare privilege last Friday, October 10 (which was world day against the death penalty), attending a gathering of brave and principled people to whom the death penalty might be applied in a number of countries around the world because of their beliefs or lack of them. This was the conference organised the Council of Ex-Muslims of Britain to discuss apostasy – the "crime" of which all members of the Council are guilty – and associated questions about the place of religion and free thought in civil society.

The members of the Council of Ex-Muslims are people who, having thought things through for themselves, have put aside the religion they were made to accept as children – a common enough feature of the adult attainment of reason among many – but in this case the religion is Islam, which regards apostasy as punishable by death.

I wonder how many reading these words have sat in a gathering of people not a few of whom have received death threats because they think for themselves, and who have chosen a path not only personally dangerous but full of difficulty in relation to their families and communities – and who have done so because of reflectively chosen principle. It is a striking experience. In our relatively peaceful and tolerant western dispensations, disagreements of principle are rarely matters of murder; which is why some people find themselves incapable of grasping what last Friday's gathering signified.

The symbolic import of the conference was great; the substance of the discussions was absorbing and important. It was about the nature of apostasy, the freedom to choose whether or not to have a religion, and to criticise religion whether or not one subscribes to it; the question whether there should be one and the same law for all or whether Britain's Muslim minority should be allowed to apply sharia law to itself; and the question of faith schools, religious education and creationist doctrine. The themes all related to the place of the individual in civil society, and whether religious doctrine should be allowed to impose itself on those unwilling to be governed by it or – as with children – powerless to resist it.

The conference was opened by the head of the Iranian Secular Society, Fariborz Pooya, and addressed by the extraordinary and courageous Maryam Namazie, spokesperson of the Council of Ex-Muslims of Britain, who subjected Islamism – political Islam – to scrutiny, arguing that it serves as an agency of Islamic states with serious implications for the lives, rights and freedoms of individuals, many of whom have left their countries of origin precisely to escape the repressive political and social climates there – countries with "moral police" and the death penalty for, among others, gay people, lovers who engage in extra-marital sex and people who reject religious orthodoxy.

A source of frustration for many is that they are lumped into "the Muslim community" whose self-elected spokespeople are more representative of the Islamic states that many in their "Muslim community" have fled: which is why the Council of Ex-Muslims makes a point of calling itself this, to reinforce the point that not everyone who was born into a Muslim community has to be permanently forced into homogenised membership of it. Another reason is to encourage the many closet "apostates" in that community that there is life and succour outside it. Free to Think for Themselves >>> AC Grayling | October 16. 2008

The Dawning of a New Dark Age – Dust Jacket Hardcover, direct from the publishers (UK) >>>
The Dawning of a New Dark Age – Paperback, direct from the publishers (UK) >>>

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

The Rev Dr Peter Mullen*: Beware the Dark Side of the New Moral Consensus

TIMESONLINE: Far worse than the threat from international terrorism is the aggressive process of secularisation that has gripped our country, and most of Europe, and which is becoming ever more frenzied. For example, I guess not many people are aware that it is against the law for state schools to teach the Christian faith as true. Teachers are allowed only to teach about religions. This is atheism by decree, for the only perspective from which one can teach about all religions is the secular perspective. So our children are not brought to a sense of holiness and awe, but are merely taught the meanings of religious terms as sociological descriptions. This deprivation of the spiritual is a form of child abuse.

And then there are the Sexual Orientation Regulations which make it illegal to discriminate on moral grounds between forms of sexual coupling. One might put this epigrammatically: what was once a mortal sin is now only a lifestyle choice. I supported the Homosexual Reform Act back in the 1960s on the grounds that it is not right to criminalise people on the grounds of their sexual orientation.

But the many people who believed that homosexuality should be decriminalised never intended that this should create the proselytising Gay Liberation Movement. The Act decreed that homosexual acts should be “between consenting adults in private” Between means involving two; adult meant 21; and private means behind locked doors. But now the love which once dare not speak its name, shrieks at us in high camp from decorated floats along the high street.

Similarly with abortion law reform, the public was told by its supporters that legalised abortion would abolish the damage to women's health at the hands of the back street abortions. No one at the time thought that a humane Act designed to remove an identifiable evil would lead to abortion on demand, abortion in fact as merely another form of contraception. So now 200,000 embryos every year are ripped, untimely, from the womb just because people fear that a child would interfere with their lifestyle. Beware the Dark Side of the New Moral Consensus >>> Peter Mullen* | January 18, 2008

*The Rev Dr Peter Mullen is the chaplain to the Stock Exchange and rector of St Michael’s, Cornhill. He is the man who has got himself into hot water over these comments

The Dawning of a New Dark Age – Dust Jacket Hardcover, direct from the publishers (UK) >>>
The Dawning of a New Dark Age – Paperback, direct from the publishers (UK) >>>

Friday, September 12, 2008

Pope Hopes to Use Visit to Loosen France's Secularism

CANADA.COM: LOURDES, France - Pope Benedict XVI, despite having little of his predecessor's charisma or popularity, arrives in France on Friday, hoping to inspire renewed interest in the Catholic Church in an adamantly secular and increasingly faithless country known as the church's oldest daughter.

His four-day visit begins with a meeting at the Elysee Palace with President Nicolas Sarkozy who, despite his status as a twice-divorced man, has spoken openly of loosening up France's strict rules that keep religion far from the public square.

That will be followed by several public events in Paris, capped by an outdoor celebration of mass Saturday afternoon, expected to draw more than 200,000.

He then flies to Lourdes to mark the 150th anniversary of apparitions of the Virgin Mary experienced by Bernadette Soubirous, a poor, sickly teen who experienced 18 apparitions of the Virgin Mary that were eventually recognized by the Vatican.

"France is the oldest Christian nation in Europe, the most important country in Western Europe and, traditionally, a centre of Catholic thought and art," Pierre Bellemare, a professor and self-described "pope-watcher" at St. Paul's University in Ottawa, said in an interview Thursday.

"So, naturally, he would like to see Catholicism thrive and be more present there - free to express itself in public debates."

He said Benedict's ultimate hope would be that the French secular model, based in a 1905 law once so harshly enforced that priests were arrested for wearing their clerical clothing in public, move closer to the more "tolerant and open" American model. Pope Hopes to Use Visit to Loosen France's Secularism >>> Peter O'Neil, Europe Correspondent , Canwest News Service | September 11, 2008

The Dawning of a New Dark Age (Paperback – Canada) >>>
The Dawning of a New Dark Age (Hardback – Canada) >>>

Thursday, July 03, 2008

Turkish Party Rejects Anti-Secularism Charges

ASSOCIATED PRESS: ANKARA, Turkey — Turkey's deputy prime minister defended the ruling party in the country's top court Thursday against charges that it is steering the country toward Islamic rule.

The chief prosecutor is demanding the Islamic-rooted party be disbanded for anti-secular activity and that Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and 70 other party members be barred from joining a political party for five years.

The court will deliver a verdict in the coming months. Some observers say a decision to disband the party could throw the country into political and economic instability.

The case is being heard as police rounded up two retired senior generals and some of the government's fiercest critics as part of a widening, year long investigation into allegations of a coup plot against the Islamic-leaning government by secularists.

The court case and the arrests have heightened tensions in Turkey. Erdogan's party is locked in a power struggle with secular groups supported by the military and other state institutions, including the judiciary. Turkish Party Rejects Anti-Secularism Charges >>> | July 3, 2008

DIE PRESSE:
Psychologischer Krieg der Armee gegen Erdogan: Die kemalistische Elite zieht alle Register, um den gemäßigt islamischen Premier Erdogan von der Macht zu drängen. Sehr geschickt geht sie dabei jedoch nicht vor, außer beim Verbotsverfahren gegen die Regierungspartei >>> Von Jan Keetman | 1. Juli 2008

DIE PRESSE:
Held und Hassfigur – Ein Porträt >>>

DIE PRESSE:
Türkei: Von Atatürk bis heute >>>

The Dawning of a New Dark Age – Dust Jacket Hardcover, direct from the publishers (US) >>>
The Dawning of a New Dark Age – Paperback, direct from the publishers (US) >>>

Thursday, June 05, 2008

Turkish Court Upholds College Headscarf Ban

ASSOCIATED PRESS: ANKARA, Turkey — Turkey's top court ruled Thursday that Islamic head scarves violate secularism and cannot be allowed at universities.

The decision is a defeat for Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's Islamic-oriented government, which tried to allow the head scarves at universities as a matter of personal and religious freedom.

But the Constitutional Court verdict issued Thursday said constitutional amendments that were passed by Parliament in February went against secularism.

The head scarf issue is an explosive one Turkey, where the government is locked in a power struggle with secular groups that have support from the military and other state institutions.

The verdict is likely to bode ill for the government. Turkey's chief prosecutor is seeking to disband the ruling party because it is "the focal point of anti-secular activities" in a separate case at the Constitutional Court. He has cited attempts to allow head scarves at universities as a case in point.

Many see the head scarf as an emblem of political Islam, and consider any attempt to allow it in schools as an attack against modern Turkey's secular laws. Turkish Court Upholds College Head Scarf Ban >>> By Suzan Fraser | June 5, 2008

BBC:
Court Annuls Turkish Scarf Reform >>> | June 5, 2008

LE MONDE:
La Cour constitutionnelle turque annule un amendement autorisant le port du voile à l'université >>> | 05.06.08

DIE PRESSE:
Türkei: Kopftuch-Reform ist verfassungswidrig >>> | 05.06.2008

BBC:
Turkish Leaders Face Tense Summer >>> By David O’Byrne | June 5, 2008

The Dawning of a New Dark Age (Paperback – USA)
The Dawning of a New Dark Age (Hardcover – USA)

Thursday, April 03, 2008

Turkey’s AK Party Accused of Undermining the Secular State

VOICE OF AMERICA: Turkey's ruling AK party is facing the prospect of closure, after the country's Constitutional Court agreed to hear a case accusing it of undermining secularism. The prime minister and president also face a five-year political ban. The case, as Dorian Jones reports from Istanbul, has plunged the country into a political crisis.

Constitutional Court Deputy Chairman Court Osman Paksut announced the high court would hear the case against the ruling Justice and Development Party.

The AK party, as it is known in Turkey, is accused of undermining the secular state. If the prosecutor wins the case, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and President Abdullah Gul along with 69 other members of the ruling party face a five-year political ban.

In last year's general election, the party with Islamic roots won nearly two-thirds of the seats in parliament with 47 percent of the vote.

Some political observers say that following his recent victory, Prime Minister Erdogan abandoned the conciliatory approach to the divisive issue of religion, which characterized his previous administration.

"With that 47 percent, he thinks he can rule the world," said Ppolitical [sic] columnist Murat Yetkin. Court Case Against Ruling Party Divides Turks >>> By Dorian Jones, Istanbul | April 2, 2008

Mark Alexander

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Demonstrations for Secularism in Turkey Again

BBC: Tens of thousands of Turks have massed in the city of Samsun in the latest demonstration in support of secularism.

The crowds waved national flags and chanted slogans opposing any change to Turkey's secular political model.

The protest in Samsun, a port on the Black Sea, followed huge rallies in Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir. New rally for Turkish secularism (more)

NZZ:
Erneut Grossdemonstration in der Türkei: Kundgebung gegen Islamisierung

Mark Alexander

Monday, April 30, 2007

Turkey’s Growing Political Crisis

SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: The threat of an army coup hangs over Turkey in a dispute about a presidential election that has once again exposed the country's deep divide between secularists and Islamists. Analysts hope the constitutional court will reduce tensions by annulling the vote and prompting fresh parliamentary elections. Alarm Grows over Political Crisis in Turkey (Read on)

Mark Alexander