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H1N1 VIRUS ALERT
From Episcopal News Service
[Ecumenical News International, Canterbury, England] Fears about the spread of the H1N1 virus, once known as swine flu, are curtailing religious activities of both Christians and Muslims as they worship and express their faith, especially in Britain.
Health authorities believe that the H1N1 flu pandemic is having a greater impact on Britain than on other countries in Europe, with 31 deaths from the sickness reported this week. They attribute this to Britain’s position as an international air communications and travel hub.
Christians in Britain have had to introduce health measures at communion services and concerning the water some of them use to bless themselves on entry into churches.
Leaders of the (Anglican) Church of England wrote on July 23 to bishops recommending the suspension of the sharing of the chalice at communion. The archbishops of Canterbury and York said the church’s worship needed to “take into account the interests of public health during the current phase of the swine flu pandemic.”
The letter followed advice from the health department in Britain not to share “common vessels” for food or drink. The department reported that 100,000 suspected new cases of the flu had been reported in Britain over the past week, almost double the 55,000 new cases in the preceding period.
The Muslim Council of Britain released guidelines to Muslims on its website. It urged imams and mosque committee members to increase the awareness among the Muslim community about the dangers of using communal towels during cleansing ceremonies before worship.
MCB spokesperson Murdaza Shibli told Ecumenical News International that the council, “concurs with the advice of Saudi Health Authorities and the World Health Organization that the current pandemic strain of swine flu was more likely to be severe in certain groups of individuals — elderly, pregnant women, people with chronic disease and children.”
He said that many of the 200,000 would-be pilgrims to Mecca would have to postpone their journeys this year.
As a precaution against spreading the H1N1 virus, Arab health ministers in Cairo on July 22 announced plans to ban children under the age of 12, the elderly, and the chronically ill from attending the hajj — an annual Islamic pilgrimage to Mecca that is a pillar of faith for Muslims.
About three million Muslim pilgrims from more than 160 countries travel to Mecca every year in one of the world’s largest religious gatherings. This year the hajj pilgrimage will take place in November, but many Muslims also visit Mecca during the holy month of Ramadan, which starts in August.
Anglican clergy in the Diocese of Chelmsford east of London have advised worshipers to empty all water stoups at the entry of churches, where people bless themselves with the Sign of the Cross, until the pandemic is over.
“The water contained in stoups can easily become a source of infection and a means of rapidly spreading the virus,” Bishop John Gladwin of Chelmsford said in a message.
While seeking to avoid panic, following reports that as many as 65,000 people could die from the pandemic, Christian and other religious leaders are telling worshipers that certain rituals will have to be abandoned for the time being.
Many British Roman Catholic parishes have stopped offering Communion wine at Mass following fears that sharing the chalice will further spread infection. In New Zealand, the Catholic Church has asked priests not to place Communion wafers on the tongues of worshippers during the Communion service.
November 22, 2008
[Episcopal News Service, Fulbright Association] Archbishop Emeritus of
Cape Town and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Desmond Tutu was awarded the
J. William Fulbright Prize for International Understanding at a
November 21 ceremony at the U.S. Department of State in Washington,
D.C.
The Fulbright Prize recognizes Tutu’s “tireless work for peace in
South Africa and elsewhere, his courage in speaking out against
injustice, his efforts to achieve a democratic and just society
without racial division, and his initiatives to alleviate suffering
caused by HIV/AIDS,” said a news release from the Fulbright
Association, a private, non-profit organization that supports and
promotes the Fulbright Program.
“The Fulbright Prize commemorates many decades of work promoting
international understanding through Fulbright and other international
educational exchanges,” said Suzanne E. Siskel, president of the
Fulbright Association. “It is a great honor to confer the 2008
Fulbright Prize on Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu whose life work
exemplifies the conviction that we must, as the Fulbright Program’s
founder insisted, recognize human dignity as the essential common bond
for a peaceful world.”
Full story: http://www.episcopalchurch.org/81831_102823_ENG_HTM.htm
November 21, 2009
This year marks the 60th anniversary of the founding of the state of Israel. For most Israelis and for many Jews around the world, it marks a time of celebration. But for many Palestinians, it was the 60th year of Naqbeh, also known as “the catastrophe”. A new book, Sixty Years, Sixty Voices: Israeli and Palestinian Women highlights the struggle for peace in the words of women.
Patricia Smith Melton, the book’s editor, and two of the women whose voices are featured in the writings — journalist Barbara Sofer and Reem Alshareef, who heads a school in Hebron — discuss their hope for peace in the Middle East.
Listen to the NPR interview with them at
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=97245426
November 17, 2009
An Episcopal Church and a Synagogue in Connecticut have joined forces. The Jewish congregation has been worshipping in the Episcopal Church for several years. Recently, the church sold part of their land to the Synagogue to build a temple of their own and create a shared campus.
Read all about it here: