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Narnia's
lion really is Jesus (December 4, 2005)
- AN unpublished letter from the novelist C S
Lewis has provided conclusive proof of the Christian message in his
Narnia children’s books. In the
letter, sent to a child fan in 1961, Lewis writes: “The whole
Narnian story is about Christ.” It has been found by Walter
Hooper, literary adviser to the Lewis estate. It
has emerged ahead of this week’s release of The Chronicles of
Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe. The film, starring
Tilda Swinton and Jim Broadbent, cost £75m to make and has been at
the centre of a tug of war between Christians and secularists. Brian Sibley, author of Shadowlands, the book
which describes Lewis’s marriage to Joy Gresham, said: “This is
the most specific explanation of Narnia I have heard.” The
new film depicts one of the seven novels in Lewis’s series, which
tell the story of four children journeying through a wardrobe into
Narnia, a world of talking animals that is plunged into endless
winter by a witch. The children and animals rally to Aslan, a noble
lion. On one side church groups,
backed by the film’s producer Disney, are promoting the story’s
message as Christian, with Jesus represented by Aslan saving a world
fallen into sin. more...
Amazing
discovery in heart of biblical Jerusalem (December
4, 2005)
- In what many archaeologists hail as the potential find of the
century, remains of a massive structure dating to the time of King
David have been discovered in the heart of biblical Jerusalem. Eilat
Mazar, the Israeli archaeologist leading the excavation, has
suggested that it may, in fact, be the palace built by David as
described in the Bible. The discovery has shaken the already
contentious field of biblical archaeology to its roots: For the last
few years, a number of respected archaeologists n most prominently
Israel Finkelstein, chairman of Tel Aviv University's archaeology
department and author of the 2001 best-seller The Bible Unearthed
have argued that the biblical accounts of Jerusalem as the seat of a
great and united monarchy under the rule of David and Solomon are
false. If Mazar's hypothesis proves right, it would go a long way
toward proving Finkelstein and the others wrong. Her findings will
also doubtlessly affect the broader political battle over Jerusalem
that is, the question of whether the Jewish people has its origins
in the city and thus has a special hold over it, or whether the
concept of a Jewish origin in Jerusalem is nothing but a myth. With
such a potentially powerful find, there will naturally be no
shortage of skeptics, whether for reasons of politics or
scholarship. Yet there are many good reasons to identify Mazar's
find, at least provisionally, as the palace described in the Book of
Samuel. These reasons deserve to be heard. more...
Reported from harpazo
Ready:
-
Powerful
quake hits central Africa (December 5, 2005)
- A powerful earthquake toppled homes onto children in eastern Congo
Monday, leaving an unknown number of casualties in a region already
beset by war, poverty and volcanoes. UN spokesman Michel Bonnardeaux
said an unknown number of people were killed or injured. Anne
Edgerton, another UN spokesman in the region, said later that about
a dozen injuries had been reported and no deaths could be confirmed.
"Dozens of houses have collapsed, several children were buried
by the roofs of their houses," Dr. Jean-Donne Owali told The
Associated Press by telephone from lakeside Kalemie, Congo, 55
kilometers (35 miles) from the epicenter. "Injured people have
been sent to local hospitals." He said children were brought to
his clinic bleeding from wounds to the head suffered when their
mud-and-thatch homes collapsed. UN spokesman Bonnardeaux said most
of the casualties were struck by falling zinc and steel roofs. He
added damage was reported in Kabalo, a Congolese town 300 kilometer
east of Kalemie along the Lukuga River. The desperately poor region
has camps for tens of thousands of refugees from wars and economic
collapse in Congo and Burundi. The United States Geological Survey
gave a preliminary measurement of 6.8 and located the epicenter
about 10 kilometers (six miles) below the surface of Lake
Tanganyika, between Congo and Tanzania. Quakes of magnitude 7 can
cause widespread and heavy damage. more...
Netanyahu
hints could consider Iran nuclear strike (December
5, 2005)
- Former Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu hinted that he
could consider a pre-emptive air strike against Iran's nuclear
installations if he were to be re-elected. Netanyahu, who is widely
expected to regain the leadership of the right-wing Likud party
later this month, said Israel needed to "act in the
spirit" of the late premier Menachem Begin who ordered an air
strike on Iraq's Osirak nuclear reactor in 1981. "I view the
development of the Iranian nuclear (programme) as a paramount threat
and as a real danger to the future of the state of Israel,"
Netanyahu told the Yediot Aharonot newspaper. "Israel needs to
do everything to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear threat
against it." "We need to act in the spirit of Menachem
Begin, who defied the entire world and with a bold step prevented
Iraq from arming itself with nuclear weapons." Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon, Netanyahu's arch rival said last week that Israel
would never allow its arch-enemy Iran to come into possession of
nuclear weapons. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad caused an
international backlash in October when he called for the Jewish
state to be "wiped off the map". The International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) in September found Iran in non-compliance with
the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, paving the way for the matter
to be referred to the UN Security Council if Iran does not halt
nuclear fuel work and cooperate fully with an IAEA investigation.
Iran has insisted that its nuclear programme is merely designed to
meet domestic energy needs.
-
Pope,
Abbas Discuss Mideast Peace Process (December
5, 2005)
- Pope Benedict XVI discussed the Middle East peace process Saturday
with Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, who invited the pontiff to
visit the Holy Land. ``You will be very welcome in Jerusalem and all
the holy places,'' Abbas, speaking English, told the pope after
their private 20-minute meeting in Benedict's library. ``Thank you
very much,'' the pope replied. Abbas later told journalists that
Benedict ``responded positively'' to his invitation but indicated no
date for a visit. Last month, Israeli President Moshe Katsav invited
Benedict to Israel and said he hoped the pope would visit next year.
During their meeting, Benedict and Abbas talked about the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, with the pope stressing ``the need to
integrate all components of the Palestinian people into the peace
process,'' Vatican spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls said in a written
statement. The statement did not elaborate but appeared to be a
reference to extremist elements blamed for violence and terrorism.
Violence marred primary elections across the Palestinian territories
earlier this week. Briefing journalists at a Rome hotel, Abbas said
the pope with ``his symbolic weight ... can carry out a decisive
role for peace.'' One of the members in the Palestinian delegation
presented the pope with a document that Abbas later said was
fashioned by Bethlehem's inhabitants ``to express the ties of
friendship and spirituality that link the Vatican and the people of
Bethlehem, dear to Christians as Jesus' birthplace.'' When Pope John
Paul II received Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat in 1982, the first
of many meetings between the two men, it sparked protests in Israel
and in the worldwide Jewish community. John Paul consistently
championed rights for the Palestinian people while at the same time
greatly improving the Vatican's relations with Israel. more...
-
El
Baradei: Iran only months away from a bomb (December
5, 2005)
- IAEA chairman Muhammad ElBaradei on Monday confirmed Israel's
assessment that Iran is only a few months away from creating an
atomic bomb. If Teheran indeed resumed its uranium enrichment in
other plants, as threatened, it will take it only "a few
months" to produce a nuclear bomb, El-Baradei told The
Independent. On the other hand, he warned, any attempt to resolve
the crisis by non-diplomatic means would "open a Pandora's box.
There would be efforts to isolate Iran; Iran would retaliate; and at
the end of the day you have to go back to the negotiating table to
find the solution."
-
Russia
Justifies $1 Billion Worth Weapon Deal with Iran (December
4, 2005)
- Russia’s weapons sales to Iran are purely for defensive
purposes, a government spokesman said Saturday, in response to
reports that Russia was selling $1 billion worth of weapons to Iran,
AP reported Saturday. The news reports said Russian was selling Iran
advanced missiles and other systems, but the Foreign Ministry
spokesman, Mikhail Kamynin, did not comment on specifics, saying in
a statement only that they were “exclusively defensive weapons.”
Kamynin said the sales fully complied with nonproliferation
commitments and Russian law. The statement appeared timed to head
off the heated reaction expected from the United States after
Russian media reported Friday that officials had signed contracts in
November that would send up to 30 Tor-M1 missile systems to Iran
over the next two years. The Interfax news agency said the Tor-M1
system could identify up to 48 targets and fire at two targets
simultaneously at a height of up to 20,000 feet. A high-ranking
Iranian official downplayed the deal, telling the official Islamic
Republic News Agency on Saturday that Iran buys arms from many
countries and would not stop. “Iran’s and Russia’s military
cooperation is not a complicated issue,” said Ali Larijani,
secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council. “It
existed before, and there was no ban on it.” Moscow is already at
odds with the West over its nuclear ties with Tehran but has sought
to use its warm relations with Iran to be recognized as a key
mediator between the West and the Islamic Republic, Reuters added.
-
Israeli
Aircraft Fire on Gaza Rocket Lab (December
4, 2005)
- Israeli aircraft fired missiles at an abandoned building and a
rocket launching ground in the northern Gaza Strip on Sunday in the
first aerial attack on Gaza in more than a month, the military said.
Palestinian security officials said missiles also struck a charity
belong to the Islamic Jihad militant group. A bystander was slightly
wounded by flying shrapnel, they said. The Israeli military said it
targeted a building used for terror operations and open fields where
homemade rockets had been launched in recent days. No one was
injured, it said. Palestinians said the building was an abandoned
metal workshop. Israel targets workshops it suspects are used to
produce producing weapons. After a lull of several weeks,
Palestinians began firing homemade rockets at southern Israel from
Gaza again last week. Israel responded initially with artillery
fire. The air strike Sunday was the first since Oct. 27, the
military said. Some Palestinian officials say the attacks on Israel,
which have caused no injuries, have been renewed in an effort to
show force ahead of Jan. 25 Palestinian parliamentary elections.
Reported from Steve
Quayle:
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