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Israel and
Europe must nurture detente (December
20, 2005)
- Almost
overnight and unnoticed, relations between the European Union and
Israel have gone through a major transformation. A few weeks ago,
the odds of that happening seemed remote. Centuries of
persecution, expulsions, blood libel and, finally, the Holocaust are
the core of the Israeli (and Jewish) attitude towards Europe. The
sense of betrayal at two existential junctures - by France in the
1967 war and by Great Britain in the 1973 war - and the perception
of Europe as pro-Arab have amplified Israel’s suspicion of Europe.
European attitudes towards Israel are no less complex. There is
recognition of a moral debt and of Israel’s achievements and its
democracy, but also criticism of Israel’s presence in the
Palestinian territories and of the means deployed by Israel to
protect itself (the security fence, combating terror and its impact
on the Palestinian population). The close co-operation between
Washington and Jerusalem irked the Europeans while Europe’s
infatuation with Yasser Arafat, the Palestinian leader, dismayed
Israel. All of these things prevented a meaningful political
dialogue, let alone co-operation, on resolving the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. In the diplomatic language it
translates into "correct" relations, meaning cold and
remote. The death of Arafat, the EU positions on Lebanon and Iran,
the improved EU-US dialogue on the Middle East and, above all,
Israel’s acceptance of the road map for peace and its
disengagement from Gaza and settlements in the West Bank, have
created a new environment between Europe and Israel. The first
harbinger was the European Neighborhood Policy agreement between the
EU and Israel, which included a wide-ranging political dialogue on
the peace process, methods of combating terror, anti-Semitism, human
rights abuses and weapons of mass destruction. The
Gaza disengagement and the manner in which it was implemented
transformed Europe’s view of Ariel Sharon, Israel’s prime
minister. It also created a new agenda enabling Europe to find for
the first time a role in the Palestinian-Israeli conflict beyond
just being a financial donor. In a matter of weeks, the EU has found
itself engaged in three different missions - the opening of the
Rafah crossing between Gaza and Egypt, the upgrading of the
Palestinian internal security forces and the facilitation of trade
relations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.
more...
-
Ailing
hearts boosted by Israeli stem cell treatment (December
22, 2005)
- Ever since she gave birth two years ago, Jeanine Lewis' heart had
grown increasingly weak and enlarged, due to a condition called
cardiomyopathy. She was diagnosed with the condition at age 17, but
childbirth significantly worsened her health. With each pump, her
heart moved only about half the blood that a healthy heart should be
circulating throughout her body. The 29-year-old Pennsylvania
resident was on the verge of despair when she found an Internet site
that described revolutionary stem cell treatments for conditions
like hers, and she decided to fill out the questionnaire to see if
she qualified. Two months later, she received a phone call from a
representative from the company TheraVitae, who told her that the
company could offer a possible solution to her problems. In May, a
team of cardiac surgeons led by Dr. Kit Arom, a renowned cardiac
surgeon worldwide at Bangkok's Heart Hospital, and Dr. Amit Patel of
the University of Pittsburgh operated on Lewis in Thailand, and she
became the first patient in the world to have stem cells that had
been harvested using TheraVitae's Israeli-developed VesCell therapy
implanted directly into her heart. "I'm not ready to run a
marathon," she recently wrote on her website. "But I feel
like I did before I was pregnant. That they could take something
from your own body and use it to heal you, there's nothing more
natural than that." Lewis's miraculous recovery was a result of
TheraVitae's novel technology which offers treatment for heart
disease with stem cells taken from the patient's own blood. more...
-
The
Mid-East's beleaguered Christians
- In the Egyptian city of Alexandria, a crowd of Muslim
demonstrators tries to storm a Coptic church to protest at a play
about a Muslim campaign to convert Christians. In Iraq, the
Christian middle class is emigrating in droves, fearful of the daily
violence and the hostility it now encounters from Islamists. In
Saudi Arabia, churches and other places of non-Muslim worship are
banned, and foreign workers who try to hold secret Christian
services are jailed, flogged and often deported. In the land of its
birth, Christianity is in sad decline as the pressures of life under
Israeli occupation and the growth of militant Islam push Palestinian
Christians from Jerusalem and the West Bank. Few issues are so
sensitive as the position of Christians in the Middle East. Some
Christian Arabs seek to minimise the difficulties they face, either
to avoid trouble or to present themselves in a patriotic light. At
the other extreme, some outsiders - for example, in the United
States - exaggerate the plight of Middle East Christians, depicting
them as wholly marginalised and on the verge of extinction. more...
-
Islamic
Rule Slowly Replacing Military Influence in Turkey (December
15, 2005)
- Tensions have risen between Turkey's military and Islamist
government. Officials and military sources said the tensions stem
from efforts by the government of Prime Minister Recep Erdogan to
sharply reduce the role and profile of the military. The effort has
been supported by Erdogan's Justice and Development Party, or AKP,
which has a huge majority in parliament. The latest tiff was sparked
by a parliamentary demand to remove the military contingent from the
government complex in Ankara. Parliamentarians said the military
presence in the complex was not appropriate for a country that
sought to join the European Union, Middle East Newsline reported.
"Ankara, which is the center of national politics, has a
military appearance rather than a political one,"
parliamentarian Resul Tosun, an AKP member said. The campaign by
Tosun has been supported by many in the AKP. Turkey's military
maintains the headquarters of the General Staff as well as the land,
naval and air forces commands near parliament. The military academy
is also located nearby. more...
-
Muslim
'power extending into Canadian politics'
- A Muslim who won the Liberal Party nomination for a parliamentary
seat in Ontario, Canada, declared his success a victory for Islam in
a speech to supporters, according to a Coptic Christian who attended
the event. "This is a victory for Islam! Islam won! Islam won!
... Islamic power is extending into Canadian politics," Omar
Alghabra, the Liberal candidate for Mississauga-Erindale,
reportedly declared to his audience of several hundred. Alghabra
delivered his speech Dec. 2 in the Coptic Christian Centre of the
Church of the Virgin Mary and St. Athanasius in Mississauga. David
Ragheb, a member of the congregation, reported that following the
speech, Markham Councillor Khalid Osman took to the stage and made
his own declaration. "We have the East, we have the West, and
now we have Mississauga!" he said to cheers and applause from
the audience. Ragheb commented: "A member of Parliament is
supposed to represent my concerns about taxes and roads in
Mississauga, not promote an Islamic agenda." Victor Fouad, an
associate member of the Canadian Coptic Association, said he wrote
to Prime Minister Paul Martin, expressing concern about such
Islamist rhetoric from a Liberal who could easily become a Canadian
parliamentarian. Foud says his message was ignored, however, and
"Paul Martin's silence since that time can only be interpreted
as approval of Mr. Alghabra's rhetoric." more...
-
New
scanner to unveil more mysteries of the body (December
21, 2005)
- A scanner that can peer inside a living body to reveal muscles,
organs and arteries in unprecedented detail has been unveiled. Using
the £900,000 Somatom Definition scanner, doctors can
"remove" a heart, dissect it and hunt for blocked vessels
without spilling a drop of blood. They can inspect the outcome of
heart surgery without putting a patient at risk, or quickly produce
a finely detailed image to help diagnose patients admitted to
hospital in an emergency. The machine is the latest generation of
computed tomography (CT) scanner, pioneered in the early 1970s by
Sir Godfrey Hounsfield, the British Nobel laureate, who died last
year. Developed by Siemens, the new scanner uses two X-ray sources
to produce a much-improved image and a huge amount of information
about what is going on inside the body. One of the machines should
be operational in Britain by the second half of next year. more...
-
Discovery
of Tombstones in China Could be "Earthquake in World's
Christian Community"; World History Could be Rewritten (December
23, 2005)
- Legend of Thomas the Apostle may prove to be fact. According to a
report in the China Daily, one day in spring, an elderly man
walked alone on a stone road in Xuzhou in East China's Jiangsu
Province. At the end of the road was a museum that few people have
heard of. As he wandered into the gallery, he was stunned by what he
saw. Was he standing, he asked himself, in front of the famous Gates
of Paradise in Florence? Wang Weifan, a 78-year-old scholar of early
Christian history in China, said he saw images from Bible stories
similar to those engraved in the doors of the Baptistry of St John.
But in Florence he didn't. Even so, says reporter Wang Shanshan, the
art objects could be more precious in their own way if the early
Christian clues that Wang believes he detected can ever be
confirmed. They are from the Eastern Han Dynasty (AD 25-220),
China's parallel to the Roman Empire, and almost a millennium older
than the gilt-bronze gates of Florence. "There was Christmas.
There was Genesis. There was Paradise Lost. They were on display,
one by one, on 10 stone bas-reliefs excavated from an aristocrat's
tomb in the Han Dynasty," said Wang, a professor of theology at
the Jinling Theological Seminary in Nanjing, as he told his story to
China Daily. Before Wang's discovery tour to the Han Dynasty Stone
Relief Museum in 2002, no one seriously believed that, merely 100 or
so years after the crucifixion of Jesus Christ, his teachings could
have reached as far as to China. There were myths, of course, and
there was legend, but no evidence until now. But now Wang says,
"It really happened." The reliefs which fascinated Wang
were carved on stone tablets from two tombs, discovered in 1995 at a
place called Jiunudun, or "Terrace of Nine Women," in
suburban Xuzhou. "The Bible stories were told on the stones in
a kind of time sequence," said Wang. One depicted "a woman
taking fruit from 'the tree of knowledge of good and evil' and a
snake biting her right sleeve. It also included the angel sent by
God to guard the tree." more...
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