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Katolsk vision är ett forum för fri debatt mellan katoliker, andra kristna och allmänheten i övrigt. Alla deltagare i debatten i detta forum svarar själva för sina åsikter.
Välkommen att delta i diskussionerna! **** Catholic Vision is a forum for free debate between catholics, other christians and the public in general. All participants in this debate forum are responsible only for their own views. Welcome to participate in the discussions! **** Here is also the address to our web site where you'll find more info: http://www.geocities.com/katolskvision/
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Elisabet
Datum: 17 december 2006 Poster: 78
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Postat: tis sep 25, 2007 7:40 am Rubrik: Stöd åt munkarnas fredliga protest |
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Den som med sin signatur vill visa stöd för munkarnas fredliga protester mot militärregimen i Burma kan skriva under på en petition till FNs Säkerhetsråd och FNs media...
Namninsamlingen startade i går, och har just nu fått över 12000 namn. Målet är 100000.
Läs om petionen här:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/stand_with_burma/c.php?cl=19996047
Hälsning Elisabet |
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Elisabet
Datum: 17 december 2006 Poster: 78
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Postat: fre sep 28, 2007 10:37 am Rubrik: |
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Namninsamlingen (enl ovan) är just nu uppe i 171,811 namn.
Ytterligare ett sätt att visa sin solidaritet är att bära röd skjorta i dag. Följande sms har cirkulerat runt om i världen:
- "In support of our incredibly brave friends in Burma: May all people aroundthe world wear a red shirt on FridaySeptember 28.
Please forward."-
Det vi gör här uppmärksammas i Burma och ger moraliskt stöd åt munkarna och folket där.
Elisabet |
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Irène
Datum: 08 april 2007 Poster: 72
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Postat: fre sep 28, 2007 10:52 am Rubrik: |
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Elisabeth
Strålande initiativ. Jag har skrivit på
Hälsningar Irène
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LenaA
Datum: 17 augusti 2007 Poster: 57 Ort: Uppsala län
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Postat: fre sep 28, 2007 4:09 pm Rubrik: |
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Röd skjorta ... Hur många kan egentligen tänkas ha en röd skjorta i garderoben? Jag har bara en röd t-shirt, och det är ju lite för kallt för det nu. Tror ni att en röd mössa kan fungera istället? |
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Elisabet
Datum: 17 december 2006 Poster: 78
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Postat: sön okt 07, 2007 6:36 pm Rubrik: |
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Namninsamlingen är nu uppe i 676.223 undertecknare. Munkarna säger att det betyder väldigt mycket att inte världen nu glömmer bort vad som hänt och fortfarande händer, trots att nyheter har svårt att komma ut och de flesta munkarna är isolerade. Ett fortsatt ihärdigt moraliskt stöd kan verkligen vara till stor hjälp.
Tre munkar flydde från Burma till Thailand för att kunna berätta för världen vad de varit med om. Snart återvänder åtminstone en av dem hem till Burma igen. Vida, den munk vars historia vi här får ta del av, är övertygad om att inom några veckor kommer munkarna återigen att organisera sig i protest, men denna gång kanske på ett helt annat sätt. Planer görs upp.
Power of love might not be enough, says monk who fled Rangoon terror
by Nick Meo, The Times, October 5, 2007
Mae Sot, Thailand -- Last week Vida was a simple monk who marched through the streets of Rangoon because he believed it would persuade the regime to be more compassionate towards Burma’s hungry poor. Yesterday he was an angry, perhaps even traumatised, man - but a determined one; his face haunted, his hands kneading constantly as he described his hatred of a military regime he is determined to help to bring down.
Vida, 48, and two comrades were among the first monks to escape from Rangoon, crossing the border into Thailand and bringing with them a tale of horror and heroism from the Saffron Revolution and a message of defiance for the world. “In a few weeks the monks will reorganise,” he said. “This is not the end.”
Vida did not want to give his first name, nor be photographed, as he intends to return to Burma soon. He said he had given up his job as a TV repairman seven years ago to become a monk and had never been interested in protest politics before this summer.
Speaking from a safe house in Mae Sot, he said: “Politics is not the concern of the monks but this time we saw the people getting poorer and poorer and their trouble get bigger and bigger. We thought the monks could negotiate between the regime and the people and show loving kindness to both sides.” The overture was met with a deadly fusillade, which Vida believes may have killed some of his comrades, although in the confusion of a panicking crowd, as he ran for his life amid teargas, screams and gunshots, he cannot be sure.
He escaped into a temple and then spent a couple of days in Rangoon staying with friends and avoiding his monastery as agents from the regime’s militia rounded up monks. He decided to try to reach Thailand to tell the world what he had seen, begging lifts from bus drivers and talking his way through police checkpoints on the road to the border.
The last few days have left their mark. His face is drained. The euphoria of protest, followed by the horror of the attack and the fear of being on the run, has left him exhausted.
The experience has also tried his Buddhist beliefs. “I hate the soldiers now,” he said through an interpreter. “I know I shouldn’t, but I do. Those who killed monks will go to the lowest depths of the Hells. They will not scare us into giving up, though. We are even more determined to continue our struggle against the military. We want peace, national reconciliation, lower prices and the release of political prisoners and Aung San Suu Kyi.
“In about three weeks, after a Buddhist festival is completed, I will return to Burma. We will return to our struggle. Plans are being drawn up.” Asked whether he was ready to die, Vida answered emphatically: “Yes”. He said he did not know whether the monks would return to street protests, or to a more long-term civil disobedience campaign. “I think there will be a different style of protest,” he said.
He described his escape from a bus station where 300 desperate monks had gathered to try to get out of Rangoon. Some had cast off their robes but they were unmistakable with their shaven heads. People were scared to help them, he said, but some managed to summon up the courage to do so, donating money for food, or beds for the night. One monastery in Thailand refused shelter to him and his two colleagues, one of whom was ill.
Other Burmese monks in Thailand have described angry arguments within monasteries in Burma over whether to join the protests, with radical young monks sometimes claiming that corrupt abbots, paid by the regime, tried to hold them back.
Fear levels are high. Siri, one of Vida’s comrades, said: “The military are so brutal. I think they might have had a lot of people shot and beaten.”
Vida added: “They will not last much longer. The monks have the power of love. But we need the international community, too.”
This article comes from The Buddhist Channel site
http://www.buddhistchannel.tv/index.php?id=51,5100,0,0,1,0
Elisabet |
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Elisabet
Datum: 17 december 2006 Poster: 78
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Postat: tis okt 09, 2007 11:11 am Rubrik: Katolska stud. i Australien: fortsatt stöd! (8 okt) |
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Interreligiös solidaritet.
Den katolska studentföreningen (ACSA) i Australien uttrycker sina medlemmars oro över alla övergrepp på de buddistiska munkarna - fängslande, tortyr, mord.
Studenterna anmodar alla katolska studenter att be för munkarnas sak.
De vänder sig också till den australienska regeringen samt det internationella världssamfundet med önskan om fortsatt uppmärksamhet och press på Burmas makthavare.
Kan de katolska studenterna i Sverige också uppmana till fortsatt stöd? Eller görs det?
http://www.catholicstudents.org.au/
Elisabet |
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Du kan skapa nya inlägg i det här forumet Du kan svara på inlägg i det här forumet Du kan inte ändra dina inlägg i det här forumet Du kan inte ta bort dina inlägg i det här forumet Du kan inte rösta i det här forumet
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