freediver
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Pope gets warm welcome in NY synagogue
http://news.smh.com.au/pope-gets-warm-welcome-in-ny-synagogue/20080419-277s.html
A New York synagogue gave Pope Benedict a warm welcome, with the chief rabbi hailing his work for inter-faith dialogue and congregants playing down recent tensions between Catholics and Jews.
"A heartfelt shalom. Willkommen," said Arthur Schneier, chief rabbi of the Park East Synagogue, using the Hebrew word for "peace" and German word for "welcome".
The visit on the eve of Passover, the holy day marking the exodus from Egypt, was only the third by a pope to a Jewish house of worship. Benedict visited one in Cologne, Germany in 2005, and his predecessor Pope John Paul visited the Rome synagogue in 1986.
This is a little weird:
Body to be sent for World Youth Day
http://news.smh.com.au/body-to-be-sent-for-world-youth-day/20080419-276x.html
The body of an inspirational Catholic who died in 1925 will be flown to Sydney for World Youth Day.
Pier Giorgio Frassati will play an important role in the huge Catholic festival despite being dead for more than 80 years, Fairfax Media reports.
Mr Frassati was only 24 when, after a one-week illness, polio killed him, but he has become a role model for young Catholics because of his fervent faith, not to mention his good looks, robust physique and sunny nature.
Frassati was noted for his charity, and at his funeral the poor turned out in force, beginning a devotion that has spread around the world.
The idea of bringing his body to Sydney seems to derive from personal contacts between the Frassati family and the Archdiocese of Sydney, Fairfax Media reports.
Italian sources told Fairfax Media his body would be flown to Sydney in June, and would be displayed in St Mary's Cathedral during the World Youth Day period in July.
A possible road to sainthood has been propelled by a vigorous campaign by his sister, Luciana, who wrote books about him.
Pope champions human rights in UN address
http://news.smh.com.au/pope-champions-human-rights-in-un-address/20080418-26y4.html
Pope Benedict XVI turned to diplomacy Friday with a scheduled speech at the United Nations to champion human rights, as the highlight of a US visit marked so far by his unprecedented attention to the pedophile priest scandal.
After celebrating Mass with some 48,000 people in Washington Thursday, Benedict held an unprecedented private encounter with five people who said they had been sexually abused by priests, offering them his support after he acknowledged the pain and damage caused by the scandal.
The group prayed together and the pontiff then listened to the stories of the victims, and "offered them words of encouragement and hope," the Vatican said in a statement.
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