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Posts Tagged ‘catholicism

Pope: No more limbo, it’s heaven or hell

2:02 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Controversia| Religion · 4 Comments

23 Apr 2007

limbo.jpgWhile the words of the Pope have long gone unchallenged in Latin America and other countries with large Catholic communities, even the staunchest supporters of the Vatican’s doctrines must be scratching their heads at this: after 800 years, Pope Benedict XVI has done away with the concept of “limbo”:

The decision was taken after Benedict XVI was presented with Vatican studies that said there were “serious” grounds that such souls could go to heaven, rather than exist between heaven and hell as they have done for almost 800 years.

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Blood-crying Virgin on the border

4:50 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Religion| mexico · 1 Comment

5 Mar 2007

070305_virgen_3.jpgLast week Mala told you about a sighting of the Virgen de Guadalupe that occurred in a baking pan in Texas. La Virgen’s latest trick apparently took place in Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, Mexico, when an image of her allegedly began to shed bloody tears.

According to Univision.com, on Ash Wednesday (also the day of the baking pan incident) the image, which its owner, María Guadalupe Salazar Martínez, keeps in her home (which according to Univision, is “made of cardboard, boards and aluminum), began to cry. First, the tears were “normal”, but she later began crying tears of blood. Since then, the home has become a shrine for devout visitors from all over the city, and clergymen have gone to witness the phenomena firsthand to see if it can be indeed declared a miracle. No word on that…yet.

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Evo: Catholic education to remain in schools

2:40 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Bolivia| Education| Religion · Comments Off

2 Aug 2006

morales200_cape20060601.jpgBolivian leader Evo Morales announced earlier in his presidency the possibility of eliminating Roman Catholic teachings from the core curriculum in the country’s education system. Now, he’s backing away from that proposal, according to AP:

President Evo Morales has backed off a proposal to remove Roman Catholic instruction from Bolivia’s schools, easing a dispute with church officials over his plan to place greater emphasis on Indian faiths.

Morales, an Aymara Indian and the Andean nation’s first indigenous president, had earlier accused the Catholic hierarchy of behaving as if they were “in the times of the Inquisition.” But the leftist leader made peace with church officials late Sunday in a conference with Cardinal Julio Terrazas in the highland city of Cochabamba.

“The government and the Catholic church agree to preserve the course on religion, respecting the existing religious diversity in the country,” said a joint statement from Morales and Terrazas released Monday.

Surprisingly, according to AP, the initial proposal to secularize education in Bolivia has cost him the support of citizens, as an overwhelming 83% of Bolivians say they support the Catholic church.

Via / Seattle Post Intelligencer

Jesus Christ in Mexico City

12:19 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Religion| mexico · Comments Off

10 Apr 2006

NT_cristoizt1.jpgEveryone knows that Semana Santa — Holy Week, celebrated this week — is a holiday that is commemorated with some very unique practices throughout the Spanish-speaking world (or wherever Spaniards have treaded; the Philippines actually has one of the most shocking displays of self-flagellation in honor of Semana Santa in the world).

We’ve all seen imagery of the Via Crucis, but have you ever seen J.C. up close and personal, hanging on a cross in a working class neighborhood? The people of Mexico City have, as each year the Iztapalapa neighborhood puts on a spectacle to rival any other. The excellent Mexico City blog Chilanga Banda has a post to bring the unfamiliar up to speed:

The representation of the Passion of Christ has been done in Iztapalapa for over a century and a half to fulfill a promise made by the inhabitants of the area to el Señor de la Cuevita, as a gesture of gratitude for having erradicated a deadly cholera that struck the population in 1833.

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