Liz Taylor slams MJ doc for gay claim

New York, May 14 (ANI): Elizabeth Taylor blasted Michael Jackson’s doctor, Dr. Arnold Klein, via Twitter for claiming that the late singer had a gay affair.

Earlier this month, Dr. Klein, a longtime friend and physician to Jackson who also treats Taylor, told TMZ that his office manager, Jason Pfeiffer, had a two-month gay affair with the King of Pop, reports The New York Post.

“Dr. Arnie Klein declared on May 2 that he did not betray Michael Jackson by saying publicly that he had a homosexual relationship with someone in Arnie”s office,” Taylor tweeted. “It seems he supplies not only women (Debbie Rowe), but men too … how convenient.”

“Just what we want in our doctors. And then to say he did not betray Michael”s confidence. No wonder he has death threats,” Taylor continued.

“I thought doctors, like priests took an oath of confidentiality. May God have mercy on his soul.”

Klein said he made the gay affair announcement to put an end to rumors that Jackson was a pedophile. (ANI)

Pope”s ally facing paedophilia claims

London, May 8 (ANI): A close friend of Pope Benedict XVI who has already offered to resign after confessing that he hit children in his care is now facing a probe over allegations of sex abuse.

Prosecutors in the southern city of Augsburg said that they had opened a preliminary probe into Walter Mixa after media reports said he had been accused of sexually abusing a boy while bishop of Eichstaett between 1996 and 2005.

For weeks, the 69-year-old bishop rebuffed allegations that he beat children at a Roman Catholic orphanage in the 1970s and 1980s.

But, after several sworn statements from his accusers came to the fore, the bishop from the Pope”s native Bavaria admitted that he “may have” slapped the children while a priest.

On April 21 he tendered his resignation after admitting giving youngsters in his care “a slap in the face or two”, which he said was “completely normal back then,” reports the Telegraph.

The Augsburger Allgemeine daily cited a lawyer for Bishop Mixa, long known as a hardliner who in February blamed sexual abuse of children by priests in part on “the so-called sexual revolution”, as rejecting the latest accusations.

The pope has not yet responded to Bishop Mixa”s offer to quit. (ANI)

Diocese needs its own bishop to survive: Priest

A Parkes Catholic priest who has been elected to represent clergy across almost half of New South Wales says the area needs its own bishop to help it survive.

The church is considering a proposal to dissolve the Forbes-Wilcannia diocese because of falling parishioner numbers and not enough priests.

Those opposed to the idea have elected three bishops to argue their case.

Father John Keeble says just like other dioceses Forbes-Wilcannia is suffering from drought and unemployment, but it has been hampered by not having a full-time bishop.

“You need a bishop because if anyone of us is trying to negotiate with other bishops, or bishops overseas to bring priests out here they really don’t want to talk to a priest they want to talk to a bishop,” he said.

The bishops will consider the future of the diocese in June.

Italian abuse victims want pope to speak out

(Reuters) – Abuse victim Dario Laiti is deaf and has great difficulty speaking. But he has a clear message for Pope Benedict: expose predator priests, past and present, living and dead, for the good of the Church.

World | Italy

“I think the pope has to carry out justice. He has to get rid of all the priests who abused children. He has to tell the world who these people were and which of them are still living,” Laiti told Reuters in this northern Italian city.

So far, the pope has not spoken out directly on the new wave of sexual abuse allegations that is hounding the Church in a number of countries, including the United States, Italy and his native Germany.

Laiti, 59, and others who say they were abused as boys in the Church-run Antonio Provolo School for the deaf decades ago have joined a growing list of victims who are calling on the pontiff to say more and directly address the crisis.

The diocese of Verona has opened an investigation into the accusations. It says while some abuse may have taken place at the school in the 1950s and 1960s, it was not as extensive as some of the former Provolo students claim.

Victims have come forward in many places, including Germany and the United States. But Laiti and his former schoolmates stand out in a country where the Roman Catholic Church still wields enormous power.

“I think this is just the tip of the iceberg,” said Marco Politi, a Vatican analyst and papal biographer.

“The Church has a culture of secrecy in every country, but here in Italy, unlike in some Anglo-Saxon countries, it is still a big player in politics, so people are still afraid of coming out and criticizing it,” Politi told Reuters.

CULTURE OF SILENCE

Last month, Monsignor Charles Scicluna, an official at the Vatican department that investigates abuse cases, said he was worried about “a certain culture of silence which I feel is still too widespread in the country (Italy).”

The former students of the school, run at the time by the small Company of Mary priestly order, signed statements in late 2008 saying they were abused by about two dozen priests, brothers and lay religious men, mostly in the 1960s.

Their stories have gained more attention as the abuse scandal swirls around the world and hits the Roman Catholic Church’s image.

Some are now questioning whether the pope, then known as Joseph Ratzinger, mishandled cases of abuse when he was a bishop in Germany and a Vatican official before his election in 2005.

Laiti and two other victims, Gianni Bisoli, 61, and Moreno Corbellari, 60, described their ordeals in interviews with Reuters in the garden of a building in Verona where city officials have given their association space for meetings.

The men speak with difficulty, making sounds that resemble mumbles, and sometimes need the help of an interpreter using sign language.

“I went to the Provolo when I was six years old and after a few weeks they started molesting me, two or three times a week, for six or seven years,” said Laiti, who worked as a delivery man for a local car parts company before his retirement.

“They masturbated me, they made me masturbate them, they sodomized me,” he said.

Gianni Bisoli, 61, said he too was molested at night in bed, in the baths and in the carpentry shop. He attended the school from 1957 to 1963 before running away.

He said he was forced to perform oral sex and was sometimes “bathed and perfumed” and taken to the residence of the then bishop, who has since died.

“I looked at the ceiling which looked liked it was in a museum and he would say “how beautiful you are.” I did not know what do to. One time he took my clothes off,” Bisoli said, adding that it happened “four or five times,” starting when he was 12 years old and until he was 14 or 15.

Asked what the pope should do, Bisoli said: “He should get rid of the (abuser priests). And if he is responsible he should resign.”

DIOCESE OPENS INVESTIGATION

The Verona archdiocese opened an investigation into accusations of abuse shortly after the Italian newsweekly L’Espresso first wrote about them last year.

Monsignor Bruno Fasani, a spokesman for the diocese, said priests, brothers and staff who worked at the school from the 1950s to the 1970s were questioned after the magazine report and said they were not aware of any systematic abuse.

He told Reuters the investigation found that decades ago two young “aspiring priests” were “immediately dismissed” when it was discovered that they were sexually attracted to boys.

Fasani said that when the diocesan investigation started, one brother who worked in the school decades ago and is now over 80 admitted to having abused boys. When told he would have to undergo therapy and be further investigated, he left the order.

The results of the Verona investigation were sent to the Vatican last year and the Vatican responded two months ago, telling the diocese to continue the probe by convoking all those who say they were abused and hear their stories.

“We want to clear it all up,” Fasani said. “Although something may have happened, saying that 24 priests and brothers were abusers out of a total of 28 in the entire religious order just does not stand up. We are looking for the truth.”

Fasani said Bisoli’s accusations against the bishop at the time, were “very, very, very unlikely to be true,” but that they would be studied further. “No one believes this. Knowing the man, his moral vigor. It is difficult that no-one saw this. A bishop is never alone,” Fasani said.

(Editing by Noah Barkin)

Special Holi celebrations at Guwahati’s Kamakhya Temple

Guwahati, Mar. 31 (ANI): Thousands of devotees from across the country gathered at Guwahati’s Kamakhya Temple to celebrate a special Holi festival.

The festival is celebrated on the full moon day after the Navratri to please Goddess Kamakhya, the consort of Lord Shiva.

Devotees offer prayers to the Goddess Kamakhya, smear colour on each other and sing devotional songs in praise of the goddess.

As a part of celebrations, the idol of the goddess is taken from the altar and carried in a palanquin to the nearby Bogola Temple.

After worshiping the goddess there, the devotees bring back the idol to its place.

“The idol of the goddess is worshipped in a temple nearby and after the worship rituals are finished there, the idol is brought back here. This is the Goddess” Holi,” said Sobha Kant Dobey, a tourist from Bihar.

The celebrations this year took place on a rainy day, which saw the devotees celebrating with great gusto.

“This is Mother”s power that it is her Holi today and it is raining as well. That”s why we believe in religion,” said Manik Deori, a priest.

The priests who participate in this festival are not allowed to eat outside the temple for 15 days.

It is only after the Holi celebrations that priests are permitted to eat at their homes. (ANI)

Priests fear diocese shake-up

Local priests in the Wilcannia-Forbes diocese are unhappy with a proposal by the Catholic Church to dissolve the district.

Caretaker and apostolic administrator, Bishop Terence Brady, says the proposal has come about because the population in western New South Wales is diminishing.

He says the vast area that needs to be covered to reach parishioners has become too much for the small number of priests.

Bishop Brady says many priests in the diocese feel threatened by the proposal.

“They haven’t really got anything to worry [about],” he said.

“Each of those priests will be given a choice which diocese they would like to be part of.

“It’s not going to affect life in the parishes, it’s not going to affect life in the schools [and] it won’t affect life in the social welfare centres or the aged care centres.

“The only difference is obviously … there’ll be a new bishop.”

Ghost fair in Jharkhand witnesses a sea of humanity

Palamu (Jharkhand), March 27 (ANI): Though people all over the world visit religious places to seek blessings for happiness and a good fortune for themselves, an annual fair held in Jharkhand’s Palamu district attracts people who wish to free themselves of the suspected evil spirits’ influence.

Hundreds of devotees of tribal and non-tribal families participated in a unique the ‘Ghost fair’ hosted in the vicinity of Sheetala Mata temple here recently.

The large presence of believers during the annual fair felt like a literal sea of humanity near the temple located in the Haider Nagar. It is held during the nine days of Navratri festival here.

Devotees camped in tents in front of the temple and persons ”possessed” by ghosts were escorted to the temple where the priests and Tantriks (sorcerers) would perform various rituals and offer prayers before the Goddess.

During these rituals, the persons who are in trance, are believed to have been influenced by the divine power of the presiding deity.

People at the fair said that they arrived here after being unsatisfied by doctors for their respective medical problems.

“This is an age-old mystic temple. People have been visiting this temple for 50 to 60 years. They come here to fulfill their wishes, get rid of the evil spirits or any problem they are facing. The presiding deity of temple goddess relieves them of all the problems,” said Surendra Nath Tyagi, priest of Sheetala Mata temple, Hairderpur.

It is believed besides obviation from evil spirits, the devout visitors also have a belief that their all wishes will be realized after praying here by a pure heart and deep faith.

“After noticing such a sea of devotees at this temple, one can make out that there has to be some reality in this ritual, otherwise people would not visit this temple. I feel that this temple has some powers, that is why people come here to get rid of their problems,” said Meera Devi, one of the devotee.

This fair has been a popular event for several decades. (ANI)

Pashupatinath attacks do not affect Nepali students in Varanasi

Varanasi, Sep 19 (ANI): The attacks on Indian priests of Pashupatinath temple in Kathmandu failed to disturb the relationship between Nepali and Indian students studying at a temple in Varanasi.

The Nepali students said that they are not concerned about such matters as they are of a political nature. They say their work is just to learn and not be involved in other considerations.

“We are not much concerned about the incident. All of us here study together, be it Indians or Nepalis or anyone, without any differences. Our work is to learn. We do not even know much about it. These are political matters and politics does not concern us much,’ said Medini Prasad, a Nepali student.

Classes are going on as usual, with the temple reverberating with chants and recitations of shlokas, rhymed poetic verse from Hindu religious texts.

Acharya Limbanath, head priest, Nepali Temple, said that there are historical ties between India and Nepal, and these should be respected. And as far as the attacks are concerned they are works of miscreants.

“Indians and Nepalis share solidarity and brotherhood since times immemorial. It is just some miscreants that exist everywhere, who want to create trouble for their own benefit,’ he said.

Teknath Upadhyay, Nepali Priest, felicitated by the temple authorities recently said that, they were respected in India and the Nepal government and people should follow the example.

“They should give respect to all the priests despite any considerations of who they are or where they are. They should give them respect like we are given in India. Even the priests there should be shown respect by the government as well as the people of Nepal,” he added.

Two Indian priests in the Pashupatinath temple were beaten up by Maoists on September 4, demanding important religious jobs be given to Nepalis.

For centuries, the priests of the Pashupatinath Temple were picked by shrine authorities from among high-caste Hindus in India, with the consent of the king of Nepal.

Since Nepal abolished the monarchy and became a republic last year, the government has taken over the task. (ANI)

Maoists unlock Pashupatinath temple trust office in Nepal

Kathmandu, Sept 16 (ANI): Maoists re-opened the Pashupati Area Development Trust (PADT) office of centuries-old Pashupatinath Temple here on Tuesday.

It was locked about two weeks ago after the two Indian priests were beaten up.

Maoists said the Pashupati Area Development Trust (PADT) office was re-opened for an upcoming festival.

“We have opened the lock for the Chhath festival, taking the welfare of ordinary people and devotees into consideration. We will bring a new programme of protests after the end of the festivals,” said Rishi Prasd Sharma, coordinator, struggle committee.

Two Indian priests in the temple were beaten up by Maoists on September 4 demanding important religious jobs be given to Nepalis.

For centuries, the priests of the Pashupatinath Temple were picked by shrine authorities from among high-caste Hindus in India, with the consent of the king of Nepal.

Since Nepal abolished the monarchy and became a republic last year, the government has taken over the task. (ANI)

Priest committee continues strike in Pashupatinath area against Indian priests appointment

Kathmandu, Sep.6 (ANI): The agitating Priest Appointment Joint Struggle Committee (PAJSC) and Unified CPN (Maoist) supporters on Sunday continued with their protests in and around the Pashupatinath Area against the appointment of Indian priests at the holy Pashupaitnath temple.

Protestors chanted slogans against the appointment of Indian priests and obstructed traffic at Purano Baneshwor, Gaushala, Mitrapark, Jayabageshwori, and Chabahil, reports Nepal News.

They also demanded the resignation of Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal and Culture Minister Manindra Rijal over the issue. The obstruction caused long traffic snarls in the area and threw traffic out of gear in other parts of the city including ring road for couple of hours.

Police intervened in the demonstration and arrested some protestors also. PAJSC has accused the police administration of using excessive force to quell their demonstration and torturing protestors who have been arrested.

PAJSC has been protesting since last week following the Indian priests’ appointment at the most revered Hindu temple in the country.

It has been demanding that Nepali nationals should also be considered while appointing top priests at the temple, that the appointment be made through open competition among both Nepali and Indian nationals, that the finances and expenses of the Pashupatinath Area Development Trust (PADT) should be made public and more transparency on the utilization of money that devotees offer, among others.

Newly appointed Indian priests in Pashupatinath, Girish Bhatta and Raghavendra Bhatta, brought from Karnataka state of India last week, had entered the temple amid tight security and started worship on Saturday morning.

The government had deployed an estimated 1,000 security personnel in and around the temple for this after Maoist and PAJSC members entered the temple and thrashed the newly-appointed Indian priests on Friday.

India also reacted very strongly to the incident.

“The attack on the newly appointed Indian priests, Girish Bhatt and Raghavendra Bhatt, at the revered and sacred Pashupatinath temple on September 4 has caused deep anguish and serious concern in India. The matter was immediately taken up through our Embassy in Kathmandu at the highest levels in the Government of Nepal and our concerns conveyed,” India’s Ministry of External Affairs said in a statement.

Indian ambassador Rakesh Sood had also visited Pashupati temple Saturday morning and condemned the beating of Indian priests.

Briefly speaking to reporters, Sood said he had taken the incident very seriously. (ANI)

Nepal Cultural Minister regrets Maoist attack on Indian priests

Kathmandu, Sep 5 (ANI): Nepal Cultural Minister Minindra Rijal on Saturday expressed regret at the Maoists attack on two Indian priests at the Pashupatinath temple in Kathmandu and assured adequate security to them.

“This is very sad and most regrettable to attack Indian priests inside the holy temple which is the centre of faith for millions of Hindus across the world,” Rijal said.

Earlier on Friday, a mob of 40 to 50 Maoists entered the temple posing as devotees and tore clothes and sacred threads of two priests, Girish Bhatta and Raghavendra Bhatta. They were brutally thrashed as well.

The Minister also said that police has arrested about two dozen people for alleged involvement in the incident.

Rijal further apologised for the inconvenience caused to the devotees, said that adequate security would be provided to them to prevent a repeat of the incident. (ANI)

Monsoon woes continue in Uttar Pradesh

Madna (Uttar Pradesh), July 4 (ANI): Delay in Monsoon in Uttar Pradesh, is upsetting villagers and farmers of Madna village, as they are going through a tough time as the fields in the region have almost dried up.

Harvesting was supposed to start by June 15 but with the delay in monsoons, the whole schedule went haywire.

“We haven’t received any rainfall since last monsoon. We received light rainfall some 7-8 days ago but it was of no benefit. The crops are completely dried up. We don’t plough the land now as the crops which have dried up are now finished,” said Kamlesh Singh, owner of a field.

The village head of Madna, Om Prakash fears that if the current situation continues, it may bring the villagers on the verge of death.

“Farmers are feeling helpless as our village is a flood prone village and many of the sugarcane crops got destroyed earlier because of it. This time we just had wheat crop yield and if there are no rains, then drought might occur and bring the farmers to the verge of death,” said Om Prakash.

Meanwhile, priests in Hyderabad performed fire rituals to appease the Hindu God of rain, Indra.

While incessant rains are lashing the western parts of the country disrupting normal life, it is playing truant in some southern parts of the country.

The monsoon is crucial for summer-sown (Kharif) crops and most of the country’s marginal farmers rely solely on the rains.

Lack of rains has created concern among people across the country. Thus almost all farmers are desperately seeking divine intervention. Parched farmlands present a grim situation. (ANI)

Hindus, Muslims pray for rains in Patna

Patna, June 27 (ANI): Following a delayed monsoon, people in Bihar have turned anxious and want the God to bless them with rains.

On Saturday, various Hindus and Muslims held special prayers to invoke divine powers of the Rain Gods who, they believe, have decided to give the region a miss.

Residents said while incessant rains are lashing western parts of the country disrupting normal life, it played truant here.

Many Hindus participated in a Yajna, or the holy fire ritual whereas members of the Muslim community offered Namaz for rains.

Priests chanted shloka and hymns that reverberated in the entire vicinity during the Yajna ceremony.

“We are pleasing the rain God by offering this prayer. We are praying here in a hope that the rain God accepts our wish and grants us with rain. This rain will bring smile on the faces of the farmers and would help bringing back greenery in the state,” said Prakash Malakar, a Hindu priest.

Members of the Muslim community, took part in prayer session and said they had full faith that the Gods would be pleased and rains would soon touch not only Bihar but other parched lands as well.

“The intense heat and lack of rain is not only causing serious problems to the people of Bihar but to other states as well. We wish that Allah blesses not only Bihar with rains but also the other drought hit regions,” said Mohammad Kalimuddin, a Muslim priest.

The delay in the arrival of monsoon is becoming a cause of concern for the masses especially farmers, as nearly two-thirds of agriculture depend on the rains and two-thirds of the population is dependent on agriculture.

The Meteorological Department has said that the total rainfall from the crucial June-September monsoon would be 93 percent of the long-term average, coming in below normal for the first time in four years. (ANI)

Malaysian Indian Congress calls for a Malaysian Hindu Religious Department

Kuala Lumpur, May. 4 (ANI): The Malaysian Indian Congress has petitioned the government to set-up a Malaysian Hindu Religious Department to deal with temple and conversions issues.

“After setting up such a department, there will be a government body to handle these matters and look into the implementation of government policies and decisions,” the New Strait Times online quoted MIC’s Youth wing adviser S. Vell Paari, as saying.

Currently, there are only non-governmental organisations like Malaysia Hindu Sangam and Malaysia Hindu Youth Council handling such issues.

The MIC said the implementation of government policies and decisions has always been a problem. Recently, rules were tightened for hiring priests from India, and the move was reverted after much protest.

“Even then, we still face problems whenever we bring in priests. It will be much easier when a government agency works with another government agency,” Vell Paari said.

The party claims that establishment of such rules and guidelines could be drawn up to deal with matters of temple demolitions.

There are an estimated 23,000 legal and illegal temples in the country.

On the issue of conversions, he said with the existence of the department, a Hindu who wanted to convert could be made to notify it for the families concerned to be informed.

“This can avoid such allegations as body snatching,” he said, adding that the department should be placed under the Prime Minister’s Department.

The department could also look into social ills like crimes, gangsterism and alcohol abuse, and organise religious classes, Vell Paari said.

The proposal would be discussed by the party’s central working committee before being submitted to party secretary-general Dr S. Subramaniam to raise before the cabinet. (ANI)

‘Thakurani Jatra’ festival being celebrated in Orissa

Bijipur, May. 3 (ANI): Devotees in Bijipur District of Orissa tonsure their heads to please goddess as part of carnival procession of ‘Thakurani Jatra’ festival.

The ritual gains even more significance as not just a way to honor the goddess, but also a protest against the dubious religious leaders and other issues concerning the villagers.

“I have been doing this for the past four to five years. I also wore a garland made of vegetables. It was a way of protest against inflation and rising prices of vegetables,” said Sibsankar Patra, a devotee.

The day of head tonsuring is decided and followed by all villagers.

The leader of the group, the ‘mahant’ leads the procession with a female consort. The female consort is actually a male dressed up as a girl, a comment on the dubious nature of priests and religious leaders.

“The ritual is going on since 1933. Our predecessors used to follow the ritual as well. Then only 10 to 20 people used to get their heads tonsured but now it is almost 200 to 300 people. We do it to propitiate the goddess. But now we are also raising awareness. We write songs as well on various subjects and try to gain people’s attention with our attires,” said Brindaban Parida, the Priest.

Not only are these devotees getting designs on their heads, they are also getting various themes and motifs on their backs. The people claim that they are trying to raise awareness by creating designs based on socially relevant issues. (ANI)

Vatican insiders declare the Pope a ‘disaster’

Rome (Italy), Mar.20 (ANI): Vatican insiders have said the Holy See is struggling to contain international anger over Pope Benedict XVI’s claim on his first official visit to Africa that AIDS “cannot be overcome through the distribution of condoms, which even aggravates the problems”.

The Pope’s remarks about condoms, and a recent furore over his lifting of the 20-year excommunication of a British bishop who has questioned the Holocaust, has left him looking isolated and out of touch, prompting calls for a radical shake-up of the way the Holy See delivers its message.he Pope is isolated and fails to adequately consult his advisers, said a Vatican source with 20 years’ knowledge of the Holy See.

Another Vatican insider described Pope Benedict’s four-year-old papacy as “a disaster”, recalling the pontiff’s previous inflammatory remarks on Islam and homosexuality.

“He’s out of touch with the real world. On the condom issue, for example, there are priests and bishops in Africa who accept that condoms are a key part of the fight against AIDS, and yet the pope adheres to this very conservative line that they encourage promiscuity. The Vatican is far removed from the reality on the ground,” another insider was quoted, as saying.

Though the Vatican has moved quickly to calm feelings aroused by the Pope’s comments, France, Germany and Belgium have criticized his message as irresponsible, while the UNAIDS agency said condoms were a vital part of the battle against HIV, which infects more than 7,000 people a day, reports The Guardian.

The Vatican sought to defuse the row, explaining that the pope wanted to emphasize responsible sexual conduct. It sought to tweak his original remarks in a version posted on the Holy See”s website.

According to journalists present, he originally said AIDS “cannot be overcome with the distribution of condoms which, on the contrary, increase the problem”.

But in the Vatican”s version, his words became: “The scourge cannot be resolved with the distribution of prophylactics; on the contrary, the risk is of increasing the problem.”

Such semantics were lost on the French government, which despite its Catholic roots, rejected the papal view.

Eric Chevallier, a spokesman for the French foreign ministry, said in an online briefing: “France voices extremely sharp concern over the consequences of Benedict XVI”s comments. While it is not up to us to pass judgment on church doctrine, we consider that such comments are a threat to public health policies and the duty to protect human life.”

Laurette Onkelinx, Belgium”s health minister, said the pope”s comments reflected “a dangerous doctrinaire vision”.

In Berlin, German health minister Ulla Schmidt and development minister Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul criticized the pope”s remarks in a joint statement and underlined the importance of condom use in developing nations.

“Condoms save lives, in Europe as well as on other continents,” the ministers said.

Direct criticism of the Vatican from foreign governments is rare and reflects the strength of feeling against the pope”s comments.

More than two-thirds – 67 percent of the world”s HIV sufferers live in sub-Saharan Africa and three-quarters of all AIDS deaths in 2007 took place there.

UN figures from 2007 show that more than five percent of adults among Cameroon”s estimated 18.9 million population have the disease.

Aids campaigners in Cameroon reacted strongly to the pope”s comments. Alain Fogue, a spokesman for Mocpat, a group campaigning for access to treatment for sufferers, said the pontiff was out of touch with the modern world, questioning whether he lived in the 21st century.

Michel Kazatchkine, the head of the Global Fund Aids charity, urged the pope to retract his comments. (ANI)

Traders in Rajasthan perform rituals to appease Goddess of wealth

Jodhpur, Mar 17 (ANI): Traders here are performing a ritual in honour of Lakshmi, the Goddess of Wealth, to ward off global recession.

The nine-day ritual being held at the central grounds here commenced on Friday and will conclude on March 21.

Over 400 priests have been performing the rituals amid Vedic chants which reverberate in the entire neighbourhood.

According to head priest Prakharji Maharaj, the ritual would release latent energies of intellectuals and enable them to solve the global recession.

“In the current scenario, there are no means to solve this problem. In this scenario, a Yagna was organised so that the brain’s latent energies are awakened as a result of which many doors will open up to solve this crisis of recession,” said Prakharji Maharaj.

The trading community and the public is also participating in the ritual with outmost devotion.

Some traders have travelled long distances to participate in the event.

“Mahalakshmi Yagna which is being organised for the first time in 25-30 years is considered to be very lucky for the trade and industry, particularly at this is the time of global recession that is why I’m here,” said Jyoti Maniyal from Ahmedabad.

Prior to the global recession, India witnessed an annual growth rate of eight to nine per cent. (ANI)

Mathura Priests celebrate Holi by walking through fireball

Mathura/ New Delhi, Mar 11 (ANI): Priests at Prahlad Kund in Phalen village in Uttar Pradesh’s Mathura District celebrated Holi on Wednesday by walking through a fireball.

“We have been seeing this fair from a long time. Our ancestors said this fair has been held here for thousands of years. Priests cross the fire like Lord Vishnu’s devotee Prahlad. The Priests worship constantly for five days and bathe in the Ganges,” claimed Radhey Singh, a local.

In Delhi, people from all walks of life sprayed each other with colours.

They also danced to drumbeats and consumed traditional ‘thandai’.

‘Walker’s club’ of Lodhi Garden celebrated Holi with great enthusiasm. People of all faiths participated in it,” said Jaswant Singh Arora, a local.

Foreigners also danced on the occasion and greeted people.

“I would like to wish you a very happy Holi. It’s fantastic and crazy, which is great,” said Prince, a foreigner.

Holi is associated with an uninhibited expression of love and affection.

The festival brings people of all classes and age groups together. They distribute sweets and take out procession. (ANI)

Thousands gather in Palakkad to offer prayers for world peace.

Palakkad (Kerala), Feb.8 (ANI): Thousands of devotees, including foreigners, offered prayers for world peace and communal harmony at Palakkad in Kerala on Saturday.

The five-day event is focused on prayers for universal peace. Dressed in white robes, the devotees gathered under a makeshift tent to join priests in performing a fire ritual and in praying.

“(We have) organised this Mahayagna to split the wave of darkness and to bring the light of divine into the earth and spread this grand light of consciousness to the plight of humanity throughout the globe of the Earth,” said Santosh Kumar, one of the organizers of the Mahayagna.

The congregation saw people from all religions gather under one roof and offer secular prayers for world peace. (ANI)

Devotees cover deities with woolen shawls to protect them from cold in Jaipur

Jaipur, Jan 16 (ANI): Devotees in Jaipur have been protecting their deities in various temples of the city by covering them with woolen blankets and warm clothes.

Besides, they also made arrangement for hot water and hot holy offerings.

The devotees were concerned that their deities should not suffer in biting cold.

“We think god as a human being. What we feel during the cold season, they also feel the same way. So, we equally give utmost care and attention during the change in season. We provide warm clothes and also give a hot water bath,” said Ram Das, a priest of Hanuman Temple.

The priests have made special arrangements to protect the idols from the cold wave.

“Prasad” is also selected according to the weather. The items made of Gud, Til or Gazak are considered good to beat the cold.

“For dinner, we offer various laddos (sweet) which is considered one of the hot items. During these three months of winter, we also arrange for a heater to keep them warm,” said Purushootam Das, a priest of Laxmi Narayan Temple.

Prayers in the morning follow bathing the deities in warm water and then wrapping in woolen blankets.

The priests in Jaipur claim that this is an old tradition, in accordance with Vaishnav Sampradaya. By Lokendra Singh (ANI)