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Greek Orthodox Archdiocese Sues Port Authority Over St. Nicholas Church

by 1389AD ( 106 Comments › )
Filed under Christianity, Orthodox Christianity, September 11 at December 10th, 2010 - 11:30 am

Vigil for St. Nicholas Church at Ground Zero

Exterior of St. Nicholas Church at Ground Zero, destroyed on 9-11

View from balcony: St. Nicholas Church at Ground Zero, destroyed on 9-11

Fr. John Romas conducting services: St. Nicholas Church at Ground Zero, destroyed on 9-11

Parishoner lighting a candle: St. Nicholas Church at Ground Zero, destroyed on 9-11

It is absolutely inexcusable that, nine years on, that there are still no plans to rebuild the Orthodox Christian Church building that was destroyed on September 11, 2001. The parish still exists, but the New York/New Jersey Port Authority has made it impossible for the priest and parishoners to rebuild either on their original site or on any alternative neighboring site. The rebuilding of this church is being tied up in red tape, while at the same time, Mayor Bloomberg has been lobbying for 9-11 tax dollars to be used for building the Ground Zero Mosque.

(h/t: Pam Geller)

WSJ: St. Nicholas Church Begins Legal Action Against the Port Authority

By JOSH BARBANEL

The leaders of St. Nicholas Church, the small whitewashed Greek Orthodox Church destroyed by falling debris on Sept. 11, 2001, have begun legal action against the Port Authority demanding that the church be rebuilt under the terms of a deal worked out several years ago.

A claim filed against the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey by church leaders and the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America on Monday accused the agency, which is overseeing Ground Zero’s rebuilding, of engaging in “arrogance, bad faith and fraudulent conduct” and “shabby and unlawful treatment.”

Under state law, the church is required to file a notice of claim against the Port Authority for some of its claims, and wait 60 days before it can go to court, according to Mark. G. Cunha, a lawyer for the church.

In 2008, after years of discussions, the Port Authority and the church announced an agreement to rebuild the church, which was originally located on Cedar Street, on a nearby site on Liberty Street. As part of the deal, the Port Authority said it would pay $20 million toward the cost of the new church.

But in March, the deal fell through. The Port Authority accused the church of making excessive demands, while church leaders say the Port Authority unilaterally withdrew from negotiations.

John Kelly, a spokesman for the Port Authority, said officials hadn’t yet seen the filing and couldn’t comment on it. But he said: “We very much hope the Orthodox Church rebuilds on their original site.”

In papers served on Monday the church is now seeking to compel the Port Authority to live up to the terms of what the church said is a “binding preliminary agreement.”

It said that even after the Port Authority backed away from the agreement, the authority began digging in the site of the old church and is trespassing “without permission, notice or any legal justification.” The underground portion of the old church site is part of what is to become an underground vehicle security center, where trucks entering the site would be searched…

Read the rest.

USA Today: Church left out of 9/11 renewal

NEW YORK — Towers are rising again at the site of the World Trade Center, a place of devastation turned into a construction hub. But the cross-topped belfry of St. Nicholas Church isn’t among them.

Nine years after it was destroyed in the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the little Greek Orthodox church that stood across the street from the twin towers is farther away than ever from being rebuilt.

Slow progress toward a new home halted last year when the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which controls the Ground Zero site, broke off discussions with the church over where and how a new church would be built.

On Sunday, the eve of St. Nicholas Day, 70 families of the congregation gathered near the site to light candles and pray for a way to rebuild their spiritual home amid the office towers and memorial plaza taking shape. “It’s not a political statement. This is our place, and we belong there,” says Mark Arey, a priest and director of interfaith relations for the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America…

Read the rest.


A glimpse of our pre-industrial past

by 1389AD ( 151 Comments › )
Filed under Art, Economy, History, Leftist-Islamic Alliance, Music, Open thread, Russia, Transportation at December 8th, 2010 - 4:30 pm

Look closely at this masterpiece by the Ukrainian artist Ilya Repin.

It is worth clicking the image to see a larger view.

Barge Haulers on the Volga by Ilya Repin

Barge Haulers on the Volga

This is what life was like for too many people in a pre-industrial society.

Read the Wikipedia article. Some of the people pulling the barge had once been part of what passed for the middle class in that place and time. Once they lost their footing in the middle class, this was their fate. As far as I know, none were convicts – they were just people down on their luck and desperate to make some sort of a living. Their only option was to hire themselves out for toil too arduous even for a beast of burden.

Barge Haulers is inspired by scenes witnessed by the artist while holidaying on the Volga in 1870. He made a number of preparatory studies, mostly in oil, while staying in Shiriaev Buerak, near Stavropol. The sketches include landscapes, and views of the Volga and barge haulers.

The characters depicted are based on actual people whom the artist came to know while preparing the work. He had had difficulty finding subjects to pose for him, even for a fee, because of a folklorish belief that a subject’s soul would leave his possession once his image was put down on paper. The subjects include a former soldier, a former priest, and a painter. Although Repin depicted eleven men, women also performed the work and there were normally many more people in a barge-hauling gang; Repin selected these figures as representative of a broad swathe of the working classes of Russian society. That some had once held relatively high social positions dismayed the young artist, who had initially planned to produce a far more superficial work contrasting exuberant day-trippers (which he himself had been) with the careworn burlaks. Repin found a particular empathy with Kanin, the defrocked priest, who is portrayed as the lead hauler and looks outwards towards the viewer.
[…]
Barge Haulers on the Volga shows a row of eleven male burlaks dragging a barge on the Volga River that must be pulled upstream against the current. The men are dressed in rags and bound with leather harnesses. They are rendered as mostly stoical, although in obvious physical discomfort, with their bodies bowed in toil. The scene is rendered in a white, silvery light which has been described as “almost Venetian”. In earlier studies, it was dominated by blue tones.

The men appear to be unsupervised and form the focus of the picture, with the barge relegated to a minor role at the rear of the frame. Further in the distance is a tiny steam-powered boat, perhaps a suggestion that the back-breaking labour of the barge haulers is no longer necessary in the industrial age. Also worthy of note is the inverted Russian flag flying from the main mast of the barge suggesting adding to the sense that something is not quite right. Repin echoes the stop-go rhythm of the labour in the undulating line of the workers’ heads. In the preparatory studies, many of the figures were positioned differently; for example the second man was shown wearing a cap with his head bowed into his chest.

There is a general sense of mounting exhaustion and despair moving from left to right amongst the group; the last hauler seems oblivious to his surroundings and drifts from the line out towards the viewer. The exception is a fair-haired boy in the centre of the group. Set brightly against the uniform muted tones of his companions, his head is raised looking into the distance, while he pulls against his straps as if determined to free himself from his task…

Russian and Ukrainian society at that time had too little infrastructure to support much of a middle class. It was not simply a matter of income inequality…there was too little wealth to go around, because too little wealth was being produced. Industrialization was still in its infancy. Fossil fuels were in very limited use.

Sound familiar?

This is what the leftist/green/pro-jihadi convergence wants – not for themselves, of course – but for us.

Be thankful that it is not OUR faces staring out of that bleak canvas.

Not yet, anyway.


Leonid Kharitonov & Red Army Choir – Song of the Volga Boatmen (Live)
(h/t: The Osprey)


Feodor Chaliapin – Song of Volga Boatmen (1936)


H.S. football player flagged for pointing towards heaven after scoring a TD

by Bob in Breckenridge ( 112 Comments › )
Filed under Academia, Christianity, Democratic Party, Education, Free Speech, Liberal Fascism, Multiculturalism, Political Correctness, Progressives, Religion, Sports at December 2nd, 2010 - 9:00 pm

More proof that the radical, loony, far left doesn’t want you or me to express your faith in public (or anywhere else, for that matter). It might be too offensive to the perpetually offended simpletons who make the majority of the dimocrat party base these days.

A high school player was penalized for taking a knee and pointing up towards the heavens in the end zone during a game after scoring a touchdown. The referee called it unsportsmanlike conduct.

In the second quarter of the game, Tumwater (WA.) High School running back Ronnie Hastie scored on a 23-yard run, took a knee in the end zone, and briefly pointed up towards the heavens above. For that the referee threw a flag and penalized Hastie’s team five yards, saying it was unsportsmanlike conduct. I’d flag the idiot ref for un-American conduct.

I see college football players, who are also amateurs, like high school players, and NFL players, do this all the time, and not get penalized. A lot of players from both teams get together in a prayer circle after every game and guess what they do? PRAY to and thank GOD! Oh, the inhumanity of it all!

Hell, at every Notre Dame University home football game, all the players, even those not Catholic, before the start of the game, attend mass in formal attire at Sacred Heart Basilica. After the Mass, students line up on either side of the walkway, from the Church to Notre Dame stadium, which the team walks through.

Anyway, back to Ronnie Hastie. Of course, we all know that the ACLU will be right on this like flies to honey because the kid’s free speech rights were violated. They will….Really….Seriously. Okay, they won’t. They’re too busy defending terrorists, child-rapists and other miscreants to come to the defense of a kid who did nothing more than take about three seconds give praise to God on his own.

Did I ever tell you I detest liberals?

California lib acting “Speaker” continually denies GOP member’s request for time to address Congress

by Bob in Breckenridge ( 186 Comments › )
Filed under Democratic Party, Elections, Elections 2010, Politics, Progressives, Republican Party at December 1st, 2010 - 11:30 am

If you weren’t aware, when the lib Speaker of the House, Nancy Pee-lousy, is not there, the libturds get to pick an acting Speaker.

The POS in this video is the reprehensible Laura Richardson, who is just one more shining example of why California’s in the toilet. She, for awhile, will not allow GOP Rep. Steven Buyer (R-IN), to address Congress, even though there were NO objections to his request for the time.

Here’s a short synopsis about this POS Richardson:

She learned how to do a few things well when she served in the California Legislature, including…

1. Buying nice houses and immediately stopping mortgage payments, until she was in arrears thousands of dollars and somebody bailed her out. Typical democrat.

2. Allowed said homes to fall into such disrepair, i.e., waist-high weeds and dead foliage, that feral cats, rats and other vermin took over. Neighbors finally cut the grass and watered at their expense because her house was driving down their property values.

3. Drove the most expensive car she could find, although it was several hundred dollars per month over the state-mandated car allowance. No worry, she didn’t pay that bill, either. The lease company tried to take the car back, but couldn’t locate it. I believe they got it back because she was in an accident — and when the the repair shop wouldn’t release it with the body work bill unpaid — she abandoned it.

4. Let a home slide into foreclosure, then pitched such a fit that the lender reneged on a deal with the new buyer … who had already moved into the place.

5. Notorious for not paying bills she incurred during campaigns, i.e., printing, catering, etc., some of which go back five or six years. In other words, typical libturd.

But in the end, Buyer bitch-slaps her saying that her arrogance is a part of the reason why the libs lost Congress, saying “”This why the American people have thrown you out of power!”

And a hat-tip to Denny and one of his readers Woody.