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Thursday, September 01, 2011

Failing the Krepsinis test 

It's not cricket at least. But quiet rejoicing over Lithuania's 80-69 victory over Britain at the European Basketball Chamionships.

However I will be hoping for good UK performances in the rest of the games in Group A especially if these help Lithuania head the qualifying group.

Krepsinis (basketball) is very much Lithuania's national sport and my mother was in the stadium when Lithuana won the European title way back in the 1930's having played traunt from school to queue for tickets. And once again the finals are actually in Lithuania so it is a bit of a 1966 'coming home' monent to borrow an England football reference...


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Monday, December 24, 2007

Forgiveness and healing at this season 

So this is Kukios, Christmas Eve for all you non-Lithuanians out there, the day when the traditions are to remember the dead and to heal the living. One of the advantages of being the heirs of the last European culture to be converted to Christianity is that the older midwinter roots of this sort of tradition are rather more clear.

The key event really is the Christmas Eve meal. The tablecloth is laid out on fresh hay so that the family animals are symbolically part of the festivities, and a place is laid for anyone absent, family or friend, especially those who have died recently. This is THE great family gathering. At midnight each person at the feast goes round to each of the others asking forgiveness for any hurts or slights given over the year.

In that spirit forgive me for any electronic toes I have trodden on over this years digital politics, or otehr online or political infelicities.

Sveiku Sventu Kaledu viskas.

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Tuesday, September 06, 2005

History... 

Just to note what won't be on most Britons mind... September 6th, anniversary of the recognition by the USSR (as then was) of the independence of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.

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Sunday, April 03, 2005

A remarkable life 

Some thoughts,.

One I hope isn’t an urban legend. The then recently enthroned Bishop of Crakow, out ski-ing in the Tatra mountains accidentally crossed the border into Czechoslovakia. He was arrested and charged with two offences. Illegal crossing of the border and concealing his identity by impersonating the Bishop of Crakow.

No such anonymity at the time of his death for that young bishop become Pope.

There was never any doubt about his political impact in east Europe from the moment he became Pope. When he visited Poland as Pope the first time his celebration of Mass was carried on Channel 2 of Polish TV. Channel 2 because this had more restricted coverage and in particular was easier to jam so it couldn’t be picked up in then Soviet-occupied Lithuania.

There is no doubt he played a vital role in upholding the moral consciousness that led to the peaceful dismemberment of the Soviet Empire and the liberation of my mother’s homeland.

And he is owed deep gratitude for forcing all of us to face up to the true complexity of horrors that fell on the Jewish peoples of Europe and in forcing his church to face up to a truer knowledge of its place in those events.

But in the early 1980’s I recall the deep alarm of Catholic friends with background knowledge of Catholic institutional politicing about the pressures and directions of policy statements and institutional appointments. This disquiet continued right through to his death, tellingly in a more Samizdat and underground form. They (and indeed I ) would still see Pope John the XXIII as the greatest Pope of the last century in terms of living spiritual renewal of the Catholic faith and saw Pope John-Paul as dedicated to the long-term negation of much of the work of the Vatican II conclave.

The College of Cardinals, which can now vote in a Pope on a majority rather than requiring unanimity, is made up almost entirely of Cardinals appointed by the late Pope. I have expectations rather than hopes about the outcome of this conclave.

Peter Black's thoughts echo mine with a bit more hope ... I really do not expect a Liberal Voice in the Vatican, quite the opposite.

Edis

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