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LA FOTO DELLA SETTIMANA a cura di NICOLA D'ALESSIO
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534. THE SHADOW OF BARABBAS OVER HOLY WEEK by un'Americana a Venezia
Holy Week in
this special Jubilee Year was marred this past Tuesday by simultaneous
terrorist attacks carried out at rush hour in the subway and at the main
airport of the political capital of the EU.
Tens of people were slaughtered.
Hundreds more were injured. Brussels
is a true cosmopolis. It serves as a second
home or hub to people from all over the world.
It has long welcomed immigrants, including Italians. Tolerant Brussels also hosts one of the the
largest Muslim communities inside the EU. Reporters claim that, for years, the police have
seldom entered certain neighborhoods there, so that Brussels has got at least
two Muslim ghettos. Such ethnic strongholds
inside Europe's capital have made for "safe houses" as well as
munitions depots for those sociopathic criminals we call terrorists. One of the terrorists behind the recent Paris
attacks, for example, was known to have worked in a cafe there where drug
dealing went on. There is reason to
believe that his recent capture in a Muslim quarter of Brussels after a 4-month
long search was the trigger for Tuesday's attacks. The nefarious military organization known as
ISIS took all the credit for this week's atrocities. It occurs to me that Jesus' public trial in
Jerusalem conducted by the Roman prefect, Pontius Pilate, was overshadowed by
the spirit of terrorism. Given a chance
to liberate a prisoner, with the absurd choice between a bloodthirsty
seditionist named Barabbas and the healer who called himself the Messiah, the
mob did what mobs do: They gave into the
spirit of rebellion, in this case against the invasive Roman Empire, and thus they
voted to free the terrorist, Barabbas, so that Jesus of Nazareth, called Master
by many, had to pay the price. This
evening, Maundy Thursday, Pope Francis is still scheduled to wash the feet of a
handful of Europe's newly arrived Muslim refugees in the annual reenactment of
the Last Supper. Due to the climate of
growing unease felt by European citizens towards these newcomers, the pope will
likely be criticised by many, either openly or discreetly, for this humble gesture. Virtual mobs will be calling for refugees to
be rounded up and sent back to their homelands rather than to be honored by the
head of the Roman Catholic Church. But Pope
Francis will not be easing up any time soon on his insistence that we have a
humanitarian duty to aid and assist refugees fleeing from war and abject
poverty. Not incidentally, should Syria
and Iraq ever become truly livable again, along with Libya and Afghanistan, many
refugees will gladly return to their homes, no matter how decimated by bombs dropped
by Western nations as well as by Russia.
Meanwhile, the black-flagged army that calls itself ISIS is still
battling to create and/or expand its caliphate, burning, raping and brutalizing
just like any horde of barbarians in any other epoch. Barabbas is on the loose again in the form of
common criminals with a political cause.
I have never been fooled into thinking that today's terrorists are pious
men. I know what they are. They are angry and disaffected youth led by hard-boiled
seditionists who hide behind a holy book whenever they break God's laws. Perhaps many of these seditionists have long
been commissioned by secret puppetmasters that can well afford to pay
them. The Pope has not addressed the possibility
of hell-bent sociopaths filtering into Europe alongside the refugees, but
perhaps it is not his place to discuss strategies for vetting immigrants. He simply calls on humanity, appealing
especially to Christians, to remember what Jesus said about offering food,
shelter, and clothing to whoever asks for it.
On Venerdì Santo, Good Friday in
Italy, comes the annual televised evening of the Via Crucis, the Stations of the Cross, presided over by the Pope at
the Colosseum in Rome, a fitting venue. The
Messiah, after all, was executed by Empire.
However, this is the first Holy Week I can recall having lived under the
threat of terrorism. What would Jesus
say, even now, in the face of so much cruel and senseless violence? Of the pagans who crucified him, He said, "Father, forgive them; for they know not
what they do." There, it would
seem, is His answer. The thief hanging
on the cross next to Him was also forgiven.
Here it is, Holy Week 2016, and we're hanging onto our souls. I wish everyone a blessed Easter, a heartfelt
celebration of victory over death! UN'AMERICANA A VENEZIA
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(Michael Ende)
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WEBMASTER: Roberto RAPACCINI
A chi può procedere malgrado gli enigmi, si apre una via. Sottomettiti agli enigmi e a ciò che è assolutamente incomprensibile. Ci sono ponti da capogiro, sospesi su abissi di perenne profondità. Ma tu segui gli enigmi.
(Carl Gustav Jung)
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