Stories about the Sikh sanctuary claimant:
Paralyzed refugee can travel, doctor says
Believes man who found sanctuary in Sikh temple needs better medical care than volunteers can provide
Globe and Mail, January 11
Sikh temple no sanctuary, minister says
Stockwell Day calls on Laibar Singh's supporters to end 'defiance of rule of law'
Vancouver Sun, January 12
Sanctuary immigrant backs disabled Sikh
Still joyous over his permanent acceptance in Canada, Iranian-born Amir Kazemian has proclaimed his support for a disabled Sikh desperate to stay in Canada. "I am supporting your case, because you deserve to stay in Canada and I pray for you to stay in Canada," Amir said on a bleak, rainy Monday morning after receiving his landed immigrant status in Canada. Kazemian, 42, said he hoped Laibar Singh, who has taken sanctuary in a Sikh temple, would be also accepted in Canada.
Vancouver Sun, January 15
Earlier: Stories about the Sikh sanctuary claimant
Other stories from the past week:
Human wreckage in the ring
Not all books should be read. Last fall, while two former prime ministers issued duelling memoirs, I picked up the memoir that beat them both on the bestseller lists, Bret Hart's Hitman:My Real Life in the Cartoon World of Wrestling. At some 550+ pages, it is rather more than a typical sports book, telling an excruciatingly detailed tale of the pro wrestler's life and that of his famous family, the Harts of Calgary. It is a profoundly disillusioning book, even for those who have long since outgrown their boyhood illusions about wrestling.
Father Raymond J. De Souza, National Post, January 10
Pastor guilty of sexual assault
A pastor has been convicted of sexually assaulting a parishioner to whom he gave healing baths and naked rubdowns to rid her of evil spirits. At the same time, a jury of nine men and three women acquitted Rev. Frank Seeko Lawrence of separate counts of assaulting and threatening to kill the woman, now 29, by whom he fathered a child. They also found him not guilty of sexually assaulting a second woman, now 45, who also had his baby.
Toronto Star, January 11
'Don't make it painful,' passenger prays
As Air Canada flight 190 swayed, dipped, and plunged, passenger Jayne Harvey said her own personal prayer. "Make this fast. Don't make it painful and take good care of my family," the mother of three said to herself.
National Post, January 11
Lifetime of care earns highest honour
Nurse, former nun Margaret Vickers named to Order of Canada
Daphne Bramham, Vancouver Sun, January 11
Earlier: Sister receives Order of Canada
Doc delivers message of tolerance
As it starts an election year, the United States remains a deeply divided nation, still largely riven by religious differences, still a country where an atheistic Christopher Hitchens rides high on the bestseller list even as the evangelical Mike Huckabee moves to the front of the Republican leadership race. Daniel Karslake's debut documentary, For the Bible Tells Me So, is a film that seeks to bridge this gap by examining one very specific aspect of this ideological rupture: how devout Christian families deal with their children's homosexuality. It's a film as welcome for its moving message of tolerance as for its evocative and elegant design.
Jason McBride, Globe and Mail, January 11
Earlier: VIFF films explore cults, homosexuality and forgiveness
Keep the faith or pull the plug?
He's been called the diocesan hit man. As a joke, of course. Not a great joke. People with the skills of Simon Bell have become necessary in Canada's major Christian churches. He determines which congregations can survive, and why, and which ones have slid so far into the abyss of decline that they need to be put out of their misery. His title is congregational development consultant with the Anglican Diocese of Toronto, the largest Anglican jurisdiction in Canada. Churches call him in when they realize they're in trouble. He acquired the hit-man sobriquet after his involvement in the protracted -- it's still going on -- and unpopular closing of one of Toronto's most historic and architecturally significant Anglican churches, St. Stephen-in-the-Field at College Street and Bellevue Avenue. This is what is going on as Canada completes its emergence from Christendom, the cultural hegemony of Christianity that had defined the country since the onset of European settlement.
Globe and Mail, January 12
Canadian artist's sexual statues enrage U.K. religious groups
Terrence Koh's aroused Jesus 'blasphemous'
CanWest News Service, January 12
Stuck on Hampstead Heath without a prayer - Oh my God!
What if the Greek gods lived among 21st-century mortals, sharing a dilapidated house in north London and exercising their age-old powers in an indifferent modern world? It's such a clever idea for a novel it's a wonder nobody thought of it before.
Rebecca Wigod, Vancouver Sun, January 12
'I did really well'
On Labour Day weekend of 1988, Vicki Mansell was an almost-six-yearold girl who stumbled out of a blackberry-tangled gully, scratched and smelling of gasoline, to tell two unsuspecting berry pickers: "My mommy poured gasoline on us, my brothers are on fire." . . . Why did Vicki's life work out? Her mother doesn't have a simple answer. "She wasn't treated any different [from the other children]" she says, and cites several reasons for the young woman's success: Vicki's personality, a strong Christian upbringing, a structured environment that included lots of activities and being accepted. Then, she adds finally: "Loving her. She knew she was wanted."
CanWest News Service, January 15
Survivor recalls van crash that killed 7 friends
A fellow student was praying, he said: 'I just called his name, reached over my hand and told him I loved him'
Globe and Mail, January 16
Pope won't attend Quebec City's 400th anniversary celebrations: archbishop
The Archdiocese of Quebec says Pope Benedict XVI will not attend celebrations to mark the 400th anniversary of Quebec City. Marc Cardinal Ouellet said in a statement today the Pope would send a papal official to represent him at the 49th International Eucharistic Congress. The June 15-22 congress is expected to attract thousands of Roman Catholics.
Canadian Press, January 17
Bible teacher convicted of sexual assault
A former pastor who taught Bible classes at a private religious school in Mississauga has been convicted of sexual assaulting a 13-year-old female student. In convicting Paul Tuck, 45, yesterday, Justice James Blacklock said the Brampton man had "deluded" himself into thinking none of his actions, including sexually explicit online chats, were sexually motivated.
Toronto Star, January 17
Top court refuses to review extradition of convicted war criminal
A Vancouver man convicted for crimes committed at an Italian prison camp during the Second World War may have lost his last chance to stay in Canada on Thursday when the country's highest court refused to intervene in his case. Michael Seifert's lawyer conceded he is out of ideas to prevent his removal from Canada. "I'm thinking about what I can do," his lawyer, Doug Christie, said from Nanaimo, B.C. "I'm not sure what I can do."
Canadian Press, January 17
Earlier: Stories about Nazi war criminal Michael Seifert
Somehow, Tom Cruise managed to make Scientology even weirder
Cruise is the most prominent movie-star Scientologist (a new book by Andrew Morton claims he is the #2 in the organization's heirarchy). But there are dozens more like him. As early as the 1950s, LRH targeted celebrities whom he thought would spread his message to the rest of America. . . . In Cruise, though, I'm wondering whether the celebrity strategy hasn't backfired. . . . Scientology is still a going concern -- if not as a serious faith, then at least as a business model. And apparently, many of its adherents find it genuinely inspiring and life-changing. These include Cruise himself, who appeared this week in an internal Scientology video that someone leaked to Youtube. (It has since been taken down on the church's request. But Google around, and you should find it.) The video provides a fascinating insight into the mind of a true zealot. . . . These claims are so loony, they may help definitively sink Cruise's career: The next time I see him on the big screen, I doubt I'll be able to think about anything else than that disturbing cackle. This is Hubbard's plan in reverse: Rather than redeem Scientology according to LRH's blueprint, Cruise has merely drawn attention to the religion's weirdness -- and his besides. Jonathan Kay, National Post, January 17
Alfred North Whitehead goes to China
In a remarkable display of East meets West, the leaders of China's 1.4-billion population have discovered the Harvard philosopher-mathematician, Alfred North Whitehead.
Douglas Todd, The Search, Vancouver Sun, January 17
January 17/2008