Khazen

Pope Welcomes Beatification of Lebanese Priest

Pope Welcomes Beatification of Lebanese Priest
VATICAN CITY, JUNE 27, 2010 (Zenit.org).- After praying the Angelus today with the crowds gathered in St. Peter’s Square, Benedict XVI welcomed the beatification in Lebanon of Stephan Nehmé, a religious of the Lebanese Maronite Order. "I heartily rejoice with the Lebanese brothers and sisters," the Pope said, "and I entrust them with great affection to the protection of the new blessed." Archbishop Angelo Amato, the prefect of the Congregation for Saints’ Causes, presided at today’s beatification liturgy in Kfifan.

Stephen Nehmé (born Joseph) was known for his constant awareness of God’s presence in his life. He was born in March 1889 in the town of Lehfed, in the Jbeil district, as the youngest of seven children. In 1905, two years after his father’s death, Nehmé entered the novitiate of the Order of Maronites, in the Monastery of Sts. Cyprian and Justina in Kfifan. On Aug. 23, 1907, he made his monastic vows, taking the name Stephen after the patron saint of his birthplace.  Father Nehmé died Aug. 30, 1938, at the age of 49, of natural causes and was buried in the monastery at Kfifan, where his body remains intact.

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Pope Welcomes Beatification of Lebanese Priest

Pope Welcomes Beatification of Lebanese Priest
VATICAN CITY, JUNE 27, 2010 (Zenit.org).- After praying the Angelus today with the crowds gathered in St. Peter’s Square, Benedict XVI welcomed the beatification in Lebanon of Stephan Nehmé, a religious of the Lebanese Maronite Order. "I heartily rejoice with the Lebanese brothers and sisters," the Pope said, "and I entrust them with great affection to the protection of the new blessed." Archbishop Angelo Amato, the prefect of the Congregation for Saints’ Causes, presided at today’s beatification liturgy in Kfifan.

Stephen Nehmé (born Joseph) was known for his constant awareness of God’s presence in his life. He was born in March 1889 in the town of Lehfed, in the Jbeil district, as the youngest of seven children. In 1905, two years after his father’s death, Nehmé entered the novitiate of the Order of Maronites, in the Monastery of Sts. Cyprian and Justina in Kfifan. On Aug. 23, 1907, he made his monastic vows, taking the name Stephen after the patron saint of his birthplace.  Father Nehmé died Aug. 30, 1938, at the age of 49, of natural causes and was buried in the monastery at Kfifan, where his body remains intact.

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Pope Welcomes Beatification of Lebanese Priest

Pope Welcomes Beatification of Lebanese Priest
VATICAN CITY, JUNE 27, 2010 (Zenit.org).- After praying the Angelus today with the crowds gathered in St. Peter’s Square, Benedict XVI welcomed the beatification in Lebanon of Stephan Nehmé, a religious of the Lebanese Maronite Order. "I heartily rejoice with the Lebanese brothers and sisters," the Pope said, "and I entrust them with great affection to the protection of the new blessed." Archbishop Angelo Amato, the prefect of the Congregation for Saints’ Causes, presided at today’s beatification liturgy in Kfifan.

Stephen Nehmé (born Joseph) was known for his constant awareness of God’s presence in his life. He was born in March 1889 in the town of Lehfed, in the Jbeil district, as the youngest of seven children. In 1905, two years after his father’s death, Nehmé entered the novitiate of the Order of Maronites, in the Monastery of Sts. Cyprian and Justina in Kfifan. On Aug. 23, 1907, he made his monastic vows, taking the name Stephen after the patron saint of his birthplace.  Father Nehmé died Aug. 30, 1938, at the age of 49, of natural causes and was buried in the monastery at Kfifan, where his body remains intact.

for more pictures please click read more:

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Pope Welcomes Beatification of Lebanese Priest

Pope Welcomes Beatification of Lebanese Priest
VATICAN CITY, JUNE 27, 2010 (Zenit.org).- After praying the Angelus today with the crowds gathered in St. Peter’s Square, Benedict XVI welcomed the beatification in Lebanon of Stephan Nehmé, a religious of the Lebanese Maronite Order. "I heartily rejoice with the Lebanese brothers and sisters," the Pope said, "and I entrust them with great affection to the protection of the new blessed." Archbishop Angelo Amato, the prefect of the Congregation for Saints’ Causes, presided at today’s beatification liturgy in Kfifan.

Stephen Nehmé (born Joseph) was known for his constant awareness of God’s presence in his life. He was born in March 1889 in the town of Lehfed, in the Jbeil district, as the youngest of seven children. In 1905, two years after his father’s death, Nehmé entered the novitiate of the Order of Maronites, in the Monastery of Sts. Cyprian and Justina in Kfifan. On Aug. 23, 1907, he made his monastic vows, taking the name Stephen after the patron saint of his birthplace.  Father Nehmé died Aug. 30, 1938, at the age of 49, of natural causes and was buried in the monastery at Kfifan, where his body remains intact.

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VoIP Broadcasting in Lebanon Banned Again

VoIP Broadcasting in Lebanon Banned Again

By Juliana Kenny

TMCnet Web Editor

Conducting phone calls and video conferencing over the Internet has been illegal since 2002 in Lebanon, but civilians have been able to get around the fine print of the law for years using voice broadcasting for business communications.
However, last week, the Telecommunications Ministry began enforcing the law to the T when it, “activated new hardware and software equipment to enforce the ban on VoIP communications,” according to  a Lebanese news source. This recent technological development by the government, “now effectively blocks Internet telephony for good.”
Hosting total control over Lebanon’s access to the Internet, the government-installed hardware that regulates the country’s Internet usage has not effectively blocked Skype  yet, for some unknown reason.
As a result, business communications have come to a grinding halt, and inbound and outbound call centers that have not been licensed by Minister Gibran Bassil have been negatively affected all over the country.  

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VoIP Broadcasting in Lebanon Banned Again

VoIP Broadcasting in Lebanon Banned Again

By Juliana Kenny

TMCnet Web Editor

Conducting phone calls and video conferencing over the Internet has been illegal since 2002 in Lebanon, but civilians have been able to get around the fine print of the law for years using voice broadcasting for business communications.
However, last week, the Telecommunications Ministry began enforcing the law to the T when it, “activated new hardware and software equipment to enforce the ban on VoIP communications,” according to  a Lebanese news source. This recent technological development by the government, “now effectively blocks Internet telephony for good.”
Hosting total control over Lebanon’s access to the Internet, the government-installed hardware that regulates the country’s Internet usage has not effectively blocked Skype  yet, for some unknown reason.
As a result, business communications have come to a grinding halt, and inbound and outbound call centers that have not been licensed by Minister Gibran Bassil have been negatively affected all over the country.  

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Lebanon: Patriarch Sfeir tells Sarkozy, Christian emigration from the Middle East should be stopped

From khazen.org: we will always stand by our Patriarch His Beatitude Mar Nassrallah Boutros Sfeir , the voice of reason, love and unity. His stands throughout history has proven to be stands of long-term peace, security and long-term coexistence for all communities in Lebanon. We will not tolerate any disrespectful statements towards our Patriarch or attacks from anyone. You can disagree politically, but the message and the goal is one SECURE, Lebanon full of economic growth that our Patriarch who represents the rock of the Maronite Church is seeking for.

 

 

News:

Beirut – The number of Christians in Lebanon and the Middle East is declining rapidly because of conflict, regional tensions as well as a persistent economic crisis that drives many to seek the future elsewhere. The issue is one of great concern for the Catholic Church, as Benedict XVI has said on several occasions, the latest during his visit to Cyprus, and an issue that  Maronite Patriarch Nasrallah Sfeir raised during his meetings yesterday in France.

Cardinal Sfeir raised the matter during his meeting with French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who shares the view that the presence of Christians in the Middle East is a guarantee against intolerance.

“The emigration of young Lebanese must be stopped,” the patriarch said later during a press briefing with reporters. “They cannot be blamed for leaving in search of work. But whilst those who go to Arab countries can come back, it is harder for those who go to Australia or Canada.”

 

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Within 60 Miles of Beirut, 3 Millennia of History

By G.G. LaBELLE For The Associated Press
 

Lebanon has been conquered and colonized many times over in the last three millennia. Among the famous invaders: Alexander the Great, Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar and the Muslim warrior Saladin.

Others include Persians, Romans, Egyptians, Christian Crusaders, Ottoman Turks, the French and English in World War I and, more recently, Israelis. Lebanon’s rival Christians and Muslims also upset the peace, most notably in the 1975-90 civil war.

Many invaders left monuments and other remnants of their civilizations that can be visited in day trips from Lebanon’s urbane capital, Beirut. You can go east to the Roman ruins at Baalbek, north to the Crusader-era Citadel of Raymond de Saint-Gilles that looms over the city of Tripoli, south to the much fought-over Beaufort fortress, or northeast to the towering Cedars of Lebanon, and be back in Beirut in time for dinner. Lebanon is a tiny country — 135 miles long and about 50 miles wide — and all of these sites are within 60 miles of Beirut.

The National Museum in Beirut is a good place to get a picture of the parade of conquerors who’ve marched in and out. Artifacts run from prehistoric stone tools to statuary, coins, jewelry and mosaics from the bronze and iron ages, the Greek and Roman eras, and Byzantine and Arab rule.

Jabail-Byblos, 22 miles north of Beirut on the Mediterranean coast, offers an example of how archaeological sites in Lebanon often contain layers of history as one conqueror supplanted another. Here you will find a variety of ruins from the Persian, Phoenician, Greek, Roman and Crusader eras. The sarcophagus of a king, Ahiram, who died around 1000 B.C., has an inscription in Phoenician linear script, the father of alphabets. But there are also Byzantine-era mosaics from 2,000 years later.

Another example is Beaufort Castle, 47 miles southeast of Beirut, which sits atop a cliff about 2,000 feet above sea level in southern Lebanon, commanding a view into both Israel and Syria. The Crusader king Fulk seized the fortification in 1139, Saladin took it back for the Muslims in 1189, and the Israeli army captured it from Palestinian guerrillas in 1982

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Request to improve internet speed

We demand the Lebanese government:

1-  Improve internet connection to enable us to work form Lebanon to international companies!! now our internet connection is as fast as a turtle connection from Middle Ages!
2- Unblock all voice over IP connection right away!! blocking internet sites is a big set back for the Lebanese economy
 

Please join our group in facebook to support these requests! Click Here to join the group in facebook

 

Lebanon is stifling your digital freedom
By Imad Atalla

 

No one has noticed, but the Lebanese government is writing yet another chapter in the endless mockery of our rights as private citizens and social entrepreneurial agents of progress and change. The state is extending censorship over the remainder of our liberties into the last frontier of freedom – the internet and its supposed neutrality.  Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) is a cost effective and sometimes free way of long-distance voice calling and video conferencing. It is also illegal in Lebanon, according to the telecoms law of 2002. Unlike Instant Messaging, VoIP allows users to speak from phone to phone via the internet. While extremely economical for average consumers and businesses, it greatly reduces revenues to the (monopolistic) landline network and, in some cases, wireless telephone companies – read Ogero, MTC, Alfa, and the Finance Ministry as the direct beneficiaries of long-distance communication revenues.
 

Last week the Telecommunications Ministry began implementing the short-sighted telecoms law to the letter: It activated new hardware and software equipment to enforce the ban on VoIP communications. The new equipment, which was tested in recent months, now effectively blocks internet telephony for good.   As a consequence, part of my office-to-office business communications and videoconferencing with companies outside and inside Lebanon have come to a halt. And this is probably the case with many others, such as telemarketing centers, outbound support centers, and businesses that also use VoIP.
 

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MP Dr Farid Elias El Khazen on Israeli-US policy

نفى ما يشاع عن إحتمال نشوب حرب قريبة في المنطقة

النائب فريد الخازن لـ "الأنباء" :

ـ ما تشهده المنطقة من الجانب الإسرائيلي لا يتجاوز عتبة التهويل لحمل "الكونغرس" الأميركي على إقرار تمويل النظام الدفاعي المضاد للصواريخ في إسرائيل

ـ من البديهي تواصل لبنان مع دول الخارج ومع كافة الأطراف المعنية بالشأن اللبناني 

رأى عضو تكتل "التغيير والإصلاح" النائب د. فريد الخازن أن المناورات العسكرية الإسرائيلية التي يجريها الجيش الإسرائيلي على مقربة من الحدود اللبنانية، تدخل في إطار الإجراءات الروتينية التي يجريها بشكل متواصل ونتيجة للإنتكاسات العسكرية التي مني بها هذا الأخير إثر حربه ضد لبنان في العام 2006 وضد قطاع غزة في الأراضي المحتلة أواخر العام 2008، خصوصا أنها نتائج لم يعتاد عليها فيما مضى من حروب تقليدية خاضها في أطار الصراع العربي الإسرائيلي، والتي لم يستسغها إنطلاقا من مقولة "الجيش الذي لا يقهر" وأيضا من تأكيداته السابقة بأن "الصواريخ لن تتطال الداخل الإسرائيلي"، لافتا الى أن الجيش الإسرائيلي خاض الحربين المذكورتين دون أي مردود إيجابي له لا بل صدر مقابل الأولى تقريري "فينوغراد" والثانية تقرير "غولد ستون" الذان دانا إسرائيل ووضعاها في حالة من الصدام مع المجتمع الدولي .

ولفت النائب الخازن في تصريح لـ "الأنباء" الى أن الجديد في المناورات العسكرية الإسرائيلية، هو كثافتها بحيث أجرى حتى الآن 6 مناورات متتالية خلال الخمسة أشهر الأخيرة، معربا عن إعتقاده بأن تلك المناورات لا تتجاوز بأبعادها توجيه رسائل ثلاث واضحة المعالم والأهداف، الأولى موجهة الى المجتمع الإسرائيلي لتذكيره بأنه مجتمع مهدد أمنيا ووجوديا وأنه ضحية سياسات الجوار ويترتب عليه بالتالي إتخاذ كافة الإحتياطات لمواجهة تلك الأخطار المحدقة به، والثانية موجهة الى دول الجوار يعرب فيها عن جهوزيته الكاملة للحرب، والثالثة وهي الأهم موجهة الى "الكونغرس" الأميركي لحثه على إقرار تمويل النظام الدفاعي المضاد للصواريخ في إسرائيل، مشيرا في إطار الرسالة الثالثة الى أن خلفيات أسباب إفتعال إسرائيل لأزمة صواريخ "سكود" هي لدعم الإقتراح المقدم أمام "الكونغرس" الأميركي لتمويل النظام الدفاعي المضاد للصواريخ في إسرائيل، والذي تناهز كلفته الـ "مئتا مليون" دولار أميركي "$200،000،000 "، بمعنى آخر يرى النائب الخازن أن إسرائيل أرادت من خلال إدعائها زورا كما تبين لاحقا بأن سوريا قد زودت "حزب الله" بصواريخ "سكود"، وذلك بشهادة وزيري خارجية فرنسا وإسبانيا والعديد من المسؤولين الدوليين، أرادت خلق أجواء أمنية ضاغطة تعطي إنطباعا بأن الحرب شارفت على الإندلاع وتصور المجتمع الإسرائيلي بأنه أصبح مهددا بشكل مباشر، إضافة الى أنه أراد خلق حالة من الإستنفار على كافة المستويات سواء في الداخل الإسرائيلي أم في الولايات المتحدة وفي "الكونغرس" الأميركي وتحديدا في صفوف اللوبي المؤيد لإسرائيل، موجزا بأن ما تشهده المنطقة من الجانب الإسرائيلي لا يتجاوز عتبة التهويل والمناورات والشحن النفسي بهدف حمل "الكونغرس" على إقرار المشروع المشار اليه أعلاه .

 

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