Khazen

Cheikh Serhal El Khazen

بطريركية انطاكية وسائر المشرق المارونية

 

بكركي

 

 

 

 

البركة الرسولية تشمل أولادنا الأعزاء: الشيخة نوميس،

 

شقيقة المرحوم الشيخ سرحال توفيق الخازن وابنتها، وابناء عمتها،

 

وأرملة خالها، وسائر ذويهم وأنسبائهم في الوطن والمهجر المحترمين

 

 

 

بلغنا، ونحن في روما، نبأ فقدكم شقيقكم وخالكم ونسيبكم العزيزي المرحوم الشيخ سرحال، الذي لبى دعوة ربه الى دار البقاء عن ست وسبعون سنة، زخرت بالعطاء والتضحيات والحضور المميز، على أعلى المستويات في الكنيسة والوطن. وقد فجعتم بما كان عليه من حميد اخلاق، وعلم وفير، وثقافة واسعة، ولا غرو فهو سليل عائلة الخازن العريقة والغنية عن التعريف. وقد ترعرع في كنف جده المرحوم الشيخ اسكندر الخازن المعروف بسعة اطلاعه، وعلاقاته الوطنية والدولية، وقد زرع في كتب حفيده حبه للمعرفة، وشغفه بالتاريخ وبراعته في بناء العلاقات والمحافظة عليها.

 

تلقى المرحوم الشيخ سرحال علومه في واحدة من أرقى المدارس الكاثوليكية في المنطقة، وراح يغذي ميراثه الفكري والثقافي بالبحث والتنقيب وجمع الكتب والمخطوطات والوثائق التاريخية وبناء العلاقات المتينة مع عدد من السفراء الأجانب، ولا سيما السفير الفرنسي والسفير البابوي، اللذين كانت تروق لهما زياراته المتكررة، وأحاديثه الشيقة عن العلاقات التاريخية ما بين عائلة آل الخازن وحاضرة الفاتيكان، والدولة الفرنسية منذ العهد الملكي فيها، حيث تبوأ المرحوم الشيخ مرعي الدحداح، والد زوج عمته، مركز مستشار خاص للملك لويس فيليب.

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own independent state by partitioning

BY Elias Chamoun, Can the Lebanese Christians be granted their own independent state by partitioning Lebanon between them and the Lebanese Muslims under international law?

On the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea, lies a small country that many used to refer to as being the jewel of the Mediterranean. A country that was once considered to be the Switzerland of the East, and whose capital, Beirut, used to be called the Paris of the East. That country is Lebanon. There, was a model government and society of how Jews, Christians, and Muslims could all cooperate and peacefully coexist together. When taking a closer look at Lebanon one can notice something very different from all the other Near Eastern countries; the presence of a large Christian community (in proportion to the population) in a country surrounded by a sea of Islam. Descendent from the Phoenicians, the Christian ethnic group is the oldest community in Lebanon and compromises almost half of the country

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CBT for OCD

Psychopathology

Cognitive-Behavior Therapy

Assessments and Interviews before Treatment of Obsessional Disorder

By Pierre Khazen 29/1/06

I.      Assessment includes:

?      A clinical interview

?      Self monitoring

?      Home work assignments

?      Direct observation

II.      Aims of assessment are:

?      To approve of problem list

?      To arrive to a psychological formulation of each problem; factors which led to the problem and recent maintaining factors

?      To assess fitness for the psychological treatment

?      To give tools to assess progress

Reminder:  We are referring to cognitive-behavioural treatment* where assessment and treatment go together. When the connection between triggers, thoughts, neutralizing and avoidance are understood then the treatment can start immediately. Treatment will be based on exposure and response prevention.     

 

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Demonstrations caused important vandalism

The trouble in Lebanon threatened to take a sectarian spin as protesters stoned the nearby St. Maroun Church, one of the city’s main Maronite Catholic churches, and private property in Ashrafieh, a Christian area near Beirut’s commercial district.  Demonstrations caused major damage in Achrafieh.  Many cars and businesses were shattered by the demonstrators on their way to the Danish Embassy. Liberately St Maron Church and the Greek Orthodox bishopric were also severely vandalized. As an answer to these terrible attacks, Lebanese citizens in the city of Kahaleh closed the roads to forbid demonstrators to create further wreckage.  In addition, the Free Patriotic Movement is organizing a demonstration in front of St Maron church at .

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Danish consulate over cartoons

By Laila Bassam, BEIRUT (Reuters) – Angry Lebanese demonstrators torched the Danish consulate in Beirut on Sunday, further escalating a violent turn in protests over the publication by European newspapers of cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad.Thousands of protesters, some carrying green Islamic flags, chanted "God is Greatest" outside the burning building as thick black smoke billowed into the sky.

Some stood on top of a fire engine, one of three damaged by protesters to prevent fire fighters putting the blaze out. It was not immediately clear if the building was empty. On Saturday furious Syrians had set fire to the Danish and Norwegian embassies in Damascus. They also damaged the Swedish embassy and tried to storm the French mission but were held off by riot police.

The Scandinavian countries and the United States condemned Syria for failing to protect the embassies. Lebanese security forces had fired tear gas at a crowd of about 20,000 as they marched towards the Danish consulate. Pls click "READ MORE" to view pictures.

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Calls for solidarity with Lebanon

4French TV broadcaster Christine Ockrent yesterday hosted a Reporters Without Borders evening of solidarity with Lebanon, where newspaper journalists Samir Kassir and Gebran Tueni were murdered last year and Lebanese TV presenter May Chidiac was maimed by a bomb. Relatives of the victims and leading French and Lebanese figures took part in the event, held in the Orsay Museum auditorium in Paris, and paid homage to the victims.

Tueni

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Lebanon compromise avoids showdown with UN

By Lin Noueihed, BEIRUT (Reuters) – Lebanon’s declaration that Hizbollah is a resistance movement was a compromise aimed at ending a political crisis without provoking a showdown with the U.N. Security Council which demands the guerrilla group disarm.Five Shi’ite ministers had launched a government boycott on December 12, paralysing the country and sparking a slanging match between politicians for and against Hizbollah keeping its arms.

Talks to secure their return had faltered over a Shi’ite demand that the cabinet explicitly state that Hizbollah was not a militia but an anti-Israeli resistance group. Hizbollah has been under pressure to lay down its weapons since the U.N. Security Council demanded 16 months ago that foreign troops leave Lebanon and all militias there disarm. Pro-Syrian Hizbollah and Amal, Lebanon’s main Shi’ite parties, announced an end to the seven-week government boycott on Thursday after Prime Minister Fouad Siniora told parliament that Hizbollah had always been considered a national resistance organisation. He did not use the word militia.Political sources read Siniora’s words as a way to coax Shi’ite parties to rejoin the government, while not rejecting the U.N. resolution 1559 on militia disarmament.

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Border tension over Lebanon shepherd death

BEIRUT, Lebanon, Feb. 2 (UPI) — Hezbollah accused Israel of killing a Lebanese shepherd in the disputed region of Shabaa Farms in south Lebanon and vowed to avenge the slaying. The 17-year-old shepherd and a hunter disappeared Wednesday afternoon in the area, a common backdrop to Hezbollah-Israeli skirmishes. The hunter returned safely, but the shepherd’s body was found Thursday in the area by U.N. peacekeeping forces in south Lebanon, known as UNIFIL.

The body, riddled with bullets, was taken to a nearby hospital where the victim’s family and co-villagers gathered, shouting anti-Israeli slogans to protest against Israel’s frequent violations of the U.N.-drawn Blue Line along the border. Hezbollah’s Secretary General Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah warned Israel Wednesday against killing the Lebanese shepherd, vowing to retaliate "without taking permission from anyone." He said Hezbollah militants will punish the killers without hesitation.

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Blast near Lebanese army post after al Qaeda warning

BEIRUT (Reuters) – A bomb exploded near a Lebanese army barracks in Beirut early on Thursday, destroying a car and slightly wounding one soldier, security sources said. The sources said a local newspaper had received a telephone call from someone claiming to speak on behalf of al Qaeda and declaring that a security target would be bombed in Beirut in retaliation for the arrest last month of 13 group members.

The explosion occurred some three hours later at around 2 a.m. (7 p.m. EST) outside the Fakhreddine Barracks in Ramlet al-Baida district of the capital, shattering windows in nearby buildings.The sources earlier said the blast was caused by a car bomb but they later said it had been caused by an explosive charge near or under the car.

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Al-Qaeda’s Presence in Lebanon

By Murad Al-Shishani, After a missile attack on Israel from south Lebanon on December 27, 2005, the Organization of al-Qaeda in Iraq, or the Land of the Two Rivers, issued an audio-recording for its leader, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, in which he claimed responsibility for the attack and said it was ordered by al-Qaeda’s leader, Osama bin Laden. The attack, combined with the statement of responsibility, raised questions about al-Qaeda’s presence in Lebanon. Following the attack, Lebanese authorities arrested a group of al-Qaeda members or followers of the Salafi-Jihadist movement. While the Lebanese authorities did not disclose details about the arrested suspects, the news leaks raised several questions about the presence and nature of the Salafi-Jihadist movement in Lebanon.

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