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8 dicembre 2009

Is Paganism About to be Redefined from the Parliament?

(Parlamento delle Religioni)
In the world of Interfaith relations, where religions, faiths and traditions seek to find cooperation and peaceful coexistence, the labels and definitions and how they are used are important. Descriptions of faith practices are the way interfaith speakers share information that leads to greater understanding, and the clearer the language used, the better chance all parties will be able to find common ground. In this case, for a very long time Paganism has been defined by the Christian definition of any non-Abrahamic religion. This has been considered a derogatory term by many faiths, and seen as insult to many including members of Hinduism, Buddhism, Native and Indigenous faiths. They each desired that they be seen as an equal religion with their own title and definitions to be used. In this, by agreement, Paganism is not used to directly describe any faith simply because it is not Christian, Muslim, or Jewish. This agreement has allowed each faith attending to put aside the use of this word as a central description of their faith.
So the term Pagan itself is being redefined from this old Christian based definition. Part of the Teaching of Traditions series, created with the help of Pagan Trustees, describes Paganism as follows: “Paganism” is a collective term that most aptly defines Indigenous cultures of pre-Christian Europe, the Celtic and Germanic Tribes, The Balts, The Scandinavians, The Basques, The Slaves and many others.
The first Pagan presentation of the Parliament helped begin this change of identity and was called “People Call Us Pagans-The European Indigenous Traditions”, by PWR Trustees Angie Buchanan, Andras Arthen, and Phyllis Curott. The opening of the description is as follows: As the World confronts environmental devastation, we are beginning to appreciate the wisdom of Indigenous peoples who have lived thousands of years in sustainable harmony and spiritual connection with the Earth. After hundreds of years of suppression, most Westerners have forgotten that their ancestors once shared this wisdom as the Indigenous traditions of Europe. *
This concept of Paganism as being based deeply in European Indigenous Traditions has fascinated and found ground among American, European and Australian members of the Parliament. It helps move Paganism from being a New Religious Movement to an Indigenous tradition, and offers many more opportunities to reach out at the parliament.
As described by Andras Corban-Arthen most forms of modern Paganism can be described as part of the New Religious Movements as they were formed in the 20th century, yet there are several Pagan ethnic traditions that have survived Christianization. One such example is Romuva of Lithuania. It is these ethnic traditions that fit better into the description of Indigenous traditions, instead of New Religious Movements. It allows Pagans to be part of both New Religious Movements and also recognized as part of the Indigenous traditions. By accepting that Pagan Traditions are indigenous to Europe, then individuals must take another look and it presents them with a different paradigm of what Pagan stands for.
Further, Andras Corban-Arthen points out that Wicca, for example, cannot be seen as an indigenous Pagan faith practice and is instead a modern syncretic movement. Under this description Wicca therefore would not fall under the definition of Pagan, and would be squarely a New Religious Movement, while British Traditional Witchcraft could be considered a Pagan and Indigenous faith tradition.
This concept of redefining Paganism as Indigenous Faith Practices of Europe has been seen as a way to change perceptions. River Higginbotham, Author and Pagan, who has heard this definition for the first time at the Parliament, describes this change as one that will benefit many Pagans, and he accepts that most Pagans he knows draw on European traditions to form their own practices. This allows them grounding in culture, and this description has given them a better understanding of where their faith is coming from.
Angie Buchanan offers that recognition of Paganism as an extension of the faith practice of Indigenous European Religions gives modern Pagans grounding in their own traditions. This will help them find their own customs and rituals. This will discourage modern Pagans from raiding other Indigenous faiths rituals and practices, which is also known as Cultural Appropriation, which many Native Americans and other culturally based ceremonialists describe as a form of spiritual theft. By having Pagans focus on their own European roots, they can avoid creating situations that would aggravate cultural appropriation that harms interfaith efforts.
Linda Hart, Interfaith Liaison for Pagan Awareness Network of Australia, feels this is a good description for Paganism, and finds it useful for non-Pagans to understand. It is a useful tool in dealing with other indigenous faiths, which do not see themselves as Pagan. Instead this allows Pagans to share as fellow Earth-Based Spiritualists.
So we see that Paganism is beginning to be used to describe Indigenous European faiths, and that other practices by Indigenous people are being seen as part of a larger family of Earth-Based Spiritualists; That some forms of what we call Paganism are really independent of that term and are better described their own name under New Religious Movements.
In all cases, the definition that Pagans are those who practice a faith not covered by Christianity, Judaism, or Islam, should be discarded as politically and socially unacceptable. That we must look beyond a definition forced onto the world by missionaries as a way to divide us, and instead accept that each faith practice can and should be called by the name of their choice.
For many self-described Pagans, this is a different lens to view themselves with, and offers a chance to reexamine their faith as Pagans, Earth Spiritualists, New Religious Movements, or something else yet to come. It may be time to examine the entire Pagan movement under this new definition and allow it to evolve into more than simply one community; that understanding these differences and the labels they generate can allow us to interact more fully in a multi-religious and pluralistic Interfaith World, as shown at the Parliament of World’s Religions. Link esterno
*PWR Program Handbook, 2009, pg.142-143


6 dicembre 2009


Superacceleratore del Cern 'vede' le prime collisioni
Osservate dai grandi rivelatori del Large Hadron Collider (Lhc) di Ginevra


(ANSA) ROMA - Per la prima volta le collisioni fra protoni sono state osservate dai grandi rivelatori di particelle del supar-acceleratore Large Hadron Collider (Lhc) del Cern di Ginevra. Lo rende noto il sito Lhc Italia, dell'Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (Infn).
"Tutto ha funzionato alla perfezione", si legge nel sito e gli eventi sono durati circa 20 minuti. Sono avvenuti con un' energia complessiva di 900 miliardi di elettronvolt (GeV). Ognuno dei due fasci aveva cioé un'energia pari a 450 GeV e quattro "pacchetti" di protoni.
Le collisioni sono avvenute in tutti e quattro gli esperimenti dell'Lhc. Rispetto alle prime collisioni avvenute il 23 novembre, questa volta era in funzione l'intero apparato dei rivelatori. Il programma per oggi è proseguire con nuove collisioni, aumento progressivamente l'intensità dei fasci.

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1 dicembre 2009

Clima: presentata la bozza di Copenaghen

Aiuti economici ai Paesi Poveri, taglio delle emissioni del 50% entro il 2050 e limite dell’innalzamento della temperature globale sotto i 2 °C: questi gli obiettivi elencati nella bozza che tra una settimana verrà presentata nella capitale danese

(Rinnovabili.it) – Quando mancano ormai solo 7 giorni alla conferenza di Copenhagen la Danimarca ha presentato la bozza che verrà presentata al summit e che potrebbe essere alla base dei futuri accordi. Il documento, oltre a sottolineare l’importanza di limitare l’innalzamento delle temperature al di sotto dei 2 °C, propone di ridurre la produzione di gas serra del 50% entro il 2050 facendo riferimento ai livelli degli anni 90, invitando i Paesi Ricchi ad agire affinché siano i responsabili almeno dell’80% del calo degli inquinanti, prevedendo al 2020 i livelli massimi delle emissioni dannose.A tal proposito si è espresso il premier danese Lars Lokke Rasmussen dichiarando di sperare in un documento “politicamente vincolante” che elenchi in maniera dettagliata gli obblighi di ciascun Paese, proponendo il 2010 come anno in cui l’accordo dovrà essere trasformato in un trattato con valore legale.Non sembrano essere state ascoltate, almeno per il momento, le indicazioni dei Paesi più poveri: nel documento non c’è traccia di obiettivi di riduzione a breve termine destinate ai Paesi sviluppati. Dall’Europa arrivano inoltre buone notizie: l’Europarlamento ha approvato il documento ‘Preparazione del summit di Copenaghen sul cambiamento climatico’, recante la posizione che l’Ue ha intenzione di portare a Copenhagen che, tradotta in euro, si identifica in un fondo da 30 miliardi di euro l’anno a supporto dei Paesi in via di Sviluppo fino al 2020.



CENSURA IN GRECIA

Grecia - Video di Costa Gravas nel nuovo museo dell'Acropoli censurato nelle parti riguardanti la distruzione del Partenone da parte dei Cristiani.



Il 2 Agosto si è Formata una protesta pacifica davanti al museo da parte dei Gentili Ellenici dell'YSEE


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