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| Refugee Workshops Help Chaldean Families Learn About the U.S. |
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Michigan, USA – St. Joseph Chaldean Catholic Church in Troy, Michigan continues to host an array of services for refugee assistance. Along with English classes, school tutoring for children, and family support services the church campus will now feature special workshops geared to refugee families.
“The love and help for us at St. Jospeh and all the churches, makes me thank God every second,” says Habiba Yousip through a translator. “If it was not for our Church we would all be dead.”
The workshops provide informative sessions to help refugee arrivals transition to life in the United States. Sessions include knowing your neighbor, taxes and financial planning, keeping your children safe, apartment living, senior housing, food safety, and disaster preparedness.
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| Filed in: Living & Lifestyle, Career & Education, Government & Society, Chaldean Churches By Sam Yousif |
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| Pontifical Babel College in Baghdad Finally Returned to the Chaldean Catholic Church |
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Baghdad, IRAQ – After ongoing threats, attacks, and kidnappings Chaldean seminarians, students, and staff fled the centuries old Pontifical Babel College in Baghdad. Abandoning the building to safer territory in northern Iraq, the staff had no choice says the dean of the college.
A short while after, U.S. military occupied the building as a “combat outpost” and fortified base of operations for the 4th Cavalry Squadron of the First Mechanized Infantry Division, and then by the 2nd Squadron of the 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment.
The controversial move by the U.S. military fueled Iraqi Christian conspiracies of collaboration between Chaldeans and the United States. Radical Islamic leaders used the building as evidence to further persecute Christians as conspirators. Although Iraqi Christians were innocent in the taking of the building, the appearance was enough to recruit hundreds of terrorists and cause animosity between Iraqi Christians and fanatical foreign Muslims.
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| Filed in: Religion & Spirituality, Law & Order, Government & Society, Chaldean Churches By Huda Metti |
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| Election Part I: “We Have No King But Caesar” |
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The following is the first of a three-part series on the 2008 Elections. In the next two weeks we will deal with issues of Culture and Conscience.
Now that the election is over, we can separate the real Catholics from those who just act the part. Those still reeling from the results of the election can rest assured that they are in good company with the saints.
Those who have drawn a line in blood and made a decision to stand with the culture of death need a serious examination of conscience.
Now look at what we’ve done to ourselves. America has made her “choice” for maximum leader and it is not pretty. In fact, it is one of the most devastating blows to American civilization that we have ever undergone, and I do not speak in hyperbole. Even such a saintly figure as Mother Theresa said that “a nation that kills its children has no future;” likewise, an authority like Fr. Benedict Groeschel recently commented that we have entered into “the beginning of the twilight” of our country—dire words that touch on the reality of electing the most extreme, pro-abortion candidate America has ever had the misfortune of occupying the highest office of our land.
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| Filed in: Religion & Spirituality, Government & Society, Opinion and Editorials By Guest Reporter |
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| Chaldean Healthcare Provider Sees Shift in Culture Costing A Great Deal |
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Florida, USA – “The family is the nucleus of society. When it is weakened or destroyed, we all pay,” says Jenny Jabril, a Chaldean nurse in Florida’s Orange County. “We all pay when families break-down or fail. We the people, deal with the dysfunction. Our taxes go up to care for the abandoned or misguided children, our education system spins out of control, we pay more to prevent crimes, protect our families, or hospitalize these people.”
Jabril is frustrated over the increased number of substance abuse. In Florida law, citizens can be held against their will under the Marchman Act. Individuals whose substance abuse makes them a threat to themselves or others can be held at a mental-health facility for up to five days while physicians evaluate them.
Jerry Kassab, president and chief executive officer of Lakeside Alternatives, Orange County's receiving center, said his facility receives about 20 patients a day who are committed under the law. There are three scenarios in which someone can be committed under the Marchman Act.
In Orange County, Kassab said, most patients are taken to Lakeside by law enforcement officers. "The most common instance is when someone's out on the street who's acting up, or the police might be called by a store owner because someone's acting up or acting weird," Kassab said. "You also get instances when one family member calls the police because someone in their family is out of control."
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| Filed in: Health & Fitness, Government & Society By Britney Hermiz |
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| The Faithful Catholic Citizens’ “8 Answer” Guide |
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In 2004 a group of United States Bishops, acting on behalf of the USCCB and requesting counsel about the responsibilities of Catholic politicians and voters, received a memo from the office of Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the future Pope Benedict XVI, which stated:
“A Catholic would be guilty of formal cooperation in evil, and so unworthy to present himself for Holy Communion, if he were to deliberately vote for a candidate precisely because of the candidate’s permissive stand on abortion and/or euthanasia." In short, you are not in communion with Christ or His church if you vote for a candidate who supports abortion more.
This declaration raised a number of questions. The following 8 answers might offer greater clarity.
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| Filed in: Religion & Spirituality, Government & Society, Opinion and Editorials By Frank Dado |
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| Chaldeans Measured for Political Leanings |
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California, USA – The results are in for the www.CHALDEAN.org voter knowledge survey. The survey was created to register Chaldean voter knowledge of the presidential campaign and extrapolate which presidential candidate would best address the needs of Chaldeans.
Dr. James Brothman, psychometric expert and president of Brothman Research, created the survey for www.CHALDEAN.org. A psychometric survey is a more sophisticated method than the traditional polls that ask respondents who they plan to vote for in the election. The scientific survey reveals that not every issue carries the same weight of importance to a voter, nor does every voter prioritize the issues in the same way.
“We create a scientific survey that captures issue concerns and matches the concern to the candidate that would best meet the respondents need. We do not ask who they are voting for or why. Instead we apply a reverse engineering process that filters out emotions. We ask what issues are important to you and how important are those issues to you. Based on the information we receive are able to determine who the respondents would vote for if they are truly voting on issues only. The difference between the survey results and the actual voting results tells us how much campaign marketing influenced the vote.”
Based on Dr. Brothman’s research of Chaldean voter respondents, 88% of the Chaldean community should vote for McCain / Palin if they are driven by the issues important to them.
Dr. Brothman also reveals the leading issues important to Chaldeans this election.
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| Filed in: Living & Lifestyle, Government & Society By Britney Hermiz |
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| Chaldeans Overwhelmingly Plan to Vote YES on California Prop. 4 & 8 and NO on Michigan 1 & 2 |
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California, USA – Chaldeans in California and Michigan are eager to vote on their state ballot initiatives. In California an effort to prohibit or allow homosexual marriage is on the ballot as proposition 8. In Michigan, the statewide ballot is asking voters to either allow or reject the use of marijuana (proposal1) and embryo research (proposal 2).
“Chaldeans in California and Michigan should understand that all three of these issues are very important. The cost to Chaldeans and America is very high if gay marriage is allowed, embryos are killed for research, or drugs are made legal,” says Ann Bodagh, of El Cajon. “Chaldeans need to work together to prevent America from slipping even further.”
Bodagh’s opinion is the majority, but liberal corporations, like Apple computers and Levi Straus jeans are throwing big money to help fund the passing of proposition 8. In Michigan, drug companies, the DNC, and Planned Parenthood are hoping marijuana use and embryo research get passed.
We examine all three propositions.
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| Filed in: Government & Society, World News & Odds 'N' Ends By Sam Yousif |
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| Can A Difference Be Made By Chaldeans Calling for Action? |
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California, USA – An unlikely duo seem to breaking through the information blackout of Iraq’s desperate situation. Contrary to news coverage that Iraq is healing, few if any major media outlets are covering Iraq’s minority persecution.
Chaldean Catholic Cardinal Emmanuel-Karim Delly of Baghdad, Iraq, expressed sadness over what he viewed as a chronic lack of concern and concrete action to stop the violence and protect all of Iraq's citizens. Greater attention and pressure are needed so that the Iraqi government can "be just and fulfill its duty toward its citizens," he said.
Echoing the Cardinal’s call urging everyone to help call attention to the injustice, Chaldean star rapper Timz, winner of the Hollywood Film Festival's "Video of the Year" and nominee for the MTV Video Music Awards' "Video of the Year," releases another hip-hop masterpiece titled “Do Something.” A powerful call to action that begins with a hypnotic beat mixed with middle eastern flair beginning with a message from Timz himself to “Change the world, not the channel.”
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| Filed in: Sports, Art, and Entertainment, Government & Society, World News & Odds 'N' Ends By Mary Esho |
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| “I looked, and I know what I saw," says Cardinal Egan of New York |
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Have you any doubt that it is a human being?
If you do not have any such doubt, have you any doubt that it is an innocent human being?
If you have no doubt about this either, have you any doubt that the authorities in a civilized society are duty-bound to protect this innocent human being if anyone were to wish to kill it?
If your answer to this last query is negative, that is, if you have no doubt that the authorities in a civilized society would be duty-bound to protect this innocent human being if someone were to wish to kill it, I would suggest—even insist—that there is not a lot more to be said about the issue of abortion in our society. It is wrong, and it cannot—must not—be tolerated.
But you might protest that all of this is too easy. Why, you might inquire, have I not delved into the opinion of philosophers and theologians about the matter? And even worse: Why have I not raised the usual questions about what a "human being" is, what a "person" is, what it means to be "living," and such?
People who write books and articles about abortion always concern themselves with these kinds of things. Even the justices of the Supreme Court who gave us "Roe v. Wade" address them. Why do I neglect philosophers and theologians? Why do I not get into defining "human being," defining "person," defining "living," and the rest?
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| Filed in: Religion & Spirituality, Government & Society By Guest Reporter |
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| By Their Own Admission Says Dani Jopa and Angie Kassab |
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Illinois, USA – “The hypocrisy of this candidate is clear. He can not be trusted,” says Dani Jopa. “He promises to accept public financing, then doesn’t. He votes one way, and says he didn’t. He tells everyone he doesn’t accept lobbyist money, he does. He says he will oppose going after illegal immigrants, then says let’s get them. He wanted to put an end to the Cuban embargo, and then tells Cuban exiles in Florida we will keep the embargo. He is untrustworthy. He is a panderer. He is what I have come to hate about politicians in America.”
Jopa’s strong feelings resonate with half the country. Many agree that Obama should be well over 30 points ahead of McCain given the circumstances. Instead the two candidates are neck-and-neck. “By his own admission he and his running mate tell the American people he is not ready to be president,” Jopa adds, referring to the latest dust-up over Obama’s naiveté and lack of experience.
Biden created a uproar with his implication to a crowd of deep-pocket donors that presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama's lack of experience would create an appearance of weakness that would encourage opponents to challenge the U.S. According to news reports, Biden told the crowd of donors, "Mark my words: It will not be six months before the world tests Barack Obama like they did John Kennedy.
Angie Kassab agrees with Biden, “he was only repeating what Obama himself said. He is not prepared to serve.”
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| Filed in: Government & Society By joe acho |
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| Sacred Heart Parish, MI USA
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Sacred Heart Parish 310 W. Seven Mile. Rd. Detroit, MI 48203 Tel: (313) 368-6214 Fax: (313) 891-0132
The parish was established by Rev. Jacob Yasso in 1973
Rev. Jacob Yasso

Rev. Jacob Yasso was born in the village of Telkaif, Iraq. After completing high school he was recruited to Rome and Urbaniana University where he completed his Masters Degree in philosophy and Theology. Fr. Yasso was ordained a priest in 1960 and served the Diocese of Mosul, where he worked in the public school system. Fr. Yasso was also asked by the Patriarch to teach at the Patriarchal Seminary in Baghdad, where he served as administrator, professor of philosophy and religious life, and rector of the minor seminary.
In 1964, Fr. Yasso was appointed to the United States to serve the growing Chaldean community in Detroit. There he served as the 4th Pastor of Mother of God Parish. . In 1972, the Patriarch charged Fr. Yasso with building a new parish for the Chaldeans in Detroit. In taking great pains to care for the community Fr. Yasso accelerated the development of a new church and community center. In 1975, Fr. Yasso completed the development of Sacred Heart Parish in Detroit and shortly thereafter he added the Chaldean Center of America in 1980,
A few years later in 1982, Fr. Yasso was asked to assist the late Fr. Kattoula at St. Peter’s Church in San Diego, CA. Before long, Fr. Yasso was once again recruited to Rome to study new Canon Law of the Church. While in Rome Fr. Yasso completed his third Masters Degree in Church Law, making him the only Chaldean priest trained in Canon Law.
In 1988, the Patriarch and Vatican authorities asked Fr. Yasso to travel to Canada and establish a parish and community center. While there he served as a Tribunal Judge for the Archdiocese of Toronto. Four years later Fr. Yasso returned to Sacred Heart church in Detroit to help care for the remaining Chaldean community residence in the Detroit area. To this day, Fr. Yasso continues to serve as the parish pastor creating activities and advising the City of Detroit on community related matters.
Fr. Yasso is a member of the International WYCLIF Bible translators, since 1975, and has completed the translation of the New Testament from Greek and Aramaic into Arabic and spoken Chaldean. The publication of his scholarly work is set to be released soon.
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