|    Register
   
Friday, March 19, 2010
Latest News & Information

Current Articles | Archives | Search

Australian Priest Begins Campaign to Help Chaldeans
By Amer Hedow :: 6007 Views
:: Article Rating :: Religion & Spirituality, World News & Odds 'N' Ends, Chaldean Churches

Brisbane, AUSTRALIA – In the capital city of Australia, Brisbane priest Fr. Gerry Hefferan has begun a campaign to help the struggling Chaldeans of war-torn Iraq.  Fr. Hefferan recently returned from Kurdistan and has organized a daily prayer roster with parishes from five major dioceses to pray for Chaldeans.  The effort has been welcomed by Australian Catholics as parishioners have already filled the roster until November 2009. 

The prayer roster is not the only effort Fr. Hefferan is undertaken on behalf of Chaldeans.  The Grovely-based priest is also encouraging Catholics to share expertise in education and health with staff at St Peter’s Chaldean Seminary in Iraq which has been relocated from Baghdad to Erbil in the Kurdistan north.

“This is because education and health are two major areas where the Muslim communities recognize Christian expertise,” Fr Hefferan said. “So this is one way to help bring peace to the area – it can help the Christians live more harmoniously with their Muslim neighbors.”

Fr. Hefferan said his visit to Iraq earlier this month had been to show his solidarity with the suffering Church there.  “About one-third of the Catholic population in Iraq have now migrated, with the majority in refugee camps in Syria, Jordan and Turkey,” he said. 

Pope Benedict tried to visit Iraq to boost morale there on his recent tour of the Middle East but was unable to get in. However, he did celebrate a Mass with First Communicants in Jordan as part of his outreach to Iraqi refugee children there.

“This turned out to be a real shot in the arm for the Church in Iraq ... Catholics in Kurdistan were on a real high throughout the time I spent there.”  Fr Hefferan said “the danger now is that Iraq will become similar to Palestine where there are few Christians”.

While in Kurdistan, he stayed at St Peter’s Chaldean Seminary.

Among events he attended were the graduation of Babel College students some of whom attend the seminary.

Fr. Hefferan was also present for the second anniversary of the murders of Fr. Ragheed Ranni and three deacons Basman Yousef Daud, Wahid Hanna Isho and Gassan Isam Bidawed which had occurred at Mosul’s Holy Spirit Chaldean Church in June, 2007.

Fr. Hefferan said his visit to Iraq had made him more conscious of the urgent need to support Catholics there.

Those interested in assisting Fr Hefferan can contact him via email on hefferang@bne.catholic.net.au or on (043)777-5088.

 
Rating
Syndicate  

Some New Partners Take Nontraditional Paths
New Keker & Van Nest partner Steven Ragland worked as a juggling clown after college. And new Allen Matkins partner Michael McFadden spent 18 years in nonlegal jobs before taking his first law firm job. Stories like theirs show there's more than one route to a law firm partnership.

PTO Goes on a Hiring Spree to Help Reduce Patent Backlog
With a backlog of more than 700,000 patent applications, the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office needs all the help it can get. And it has plenty to choose from -- a recent patent examiner vacancy announcement yielded 4,000 applications. The agency plans to hire 250 new examiners.

Sonnenschein Denied Rehearing in Former Partner's Suit Over Fees
The D.C. Court of Appeals denied Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal's request for an en banc rehearing in its legal battle with former partner Douglas Rosenthal on Thursday, meaning the firm could now potentially owe more than $1 million in damages. Rosenthal sued Sonnenschein in 2005, saying he had been unfairly compensated for millions in fees he generated for his old firm, including those from representing the families of victims killed in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103.

Cadwalader Adds Three Partners From Proskauer
Cadwalader has added a three-partner group from Proskauer Rose. Louis Solomon, Hal Shaftel and Colin Underwood will expand Cadwalader's complex commercial dispute capabilities. Solomon, who co-chaired Proskauer's litigation practice until last year, will bring with him a roster of clients, including PepsiCo, Bristol-Myers Squibb and AriZona Iced Tea. Michael Lazaroff, previously senior counsel at Proskauer, will also join Cadwalader as special counsel. Solomon declined to say if associates would follow.

Northwestern Offers Foreign Students a Fast Track LL.M.
Who says you need a year to earn a Master of Laws degree? Northwestern University School of Law on Tuesday announced a new program through which foreign lawyers can complete an LL.M. in just 15 weeks -- the shortest program of its kind. The accelerated LL.M. program is open only to foreign lawyers and will emphasize "the importance of the role of the lawyers as a strategic advisor in business," the school said.

How to Know if You're a Big Law Cog
The Snark takes some time to clarify the term "Cog." Notably, it doesn't just refer to Big Law associates. Here's a quiz that lets you know if you're a Cog, "The Man" (even if you're a woman), or a Consuming Oxygen Guzzler -- a Cog who just sucks in the good air and wastes space.

Los Angeles Court System Lays Off 329 Workers, Closes Courtrooms
The Los Angeles County Superior Court will lay off 329 employees and close 17 courtrooms due to budget cuts effective April 1, administrators have announced. But the state Judicial Council said it considered the layoffs "excessive" and unnecessary" based on preliminary information.

Chadbourne Rescinds Job Offers to 11 Deferred Associates
Chadbourne & Parke confirmed on Wednesday that it had rescinded job offers to 11 incoming associates it had previously deferred past January 2010. Chadbourne said it has paid each of the 11 deferred associates the balance of a $73,000 stipend promised after the firm delayed their start dates. The firm said the decision has no effect on the other lawyers in the class or its 2010 incoming associates and summer class.

Criminal Defense Attorneys Build War Chest, Gain Support in New York City
New York City's 18-B lawyers, private attorneys who represent indigent criminal defendants when a conflict exists, have raised nearly $100,000 to battle the plan to give much of their work to institutional providers. Five county bar associations issued a supportive joint resolution.

N.Y. City Bar Retracts Survey's 'Not Satisfied' Finding on Deferred Associates
The New York City Bar on Wednesday retracted a finding from a survey suggesting that deferred associates were not satisfied with the lawyers with whom they worked at public interest groups. Saying it had misinterpreted data, the bar association also issued a revised report, which claims that deferred associates "were largely happy with their placements," a stark difference from the previous report, which suggested a "culture gap" existed between the law firm-bound lawyers and their public interest colleagues.

At Ruden McClosky, the Exodus Continues
Ruden McClosky, the Florida firm that has lost about 50 partners and two offices over the past year, saw five more lawyers wave goodbye this week for Fox Rothschild. The mass departures to various firms have spurred rumors that Ruden is on the verge of dissolving, an idea that the firm has denied. One of the lawyers who switched to Fox Rothschild says she thinks the Ruden firm will survive, partly because the January loss of eight critical lawyers to Adams and Reese served as something of a wake-up call.

Advice for the Lawlorn
Recruiters are contacting employees at my company. Is this legal? Is there an effective way to deal with these people? Ann answers, and discusses how a law firm's "no recruiters" stance cost them the candidate they wanted.
News Feed Is Not Available At This Time. Error message:The remote server returned an error: (404) Not Found.

www.CHALDEAN.org Copyright 2004 - 2008, All Rights Reserved.     |    Privacy Statement    |    Terms Of Use