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The religious intolerance and the prudent hand of the secular state (2)

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From the book “Atheistic Delusions” by David B. Hart

It is even more significant that some of the great early theorists of modern science and the scientific method believed in magic and were therefore often inclined to recommend persecution to those who used it for malicious purposes. Rodney Stark does not exaggerate when he states that “the first serious objections to the reality of satanic sorcery come from the Spanish inquisitors, not from the scholars.” We could even argue that interest in magic (though not in its malicious varieties) has been one of the main ingredients in the evolution of modern scientific thought. Undoubtedly, the rediscovery during the Renaissance of the Corpus Hermeticum [13] – this magnificent late antique anthology, which brought together texts from Neoplatonism, Gnosticism, alchemy, magic, astrology and religion – was of great importance for the formation of the ethos of modern science. . Francis Bacon (1561-1626), who did so much to define the inner rationality of the modern scientific method and who was such an energetic advocate of man’s “mission” to know and conquer the material world, is at least a continuation of the emphasis. , which the revival of Hermeticism places on the godlike rights of mankind above the lower levels of material creation, together with the alchemical tradition of decomposing the nature of the elements so that it may be made to reveal its deepest secrets. Robert Boyle (1627–1691), one of the founders of the British Royal Society, probably the greatest scientist of the seventeenth century and a pioneer in the study of air pressure and vacuum, was a student of alchemy and was firmly convinced of the reality of witches and the need to eliminate them. Joseph Glenville (1636–1680), also a member of the British Royal Society and a major apologist for his experimental methods, considered the reality of witchcraft to be something that could be scientifically proven. [14] Even Newton devoted far more energy to his alchemy than to his physical theories.

In fact, the rise of modern science and the obsession with witchcraft in Early Modernity are not just contemporary currents within Western society, but also two closely related manifestations of the unfolding of a new post-Christian sense of human domination over the world. There is nothing outrageous in such a claim. After all, magic is essentially just a kind of materialism: if it appeals to any factors beyond the realm of the visible, those factors are not supernatural — in the theological sense, “transcendent.” What can be said most about them is that they are simply extraordinary, or in other words, more elusive, more powerful aspects of the physical cosmos. Both Hermetic magic and modern science (at least in its most Bacon form) are equally concerned with the hidden forces within the material order — forces that are completely devoid of personality and morally neutral, and that we can learn to manipulate. and we aim at both noble and ignoble ends. In other words, both are engaged in the domination of the physical cosmos, the instrumental subordination of nature by mankind, and the continual increase of human power. Therefore, one cannot really speak of any belated triumph of science over magic, but simply of a natural replacement of the last of the first, in which the ability of science to complete what magic could only begin to become more and more obvious. Or rather, in the modern period, “magic” and “science” can only be distinguished retrospectively – according to their respective degrees of effectiveness. However, there has never been an antagonism between the two: metaphysically, morally and conceptually, they both belong to the same continuum.

As for the widespread fear of malicious magic and Satanism in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, when treatises on demonolatry, possession, evil spirits, and night monsters spread at the speed of their imprint, [15] it is tempting to simply equate it with any of those annoying and inexplicable forms of popular enthusiasm, such as the charm of a UFO, a Yeti, a Loch Ness monster, or the Bermuda Triangle, that would be just a staple of the specific idiocy of the 1970s, as long as their the consequences were not so tragic and lasting. A better analogy for this would be the panic that gripped Roman society in the second century BC. as a result of the migration to Italy of the cult of Dionysus or Bacchus, when there were rumors of orgies in the dark ages, of women poisoning their husbands, of children of noble families involved in ritual murders. Bacchanalia were then banned, accusations against them secured by rewards and confessions extracted by torture, and thousands of executions were ordered. Leaving aside all analogies, however, it should hardly be surprising that the fascination with Satanists and witches in the Early Modern period must have arisen in those centuries when the Christian order in Western Europe was slowly disintegrating, the authority of the church with regard to the deeds of the peoples had weakened, and the old faith could no longer offer a sufficient sense of security against the dark and nameless forces of nature, history, and destiny. Just as the Christian faith in the transcendent God-Creator had once deprived magic of appearing in any way religiously or philosophically serious, appealing to mere superstition and simple craftsmanship, so the fragmentation of Christian Europe probably encouraged a certain a kind of magical thinking to re-emerge and slip unnoticed among the fears of this tragic and chaotic age. To what extent, however, all this is capable of representing any adequate “explanation” of the extraordinary atrocities and all manifestations of fanaticism in Early Modernity is impossible to say.

All of this is not intended to justify the institution of the Roman Catholic Church for its complicity in violence during this period or for its growing sharpness and paranoia that actually existed. All powerful institutions are afraid of a decline in their power. Nor does it aim to deny that the Late Middle Ages and Early Modernity were periods marked by a passion for the eradication of heresies, unsurpassed by the time of the imp. Justinian I onwards.

It is difficult, for example, to ignore the Spanish Inquisition, which occupies such a special place among the collective nightmares of Western culture. However, there are certain facts that even here need to be taken into account. On the one hand, four decades of research have made it clear that many of our conventional notions of the Inquisition are simply hasty exaggerations and sensationalist fabrications; that for more than three centuries of its existence the Inquisition had been far more condescending and far less powerful than it had once been thought to be, and that in many cases, as any Spaniard accused of witchcraft had reason to understand, – it acted as a beneficial brake on the cruelty of the secular courts. However, I think we will all agree that the Inquisition was – in principle always, and often in its actions – a nasty institution, that the first two decades of its activity in Spain were particularly brutal, and that the relative rarity of torture or the burning of the stake does not make either of these two practices less terrible. However, we must not forget that, in principle, the Spanish Inquisition was a matter of Crown policy and service, which was at the disposal of the state.

True, the founder of the early Inquisition was Pope Sixtus IV (1414–1484), but he did so under pressure from King Fernando (1452–1516) and Queen Isabella (1451–1504), who, after centuries of Muslim occupation of Andalusia, – are thirsty for any instrument which, in their view, could have helped to strengthen national unity and increase the power of Castile and Aragon. However, the cruelty of the early Inquisition and the corruption in its circles were so great that soon Sixtus IV tried to intervene in its actions. With a papal bull of April 1482, he uncompromisingly denounced and condemned the destruction of innocent lives and the seizure of property by the Inquisition (although, of course, he did not object in principle to the execution of actual heretics). However, Fernando effectively refused to recognize this bull and in 1483 forced Sixtus IV to relinquish control of the Inquisition to the Spanish throne and to agree to the appointment of the Grand Inquisitor by the civil authorities. The first person to receive this title was the infamous Thomas de Torquemada (1420–1498), an extremely strict and uncompromising priest, especially with regard to converts: those who had converted from Judaism and Islam to Christianity. and which he suspects of attachment to the teachings of their old faiths. By the time of his final restraint by Pope Alexander VI (1431–1503), he was already responsible for the expulsion of a large number of Jews from Spain, as well as in all probability for about two thousand executions of “heretics.” However, even after Sixtus IV handed over his powers over the Inquisition, he did not completely renounce his resistance to its extremes. In 1484, for example, he supported the city of Teruel after being denied access to the Inquisition, a revolt that was suppressed the following year by Fernando by force of arms. Both Sixtus IV and his successor Innocent VIII (1432–1492) continued to make sporadic demands for greater leniency from the Inquisition and to try, at auspicious times, to intervene on the side of the converts. In the next century, the Inquisition was often drawn into the disgusting national policy of “pure blood” (limpieza de sangre), of which no one was safe – not even a monk, a priest or an archbishop. There was some resistance to Spanish radicalism in Spain itself, and none of the forms of resistance deserved as much honor and was as uncompromising as that of the founder of the Jesuit order, Ignatius Loyola (1491–1556). Often, however, the relief from racist harassment, however weak or infrequent, was provided solely by papal intervention. [16]

How do we understand all these stories? Should we conclude from them that religion in itself brings death, or that intolerance is something that is intrinsically linked to “extreme beliefs”? Should we see these stories as evidence of a cruelty that is inherent in Christianity as such? Certainly none of the periods in the history of Western Christianity seems – at least not superficially – more attractive to anti-Christian polemicists seeking convicting evidence. However, it is obvious to me that the real lesson we need to learn is the exact opposite, and this lesson is about the violence inherent in the state and the tragedy that the institutional church has ever allowed itself to be involved in secular politics. that it ever became responsible for maintaining social order, national or imperial unity. To think of worshiping the gods and loyalty to the Empire as essentially inseparable was perfectly natural for pagan Roman society, just as it was natural for Roman courts to establish extraordinary inquisitions and execute atheists [17] as traitors. However, when in 385 the Roman emperor (or in fact the pretender for such [18]) executed Ep. Priscilla in Spain for heresy, prominent Christians such as St. Martin of Turkey and St. Ambrose of Milan protested, seeing in such an action a celebration of pagan values ​​and a specific kind of pagan brutality, and none of the Church Fathers ever encouraged or approved of such measures. . During the so-called In the dark ages, in fact, the only punishment for persistence in heresy is excommunication from Eucharistic communion. In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, however, in times of the church’s unbreakable connection with secular power, when the papacy itself was a state and the Holy Roman Empire asserted its rights over the old imperial order, when new religious movements seemed more outspoken than ever subversive. for ecclesiastical and secular power, and the pillars of society seem to be shaken as never before, and chaos seems ready to come again, then throughout Western Europe heresy again becomes a felony. In honor of the Roman Catholic Church, however, it should be noted that it is not a leader in this regard: when, for example, in 1051 a group of Cathars (or “Manicheans”) were hanged by order of the often besieged Holy Roman Emperor Heinrich III (1017–1056), he had to bear the reproach of the bishop of Liège. For her eternal dishonor, however, the church abandons this approach. When the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II (1194–1250) issued laws ordering the surrender of all heretics to secular power to be burned at the stake, the institutional church’s agreement to this came without any visible sign of a troubled conscience. In the sixteenth century, however, little effort was needed in Iberia to remove the newly established Inquisition from direct papal control and to openly turn it into an instrument for strengthening the political, religious, and social unity of the national forces rising on the peninsula.

The long history of Christianity is astonishingly rich in majestic moral, intellectual, and cultural achievements, and many of them would never have been possible without the conversion of the Roman Empire to the new faith. However, this story is also a story of a constant struggle between the ability of the Gospel to change and shape society and the ability of the state to absorb any useful institution. However, if the injustices and violence in Western Christianity of the Late Middle Ages and Early Modernity were natural consequences of something inherent in Christian beliefs, if it is indeed true that the emergence of the secular state saved Western humanity from the dominance of religious intolerance, then which we will have to discover, looking back at the course of Western European history, will have to be a continuous, albeit twisted, arc: the decline of the golden days of the Roman imperial order, when religious violence was held back by the prudent hand of the state, to a long period of fanaticism, cruelty, persecution and religious rivalry, and then, after the gradual subjugation of the church, a slow return from the terrible brutality of the “age of faith” – to a progressive, more rational, more humane and less violent social structure. However, this is exactly what we cannot find. Instead, we note that violence increases in proportion to the degree of sovereignty claimed by the state, and that whenever the medieval church ceded authority in the moral realm of secular power, injustice and cruelty flourished. We also note that early medieval society, for all its deprivation, injustice, and deprivation, was in most cases far more just, generous, and (basically) peaceful than the imperial culture it inherited, and immeasurably more peaceful and even more generous (as incredible as it may seem to us) compared to the society created by the triumph of the nation-state in the period of Early Modernity. In this last example, I am not just talking about the violence of the “transitional” period of Early Modernity, on the eve of the so-called Enlightenment. The Enlightenment, viewed purely politically, was in itself a transition from an era of nationalist struggles in which states still considered it necessary to use religious institutions as instruments of their power to another era of even greater ones. nationalist struggles, when religious justifications have become obsolete, as the state has become a cult in itself and its power a single morality.

Notes:

[12] Stark, R. Op. cit., p. 221.

[13] The texts in the Corpus Hermeticum (or simply Hermetica) are attributed to the syncretic deity Hermes Trismegistus and were written in the second or third Christian century in ancient Greek in Egypt.

[14] See: Burton, D., D. Grandy. Magic, Mystery, and Science: The Occult in Western Civilization, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2004, p. 180-181.

[15] We could mention, among all the other works of Samuel de Casini, Bernard di Como, Johannes Trithemius, Martin d’Arles, Silvestro Mazolini, Bartolommeo di Spina, Jean Bodin, René Benoist, Alfonso de Castro, Peter Binsfeld, Franz Agricola and Nicholas Remi. For a comprehensive list of these authors, see: Brouette, E. The Sixteenth Century and Satanism. – In: Satan, London: Sheed & Ward, 1951, p. 315-317.

[16] See: Kamen, H. The Spanish Inquisition: A Historical Revision, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1998, p. 28-54, 73.

[17] By “atheists” in this case are meant those who do not worship pagan deities, which accusation during the period of persecution was most often made against Christians.

[18] We are talking about Flavius ​​Magnus Maximus Augustus – usurper of imperial power in Britain, Gaul and Spain in the period 383-388.

The President of the CEC to Patriarch Kiril: Your silence disappoints and frightens

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The President of the Conference of European Churches (CEC), Dr. Christian Krieger, called on Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and All Russia to raise his voice clearly against Russian aggression in Ukraine and to contribute to efforts to end the war and achieve peace.

“Religious and political leaders around the world, as well as believers from various churches, expect you to recognize aggression, call on your country’s political leadership to end the war and return to the path of diplomatic dialogue and international order,” the president’s letter said. CEC to Patriarch Kirill, published on March 4, 2022. “We call on you to confirm the value of all human lives, including the lives of Ukrainian citizens who are under attack.”

Krieger says, like millions of Christians around the world, he is horrified by the aggression of the Russian armed forces against Ukraine, civilians and thousands of people fleeing the country. “At the same time, I am discouraged by your frightening silence about the unprovoked war that your country has declared against another country that is home to millions of Christians, including Orthodox Christians who belong to your flock,” he added.

“As churches, our horizon is above national interests. I firmly believe that the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ carries a message of peace for all mankind and calls for deep respect for the dignity of every human being. This message is rooted in the mercy of the Triune God and the forgiveness that God gives by giving Himself to everyone who comes to Him. “This message calls on Christians, churches and church leaders like us to be ministers of peace and reconciliation,” he said.

“I beg you to raise your voice to end the war. I pray for the victims of this war and for all those who work for peace, “Krieger concluded.

In the same vein, he appealed to the head of the Russian Orthodox Church on March 2 this year and the Secretary General of the World Council of Churches, Professor Archpriest Dr. Ioan Sauca (Romania).

The first flight of the world’s largest airship Hindenburg took place on March 4

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The Hindenburg airship was built in 1936 in Germany and is the largest passenger aircraft of its kind. It is named after German President Paul von Hindenburg. Its board number is LZ 129, from a series of airships built and operated for transport by the company of Ferdinand Graf von Zeppelin (1838-1917).

Hindenburg began regular passenger flights as early as May 1936, flying repeatedly and successfully to the United States and Rio de Janeiro. In one year, the airship made 37 flights over the Atlantic Ocean, carrying a total of 3,000 passengers. The shortest flight is 43 hours.

The journey in the airship was quite comfortable. Passengers had double cabins with shower, restaurant with kitchen and lounge (with lightweight aluminum piano), observation room.

The main safety measure was a strict smoking ban. When boarding the airship, the passengers took all cigarettes, matches and any devices that could cause a spark. However, smokers were allowed to smoke in a special well-insulated room.

All crew members were required to wear special antistatic clothing and shoes with insulated soles.

Hindenburg’s last catastrophic flight

The airship opened the new season on May 3, 1937, departing from Germany for New York. There are 36 passengers, 14 stewards, 22 mechanics and 25 pilots on board. There are 900 kg suitcases and 2 dogs in the luggage compartment. Captain of the zeppelin is Max Pruss – an experienced pilot, a veteran of the First World War.

After a 77-hour flight, Hindenburg reached New York on May 6, where many curious citizens, including journalists, were waiting for him at the observation deck of the Empire State Building. The airship took a tour of the city and headed for the landing base. From there, he was denied a landing due to bad weather and the airship circled for some time, waiting for permission.

At 19:00 a landing permit was obtained and Hindenburg was lowered to 180 m. During his approach to the runway, a strong crosswind appeared and the captain ordered a sharp turn. Due to this abrupt maneuver, one of the steel ropes breaks, hits and pierces one of the hydrogen cells. Hydrogen is starting to leak – the pilots noticed that the tail was heavy, but did not realize that it could be due to a leak. Due to the humidity of the air and the movement of the airship, it became electrified, and when the ropes were lowered and caught by the people below, an electric discharge flowed from the contact of the rope with the ground to the metal frame. As a result, hydrogen leaks from Sector 4. The captain manages to partially control the situation and, at the risk of his life, slowly lowers the airship to the ground. This helps some of those on board to survive by jumping out of the panoramic windows in the observation hall. As a result, of the 97 passengers and crew on board, 62 managed to escape.

The most expensive artifact from World War II

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For decades, collectors from all over the world have been plagued by various artifacts from the Second World War. Many of them create a whole state, but this does not make sense of the fact that it is the same, so is the proposal. What’s more – how much more money is given by the war, what is more and more important. This often leads to price increases, which is actually normal. And for the war. Everything is interesting for collectors.

Who, however, is the most expensive appetite from the greatest war to the moment?

“The Mercedes of the furer”, as it is known, is the most beautiful artifact from Second World War. The armored dark Mercedes Benz 770k with an open glove, which belonged to the Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler, today is estimated at 10 million.

The German car was described by the Worldwide Austria as “the most significant car in the history of the car, proposed for the car.”

The car was used by Hitler during all sorts of important events. As after the victory over France in 1940. Or at the time of the visit of the Italian dictator Benito Mussolini in Germany, when the two were paradeing on the streets of Munich.

The production model of Mercedes – 770K, in fact, served only as a basis for the special limousine of Hitler. It is a convertible and had 40-millimeter branded glass and an 18-millimeter hardened steel cap. The car weighs almost 5 tons, has a capacity of 230 horsepower, and the fuel consumption reaches the incredible for the day 38 liters per 100 kilometers. The tank consumes as much as 300 liters of gasoline.

In the Second World War, the Americans confiscated Hitler’s car in France, but in the beginning they had no idea that it was.

After the war, the car became the property of a man from Belgium, after which it was sold to the United States. Since then, the price of the limousine does not allow it to fall, as over the years it has become the property of various private collectors and auction houses.

For the last time the car was offered for sale in 2018 at an official auction in Arizona, organized by Worldwide Auctioneer. Then anonymous collector offered $ 7 million for the car, but the auction did not agree with this offer for the car.

Kristalina Georgieva promised Zelensky quick funding for Ukraine

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Moscow receives $ 17 billion in Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) in the new allocation made by the Fund last year

The managing director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Kristalina Georgieva, said on March 5th that she had talked with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and assured him of a quick response to Ukraine’s request for emergency funding, Reuters reported. “I have now spoken to President Zelensky and expressed my respect for his courage and leadership,” Georgieva tweeted.

“The IMF is committed to supporting Ukraine and its people. I assured Zelensky of a quick response to Ukraine’s request for emergency financial assistance from the IMF,” the Fund’s chief added. The US Treasury Department said earlier today that Washington was determined to take “all measures” to stop Russia from taking advantage of its IMF assets.

Moscow received $ 17 billion in Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) in the new distribution made by the Fund last year. However, in order to spend this money, Russia must find a partner country ready to exchange IMF assets into base currencies in the form of interest-bearing loans. The United States and its partners will not be involved in such transactions, said a spokesman for the US agency.

According to other Reuters sources, EU officials are also examining how Russia’s influence and access to IMF funding could be curtailed. One possible option is to completely remove the country from the institution that acts as a “lender of last resort”. However, some say this will be difficult, if not impossible. Other options are being explored, such as freezing voting rights and blocking Moscow’s access to the SDR.

UN refugee chief praises European response to Ukraine exodus

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UN refugee chief praises European response to Ukraine exodus

“The response by Europe has been remarkable,” Filippo Grandi said in a statement on Tuesday, while urging other nations to step up.

He added that a European Union (EU) temporary protection directive, announced last Thursday, “offers the refugees security and options, a chance for stability during a time of great upheaval.”

Heartened but saddened

Mr. Grandi, head of the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, spent five days in the region where he met with refugees, humanitarian workers, local responders and governments.

Though heartened by the European response, he remains deeply saddened for Ukraine and its people.

“At the borders I saw an exodus of people, mostly women and children, along with older refugees and people with disabilities. They arrived shocked and deeply impacted by the violence and their arduous journeys to safety. Families have been senselessly ripped apart. Tragically, unless the war is stopped, the same will be true for many more,” he said.

Ukrainians have been streaming into neighbouring countries since the start of the Russian invasion on 24 February.

‘Outpouring of spontaneous solidarity’

The majority, more than 1.2 million, have headed to Poland.  Others have crossed into Hungary, Moldova, Romania, Slovakia and beyond.

His staff have been ramping up operations to meet ever increasing needs.

Mr. Grandi reported that UNHCR is supporting coordination of the humanitarian response.  “Scores of experts and tens of millions of dollars of aid” have also been deployed to support governments with providing material and cash assistance, while protection teams have been reinforced to address the needs of women and children.

Share the responsibility

The UN refugee chief however called for the international community to step up to provide more support for refugees and host communities, particularly in Moldova.  Some 250,000 people have found refuge there.

“All European states must continue to show generosity. Other countries, beyond Europe, also have an important role to play to help people in need and share the international responsibility for millions of refugees,” said Mr. Grandi.

While in the region, the UN refugee chief also raised concerns about discrimination and racism against some communities fleeing Ukraine. Authorities have assured him that they will not discriminate or turn away people escaping to safety.

Heavy fighting continues

Meanwhile, the situation inside Ukraine remains shocking, as people seek to shelter from the fighting in any way they can.

As of Monday, some 1,335 casualties were recorded, including 474 deaths, according to the UN human rights office, OHCHR, though real figures are believed to be considerably higher.

UN Spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said on Tuesday that UN teams and open sources both reported heavy fighting in the east and northeast, including in and around Mariupol, Chuhuiv, Kharkiv, Izyum, Chernihiv, Sumy and Sievierodonetsk.

Extremely violent clashes were also reported in the north, on the outskirts of the capital Kyiv, including Bucha, Hostomel and Irpin.

People trapped in some of these areas lack access to supplies, said Mr. Dujarric, speaking during his daily briefing in New York.

“We welcome public communications by the two sides regarding their intention to facilitate safe passage for civilians out of conflict areas including Mariupol, Kharkiv and Sumy,” he told journalists.

Support inside Ukraine

Humanitarians are scaling up response in the east and west, as security allows.

UN partner the International Committee of the Red Cross has provided more than 200,000 medical items to mobile clinics, while Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has delivered roughly 120 cubic metres of medical supplies to the country.

Mr. Dujarric said focus in the west is primarily on supporting internally displaced people.  UN migration agency IOM has so far delivered more than 18,000 high thermal blankets, while UNHCR has provided thermal blankets and mattresses for 6,000 people.

He added that humanitarians have established a common operations coordination centre in Rzeszow, Poland, for all organizations responding to the crisis in Ukraine and neighbouring countries.

The Chernobyl Nuclear Power Complex.
Exploring the Zone/Philip Grossman – The Chernobyl Nuclear Power Complex.

Concern for Chernobyl staff 

In its latest update, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) continues to express concern about the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, site of the devastating 1986 accident, and the “stressful situation” facing its staff who have been, in effect, confined there.

Roughly 210 technical personnel and guards on the site, have been working ever since the invading Russian forces took control of the facility almost two weeks ago.

IAEA chief Rafael Mariano Grossi said Ukrainian regulatory authorities informed the agency that it was becoming increasing urgent and important for staff to be rotated.

They have asked the IAEA “to lead the international support needed to prepare a plan for replacing the current personnel and for providing the facility with an effective rotation system.”

Mr. Grossi underlined that staff operating nuclear facilities must be able to rest and work in regular shifts.

He again expressed readiness to travel to the Chernobyl plant, or elsewhere, in efforts to help protect the country’s nuclear facilities.

16-year-old Isabel going the extra mile to raise awareness of tinnitus

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16-year-old Isabel going the extra mile to raise awareness of tinnitus
16-year-old Isabel, a sixth form student from Worcester, has challenged themselves to walk 10,000 steps a day during March in support of the British Tinnitus Association (BTA), the charity that has helped her manage her tinnitus. Tinnitus – commonly referred to as ‘ringing in the ears’ is an often debilitating condition that affects around 11,000 adults in Worcester alone, and one in eight nationwide.

Isabel shared: “I have suffered from tinnitus since I was eight years old due to a severe ear infection. After getting tinnitus it made me feel really isolated and stressed as I didn’t know how to cope with it and I would be left constantly hearing a high pitch buzzing in my ears. It affected me in more ways than I thought it would. It started to prevent me from being able to understand what was being said as my tinnitus would be the only thing that I could hear.”

“After finding out about the British Tinnitus Association, I was able to find information and techniques to help me live with my tinnitus so I could hear it less. It also helped me feel happier because I was able to find information and connect with others my age who had tinnitus, letting me know I wasn’t alone and that other people my age also have tinnitus.”

British Tinnitus Association’s Fundraising Officer Jess Pollard commented: “Experiencing tinnitus at any age can be daunting but the way Isabel is dedicating time and energy to raise awareness and manage her tinnitus is inspirational.”

Isabel has set out to raise £200 and would love your support in raising as much as possible. You can donate at justgiving.com/tinnituswalkingchallange, or make a donation at tinnitus.org.uk/donate and add a comment with the donation for ‘Isabel’s step challenge’. Inspired to take on a challenge of your own? Visit tinnitus.org.uk/step-challenge

– Ends –

Press contact
Nic Wray, Communications Manager
nic@tinnitus.org.uk
0114 250 9933

Editors Notes

  • The British Tinnitus Association (BTA) is an independent charity that supports over one million people living with tinnitus each year, and advises medical professionals around the world. It is the primary source of support and information for people with tinnitus in the UK. 
  • Tinnitus is the sensation of hearing noises in your ear or head when there is no external cause. The noise can have virtually any quality including ringing, buzzing, hissing and whistling.
  • Around 1 in 3 people will experience tinnitus at some point in their life. Over 7.1 million adults in the UK are living with persistent tinnitus, and for 10% of them, it can severely impact their quality of life, affecting sleep, mood, concentration, employment and relationships.
  • There is not currently a cure for tinnitus, however, there are several strategies that can be helpful in learning to manage the condition.
  • Tinnitus costs the NHS £750 million annually, with a cost to society of £2.7 billion per year.

Website: www.tinnitus.org.uk

Twitter: @BritishTinnitus

Facebook: @BritishTinnitusAssociation

Instagram: @BritishTinnitus

LinkedIn: British Tinnitus Association

British Tinnitus Association, Unit 5 Acorn Business Park, Woodseats Close, Sheffield S8 0TB

The British Tinnitus Association is a registered charity. Registered charity number 1011145.

Press release distributed by Pressat on behalf of British Tinnitus Association, on Wednesday 9 March, 2022. For more information subscribe and follow https://pressat.co.uk/

Zabuzhko: ‘Ukrainians fight to free Europe from the spectre of totalitarianism’

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Zabuzhko: ‘Ukrainians fight to free Europe from the spectre of totalitarianism’ | News | European Parliament
On International Women’s Day, Ukrainian author Oksana Zabuzhko addressed the European Parliament on the plight of her fellow citizens under attack by Russia.

Before Oksana Zabuzhko’s formal address in the Strasbourg hemicycle today at noon, EP President Metsola declared: ‘‘On this day, the word celebration is not really a word we could use. In Ukraine, we see women are resisting, standing up and taking up arms against their aggressor. It is a privilege to have with us a Ukrainian woman and writer whose literature and strong voice exhibits the strength of Ukrainian women in the face of oppression. These brave and resilient women serve as an inspiration to us all, as they defend the same European values that we hold.’’

Mrs Zabuzhko, who left Ukraine two weeks ago with only hand luggage, highlighted that she was used, in her writings, to giving a voice to women and to fighting for their rights, but for the first time now, she has to stand up for women’s rights to life itself. She added: ‘‘I cannot but admire my fellow women fighting alongside our men, managing the distribution of supplies across our besieged cities and giving birth in bomb shelters, supervised by doctors online. The problem is Putin’s bombs will not be stopped by the strength of our spirit.’’

Warning of Putin’s intentions, she said: ‘‘Many lives could have been saved if the EU and the US had woken up eight years ago when he invaded Crimea. A new Hitler was ready to pick up where the previous one had left off. I am here to tell you, as a writer who knows something about language, that it is already a war, not just a local conflict. Trust Putin when he states his ambitions. Please do not be afraid to protect the sky above those fighting there to free Europe from this spectre of new totalitarianism.’’

Reacting to her speech, political group representatives praised the courage of Ukrainians both defending their country and the EU values we share with them. They also stressed that, as often is the case in these circumstances, women and girls are among the most vulnerable groups. They praised Russian and Belarusian women who are courageously demonstrating on the streets against this war.

To watch the address and the political groups’ reactions again, click here.

Background

Oksana Zabuzhko was born in Lutsk (Ukraine) in 1960. Her novel ‘‘Fieldwork in Ukrainian Sex’’, translated into sixteen languages, made her well known on the international literary scene in 1996. She has published eighteen other books, including the award-winning novel ‘‘The Museum of Abandoned Secrets’’ (2009). She is also a leading public figure in Ukraine advocating for democracy.

WHO releases new guidelines on safe abortion

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woman in teal sweater and blue jeans

WHO has released new guidelines on abortion care in a bid to protect the health of women and girls and help prevent over 25 million unsafe abortions that currently occur each year around the world.

Based on the latest scientific evidence, these consolidated guidelines bring together over 50 recommendations spanning clinical practice, health service delivery, and legal and policy interventions to support quality abortion care.

When carried out according to WHO guidelines, abortion is a simple and safe health intervention. The new guidelines will support access to comprehensive and quality abortion care within national health systems in the WHO European Region and globally.

New recommendations to improve access to high quality, person-centred services

When carried out using a method recommended by WHO, abortion is a safe procedure.

Tragically, however, only half of all abortions take place under such conditions, with unsafe abortions causing around 39 000 deaths globally. Most of these deaths are in lower-income countries – with over 60% in Africa and 30% in Asia – and among those living in the most vulnerable situations.

The new guidelines include recommendations on many simple interventions at the level of primary care that:

  • improve the quality of abortion care provided to women and girls;
  • include task-sharing by a wider range of health workers;
  • ensure access to medical abortion pills, which mean more women can obtain safe abortion services; and
  • ensure that accurate information on care is available to all those who need it.

For the first time, the guidelines also include recommendations for the use of telemedicine where appropriate, which has helped support access to abortion and family planning services during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Removing unnecessary policy barriers facilitates access to safe abortion

Alongside the clinical and service delivery recommendations, the guidelines recommend removing medically unnecessary policy barriers to safe abortion, such as criminalization, mandatory waiting times, the requirement that approval must be given by other people (such as partners or family members) or institutions, and limits on when during pregnancy an abortion can take place.

Such barriers can lead to critical delays in accessing treatment and put women and girls at greater risk of unsafe abortion, stigmatization and health complications, while increasing disruptions to their education and ability to work.

Evidence shows that restricting access to abortions does not reduce the number of abortions that take place. In fact, restrictions are more likely to drive women and girls toward unsafe procedures. In countries where abortion is most restricted, only 1 in 4 abortions is safe, compared to nearly 9 in 10 in countries where the procedure is broadly legal.

Instead, studies in several European countries have shown that long-term national sexuality education programmes have led to a reduction in teenage pregnancies and abortions.

Following this launch, WHO/Europe will support interested countries to implement the new guidelines and strengthen national policies and programmes related to contraception, family planning and abortion services, helping them provide the highest standard of care for women and girls.

Updated guidelines

The WHO abortion care guidelines update the former edition, released in 2012, and consolidate existing and new recommendations.

An interactive online database containing comprehensive information on the abortion laws, policies, health standards and guidelines for all countries is available via the link below.

Santa Barbara Company ABC-CLIO Bought by U.K. Publisher

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Santa Barbara Company ABC-CLIO Bought by U.K. Publisher

In a December deal which received little local attention, longtime Santa Barbara book and database publisher ABC-CLIO was acquired by London-based Bloomsbury Publishing. The $22.4M sale ended the family-owned company’s 65-year history (and 60 years in Santa Barbara) as an independent non-fiction publisher serving the library and school markets.

Bloomsbury — the original publisher of the Harry Potter franchise — is a respected trade and academic book and database publisher. A public company with a market capitalization of about $400M, Bloomsbury has made several acquisitions in recent years. In a press release announcing the deal, Bloomsbury CEO Nigel Newton commented: “We are delighted to welcome ABC-CLIO to Bloomsbury. ABC-CLIO is a long-standing and respected American publisher.”

In recent years ABC-CLIO has occupied a location on two floors at 147 Castilian Drive, although that office has largely stood empty for the last two years as staff worked from home during the pandemic. At its peak, the company had 100-120 staff in our area and more around the country and, for a time, offices in Colorado and Oxford, England. The company employed dozens of writers, editors, marketers, and support staff at its Riviera and then Goleta offices, many of whom got their first jobs as budding writers and editors, finding a rare opportunity to make a career on the back of their education in history and the humanities. The company long identified itself as a premier history publisher and, if you’re wondering, Clio is the Greek muse of history.

Why sell now? For company president Becky Snyder, it’s a bittersweet feeling: “As an education publisher, we have always been at the forefront of technology in terms of understanding how students go about their research and designing our products around that. This sale allows the products to stay in the forefront. For us to continue to lead and do what we wanted to do, we needed additional resources and tools.” For his part, Ron Boehm, son of the company’s founder, explained the sale similarly, as a chance to pass the publishing baton to a respected company that would “keep the business moving forward as a going concern with an entity that appreciated our staff and the value of the products and the opportunity to expand their utilization.”

THE FUTURE

What’s next for current ABC-CLIO staff? For the moment, Bloomsbury is digesting the purchase as the pre-sale ABC-CLIO staff remains in place. A spokesperson from Bloomsbury commented this week, “We want to carefully plan the integration of ABC-CLIO with Bloomsbury in the U.S. and the wider global Bloomsbury business, so it is very much business as usual. We do not plan on integrating ABC-CLIO until at least six months after the acquisition. Bloomsbury wants to use this time to understand the business, its strengths, and all the employees involved, and we want ABC-CLIO to get to know Bloomsbury.”

A HISTORY PUBLISHER’S HISTORY

Eric Boehm (1918-2017) founded the company with a compelling vision: creating and publishing abstracts (short summaries) of historical research, just as the sciences relied on abstracting publications to track research in their fields. Boehm’s other vision was that a war-torn world could be improved and brought together by a global community of like-minded scholars all collaborating on the same project of tracking worldwide historical research. As a refugee himself from Nazi Germany, Boehm knew the post-war stakes. His vision flourished, and contributions from scholars and researchers around the world poured into ABC-CLIO’s office for processing by a multilingual team of editors.

Later, the company added a line of reference books (mostly specialized encyclopedias) for the American library market and then a line of subscription databases for the school market. The focus remained history; database titles like American History, World History, and the African-American Experience are used today in many American schools.

Over the years, both the company’s book line and the subscription databases won prestigious awards in the publishing niche geared to reference materials for library patrons. In 2008, ABC-CLIO itself purchased reference and general-interest publishers Greenwood Press and Praeger, a move that overnight added tens of thousands of titles to its book list and several subscription databases. Now the company itself has been acquired, ending its long-time run as a local independent publisher.