PERTH, WA: May 3, 1990
Helping hands needed for big youth event
Number 2686
Registered by Australia Post Publication No. WAR 0202
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POST ADDRESS: PO Box 50, Northbridge, 6000 W.A. LOCATION: 26 John St, Northbridge (east off Fitzgerald St).
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Revival of saving art Ballajura parish's six and seven year olds have piloted a student banking service run by Archdiocesan Development Fund. The new scheme, called the Junior Builders Club, began recently at the new Catholic Primary School in Ballajura 67 boasts and members from a possible 105 students. Des Dwyer, ADF Director of Marketing, said the scheme provides students with the nearly forgotten art of saving. He said: "We hope to offer the facility to all Catholic primary schools by the end of 1990." Two further pilot programs are listed for Holy Spirit School
City Beach and Padbury Catholic School. The school provides one volunteer for the weekly banking day to assist with counting of money and documentation. "There was no difficulty in finding a mum with banking experience and eager to help," said Mr Dwyer. Students receive a c omplimentary sticker and set of colour pencils on their first deposit. The Archdiocesan Development Fund provided bridging finance for the Etallajura school project and is best known for funding the last seven churches in the Archdiocese.
Des Dwyer, ADF Marketing Director faces some tough questions from larad Canty (year I) and Chinthi layasekera (Pre-primary) when he visited the Ballajura Catholic Primary School.
Holy City rift
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VATICAN CITY (CNS): Christian rights in Jerusalem must be respected in any resolution of the controversy over Jewish settlers in the city's Christian Quarter, said Pope John Paul II.
Pope steps in and gives a reminder on rights of Christians living there
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at home: Myths, facts
iti2olence
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The pope said he sympathised with the decision of Christian leaders to temporarily close the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and other Christian Shrines to protest the Jewish occupation of a building in the Greek Orthodoxowned St John's Hospice complex. The pope spoke on April 29, a day after Patriarch Latin-rite Michel Sabbah of Jerusalem said the settlement was part of a plan to take over a large part of the Christian sector. The patriarch said that would endanger the
continued presence of Christians and Muslims in Jerusalem. The "grave incidents" in Jerusalem leading to the "painful decision" to close the religious sites "are even for me cause for suffering and deep worry," the pope said. The pope prayed for peace in Jerusalem which is "holy" and "dear" to Christians, Jews and Muslims. The Vatican wants international guarantees that safeguard Jerusalem's status as a holy city open to Christians, Jews and Muslims. Christian leaders in the Holy Land closed all Christian sites in Jerusalem, Bethlehem and Nazareth on April 27 to protest the continued pressure of 150 Jewish settlers in a building owned by the Greek Orthodox Church.
Priest torn between two priorities Page
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The Israeli Supreme Court ruled on April 26 that the settlers must evacuate the building. But it said the Panamanian company through which the lease was arranged could keep 20 representatives at the site until the courts rule on the legality of the lease. Patriarch Sabbah and other Christian leaders protested the financing of the settlers by the Israeli government. He said the Jewish settlement was part of a plan to control a large part of the Christian Quarter of Jerusalem and put "in danger the future of the non-Jewish population." He aLso criticised the Israeli government for refusing to enter peace talks with Palestinian leaders. The patriarch said peace is the "only
guarantee for the future of the Hebrew people." The situation "is not a banal dispute between owner and tenant." he said. The settlers represent a radical faction in Judaism which "would like to take control of the entire city," he added. Their presence in the Orthodox-owned complex "is a violation of the 'status quo— and they are "strongly supported by the government," the patriarch said. But Israel has "two faces" and there is "a moderate Jewish religious movement". Its leaders expressed solidarity with Christians and "condemned the settlers," he said. "It seems to me, though, that the other face of Israel, an aggressive one, is emerging," said the patriarch.
Problem tics that demand tact Pages 10 and 11