Tag: Jerusalem

  • Jerusalem on alert as religious tensions rise over holy site

    Jerusalem on alert as religious tensions rise over holy site

    Israel bolstered security in the Old City of Jerusalem on Friday and prepared for possible clashes with Muslim worshippers after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu decided metal detectors at a sensitive holy site would not be removed.

    There have been daily confrontations between Palestinians hurling rocks and Israeli police using stun grenades since the detectors were placed at the entrance to the shrine, known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and to Jews as Temple Mount, on Sunday, after the killing of two Israeli policemen.

    Muslim leaders and Palestinian political factions have urged the faithful to gather for a “day of rage” against the new security policies, which they see as changing delicate agreements that have governed the holy site for decades.

    The Israeli police said extra units had been mobilised to bolster security in the Old City, while Muslim access to the shrine for prayers would be limited to women of all ages and men over 50.

    Roadblocks were in place on approach roads to Jerusalem to stop buses carrying Muslims to the site.

    “Police are coordinating to enable Friday prayers to take place and at the same time security measures are taking place,” spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said.

    The Noble Sanctuary-Temple Mount compound, containing the Dome of the Rock and the Aqsa Mosque, has long been a source of religious friction.

    Since Israel captured and annexed the Old City, including the compound, in the 1967 Middle East war, it has also become a symbol of Palestinian nationalism.

    On Thursday, there were calls for Netanyahu to back down and remove the metal detectors so as not to inflame the situation.

    President Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey, after discussing the issue with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, called Israeli President Reuven Rivlin to press for their removal.

    Nickolay Mladenov, UN’ special coordinator for long-stalled Israel-Palestinian peace talks, appealed for calm and the White House urged a resolution.

    Jordan, which is the ultimate custodian of the holy site, has also been involved in mediation efforts.

    After a late-night meeting of his security cabinet, Netanyahu decided the metal detectors should stay.

    Officials said they were necessary to ensure Palestinians and Israeli-Arabs do not smuggle weapons into the holy compound.

    Far-right members of Netanyahu’s government, which relies on religious and right-wing parties for support, had publicly urged him to keep the devices in place.

    “Israel is committed to maintaining the status quo at the Temple Mount and the freedom of access to the holy places,” the security cabinet said in a statement.

    “The cabinet has authorised the police to take any decision in order ensure free access to the holy places while maintaining security and public order.”

    Tensions around the Noble Sanctuary-Temple Mount have erupted into violence in the past.

    In 2000, after then Israeli opposition leader Ariel Sharon visited, Palestinians took it as a provocation.

    It led to clashes that spiraled into the second Intifada, when an estimated 1,000 Israelis and some 3,000 Palestinians were killed over four years of violence.

    As well as anger at having to submit to Israeli security policies, Palestinians are alarmed at what they see as the slow chipping away at the status quo at the Noble Sanctuary.

    Since Ottoman times, while Jews are permitted to visit the area, considered the holiest place in Judaism, where an ancient temple once stood, only Muslims are allowed to pray.

    Over the past decade, however, visits by religious-nationalist Jews have increased sharply and some attempt to pray.

    While police are supposed to eject them if they do, the rules are not always enforced, fuelling Muslim anger.

  • Group kicks against Jerusalem pilgrimage for Muslims

    A group, Christian Vanguard, has described the approval of Muslims for Jerusalem pilgrimage by Lagos State Government as unacceptable.

    Commissioner for Home Affairs, Dr Hakeem Abdul-Lateef, informed weeks ago that the approval was to enable Muslims visit the third holiest mosque in the city.

    Abdul-Lateef had said: “We also urge Muslims that from this month, we will be accommodating Muslims who intend to visit Jerusalem because Jerusalem is home to the third holiest Mosque.”

    But Christian Vanguard said the approval was inciting and provoking.

    In a statement by its president, Pastor Deji Adebayo, the group said allowing Muslims to go on pilgrimage to Jerusalem amounts to “stoking religious fire.”

    It said: “Lagos State has enjoyed religious harmony because everyone is allowed to practise his/her faith without favour or harassment.

    “This recent approval is a threat to that longstanding peace. Everyone should practise his or her religion without meddlesomeness or government’s tactic support.

    “Why are Muslims interested in going to Jerusalem? Are they not pleased going to Saudi Arabia alone?

    “Will Christians also be allowed to go on pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia to return the favour or Muslims will claim it is a Holy Land?

    “If Mecca is a Holy Land, so is Jerusalem. It is a Christian land and only Christians should embark on pilgrimage there.

    “To say Muslims can now go there is sacrilegious and unacceptable. We wonder what they would like to do there.

    “It is known worldwide that Muslims only go to Mecca for pilgrimage. How it was agreed that they can now go to Jerusalem is suspicious.”

    The group called on Governor Akinwunmi Ambode to order his officials to rescind the approval.

    The governor, it said, should not be misled by religious bigots to formulate policies that will hamper religious peace in the land.

  • If I forget thee, O Jerusalem…! (II)

    If I forget thee, O Jerusalem…! (II)

    Jerusalem, the capital of Israel (and the eastern portion of which the Palestinians expect to be the capital of their own state) is a harsh undulating land of hills and valleys where the traveller feels he is always either climbing or descending. It is one of the most fought over, most destroyed and re-built lands in the world, and this is not talking about a hundred years ago since the British Mandate, but going back thousands of years.

    The word ‘Diaspora’ is much used by virtually everybody. It is used for example to describe the skilled expatriate Nigerian community who exist in large numbers in the UK and America due to ‘brain drain’. But the word really arose from the repeated conquering and sending into exile all over the world of the Jewish people. It is said that the first Diaspora sent the ten northern tribes of ancient Israel into permanent exile all over the world. The second Diaspora, variously attributed to the Assyrians and Nebuchadnezzar, destroyed Jerusalem and sent some of its people into exile, – many in Damascus, but also left some behind in a mix of population with other peoples in the areas that would later be known as Palestine, and modern Israel.

    The important message here is that entering the big Arab market in East Jerusalem to visit the Wailing Wall, and to follow the fourteen stations of the cross, you can feel the mutual animosity between the young battle-ready soldiers of the Israeli Defence force deployed about to keep the peace, and the resentful Arabs shopkeepers, who feel their land has been taken away from them.

    For thousands of years, in every Jewish household, in Russia in London, in Poland, in Morocco, settling to table at Passover feast, adults and children would intone fervently, before breaking the bread

    If I forget you O Jerusalem – let my right hand lose its cunning – ‘, and offer the ritual greeting ‘Next year in Jerusalem…’

    Every modern leader who has felt the frustration of trying to end the Arab-Israeli conflict has come to realize that need to see the battle between the two cousins – the Jew and the Arab, in context, as a prelude to trying to find a partial accommodation that everybody can live with in the modern day. Somebody was driven from his father’s vineyard fifty years ago, in the Six Day War, and he still has the land papers to prove it. Another person was driven from the same vineyards, two thousand years ago. There were no land papers, at least none still extant, in the times King Nebuchadnezzar.

    Climbing to a hilltop once during a Christian pilgrimage, your Israeli guide had pointed to a valley down below.

    That is Meggido – the site of The Final Battle – Armagedon’

    She went on to expatiate. In the final battle down there, the forces of the unbelievers would come into battle against the Jews.

    And who would win, you asked?

    The Jews, she said, without a moment’s hesitation.

    There is another version of ‘the final battle’that is believed with equal fervor by some other people. This one is centred in a place called Dabiq in – yes,  northern Syria.In fact Dabiq is the name of the news and propaganda online magazine published by ISIS.

    What is to happen in Dabiq?

    The armies of the Unbelievers would be ranged against the True Believers.

    The outcome?

    There are several versions of this. A lot of deaths. The hastening of Judgement Day.

    This is the vision that has led hundreds of youths from different lands – including Europe and America – to come and kill, and die, in these alien lands.

    It makes the hair stand on end to think of the possibility of a limited man such as Donald Trump or one of his ilk,another GW Bush – but ten times bolder, ten times more ignorant, lacking the power of reflection,lacking the benefit of History, or the capacity to project into the future, becoming president America, and wanting to ‘project American Power’ in such an environment, perhaps wanting to outdo, or blunt the edge of Vladimir Putin’s Russia. Playing into Armageddon script that Obama refused at the last minute to plunge himself and the world into. Bumbling about in a landscape where everywhere you put your foot there are ancient booby-traps, soaked in centuries of human blood and suffering, and convictions and certainties beyond the reach of rational human logic.

    The world is in for some interesting times, indeed.

  • Lagos bans sponsorship of pilgrims to Mecca, Jerusalem

    Lagos bans sponsorship of pilgrims to Mecca, Jerusalem

    Lagos State Government Thursday said it will no longer sponsor Muslims or Christians pilgrims who embark on pilgrimages to Mecca in Saudi Arabia or Jerusalem in Israel, saying it was not a responsible way to spend tax payers’ money.

    Commissioner for Home Affairs in the State, Hon. Abdulateef Abdulhakeem, who disclosed this when members of the Lagos State House of Assembly Committee on Home Affairs, led by Hon. Olayiwola Olawale, paid a visit to the ministry in furtherance of their oversight function, said the government decided to ban the sponsorship because it amounts to injustice for certain individuals to continue to benefit from the government to the detriment of other numerous members of the society.

    Abdulhakeem said, “Part of our mandate is the supervision of the Pilgrims Welfare Board. Recently the governor and the state executive council approved a policy for the state to stop sponsorship of pilgrimages and that is line with the policy thrust of the government and what the State House of Assembly also speaks to.

    “In this day and time when we are talking about paucity of funds coupled with inhibiting challenges that the government has to take care of. We can no-longer afford to spend the sum of one million on one single individual to go on pilgrimage when the scripture did not compel anyone to do so.

    “So it is most irresponsible way of spending tax payer’s money. That is why the government has taken a solid decision that we will be accountable and responsible for every kobo that the tax payers pay to the government. It is an injustice for the government to be spending millions on group of people when millions of Lagosians are yearning for government’s attention.”

    He said state government has commenced the process of gathering data of religious organizations and their locations in the state to be able to set standards give orientation and provide security for them.

    According to him, there is a symbiotic relationship between the executive and the legislative arms of government in the state, while thanking the Assembly for the quick passage of the 2016 Budget.

    “Your resolution is a compulsion it is not advisory. Even your motion that Mile 12 Market should be relocated to another area is being considered by the state government. The Ministry of Home Affairs has been restructured and some of its duties have been given to other MDAs.

    Responding to the development, Chairman of the Lagos State House of Assembly Committee on Home Affairs, Hon. Olayiwola Olawale, said the decision was laudable, saying the Assembly was ready to back it with the necessary legislation.

    He said the visit of the committee to the ministry was homecoming, adding that the commissioner was a man of integrity and that the committee would work hand-in-hand with the ministry.

  • As the people of Ijaw Nation’s Jerusalem decide

    Bayelsa State is unique in many aspects. It has the least population when compared to other states in the country. It perhaps has the least land mass. Topographically the state of former President Goodluck Jonathan is always said to be 70 per cent water and 30 per cent land.

    Fondly called the Jerusalem of the Ijaw Nation for being the only Ijaw homogeneous state, Bayelsa is rich in maritime assets. It is opened to the Atlantic Ocean and surrounded by rivulets, rivers, lakes and other water channels. The state ranks among the richest in petroleum resources. But among its contemporaries, Bayelsa is arguably the least developed.

    Now, Bayelsa is under trial. It is marching to another landmark of political transition to choose a fresh vehicle that will drive its development. The two dominant and big political vehicles begging for boarding in the state are the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the All Progressive Congress (APC). Other smaller vehicles such as the All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA) and the Labour Party (LP), also exist.

    Expectedly, PDP and the APC are at each other’s throat battling in a game of intrigues and wits to seek the patronage of the state. PDP has been the vehicle of choice for Bayelsa since 1999.

    Hitherto, Bayelsa never engaged in a competitive process to select its vehicle and driver. Election was alien. Selection and coronation were the order of the day. It was taken for granted that whoever emerged a candidate from the PDP would drive the vehicle of the state with little or no input from Bayelsa.

    So, it was for the past “drivers” of the state such as Chief Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, Chief Timipre Sylva and the incumbent driver, Chief Seriake Dickson.

    But the PDP is no longer the same. It has been given a bloody nose by the punches of the APC. Suddenly, the APC has become the vehicle of choice for many people in the state, especially the politicians. Persons who hitherto constituted the backbone and pillars of the PDP are leaving in droves to join the APC vehicle. In fact, the creme la de creme and their followers have already declared for the APC. Even the state Chairman of the PDP, Col. Sam Inokoba (retd) left his job to be counted in the APC.

    Some of the heavyweights who deserted the PDP are Timi Alaibe, Dikivie Ikiogha, Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, Nestor Binabo, Werinipre Seibarugu, Warman Ogoriba, Alex Ekiotene, Senator Brambaifa, Dr. Stella Dorgu; in fact, the list is endless. Most of them were former elected and appointed political office holders. Some of them even abandon the cabinet of Dickson to hop into the vehicle of APC.

    Therefore, as the vehicle of APC is filling up to a congesting point ahead of the December contest, that of the PDP is looking empty.

    The PDP is divided over the reelection ambition of Dickson. An anti-Dickson group, the PDP Unity Group (PUG) comprising mainly former aides sacked in controversial circumstances and other aggrieved party leaders, have vowed to scuttle the governor’s ambition.

    Therefore, in PDP some persons are desirous of collecting the party’s ticket from Dickson.

    There is a belief that the process of selecting the driver of the APC vehicle will generate controversies. Most of the bigwigs are aspiring to be at the driver’s seat and unless they bury their ambitions, the dream of the APC to displace the PDP will be a mirage.

    Almost all the heavyweights in the APC want the party’s governorship ticket. Former Governor Timipre Sylva, Alaibe, Ikiogha, Ogoriba, Godnows Powell, Ebitimi Amgbare, Inokoba and many others are struggling to get the party’s ticket. Already over seven aspirants have picked the party’s nomination and expression of interest forms valued at N6.5million. However, some names like Alaibe, Ikiogha and Ogoriba in the governorship race of APC have continued to generate fears and tension in the PDP.

    Some days back, Jonathan endorsed Dickson. A key aspirant, Reuben Okoya, also withdrew from the race in deference to the governor who also has the incumbency factor of Dickson going for him. He is believed in some quarters to have done well. Everybody is waiting to see the kind of candidate that will emerge from the APC. They are waiting to see a popular, credible, political heavyweight, a household name considering the timeline of the election. Bayelsa will then decide its vehicle and driver.

    • A slightly different version of this piece was first published last week.

     

     

  • Testy times for the Jerusalem of the Ijaw Nation

    Bayelsa State is unique in many aspects. It has the least population when compared to other states in the country. It perhaps has the least land mass. Topographically the state of former President Goodluck Jonathan is always said to be 70 per cent water and 30 per cent land.

    Fondly called the Jerusalem of the Ijaw Nation for being the only Ijaw homogeneous state, Bayelsa is rich in maritime assets. It is opened to the Atlantic Ocean and surrounded by rivulets, rivers, lakes and other water channels. The state ranks among the richest in petroleum resources. But among its contemporaries, Bayelsa is arguably the least developed.

    Now, Bayelsa is under trial. It is marching to another landmark of political transition to choose a fresh vehicle that will drive its development. The two dominant and big political vehicles begging for boarding in the state are the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the All Progressive Congress (APC). Other smaller vehicles such as the All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA) and the Labour Party (LP), also exist.

    Expectedly, PDP and the APC are at each other’s throat battling in a game of intrigues and wits to seek the patronage of the state. PDP has been the vehicle of choice for Bayelsa since 1999.

    Hitherto, Bayelsa never engaged in a competitive process to select its vehicle and driver. Election was alien. Selection and coronation were the order of the day. It was taken for granted that whoever emerged a candidate from the PDP would drive the vehicle of the state with little or no input from Bayelsa.

    So, it was for the past “drivers” of the state such as Chief Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, Chief Timipre Sylva and the incumbent driver, Chief Seriake Dickson.

    But the PDP is no longer the same. It has been given a bloody nose by the punches of the APC. Suddenly, the APC has become the vehicle of choice for many people in the state, especially the politicians. Persons who hitherto constituted the backbone and pillars of the PDP are leaving in droves to join the APC vehicle. In fact, the creme la de creme and their followers have already declared for the APC. Even the state Chairman of the PDP, Col. Sam Inokoba (retd) left his job to be counted in the APC.

    Some of the heavyweights who deserted the PDP are Timi Alaibe, Dikivie Ikiogha, Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, Nestor Binabo, Werinipre Seibarugu, Warman Ogoriba, Alex Ekiotene, Senator Brambaifa, Dr. Stella Dorgu; in fact, the list is endless. Most of them were former elected and appointed political office holders. Some of them even abandon the cabinet of Dickson to hop into the vehicle of APC.

    Therefore, as the vehicle of APC is filling up to a congesting point ahead of the December contest, that of the PDP is looking empty.

    The PDP is divided over the reelection ambition of Dickson. An anti-Dickson group, the PDP Unity Group (PUG) comprising mainly former aides sacked in controversial circumstances and other aggrieved party leaders, have vowed to scuttle the governor’s ambition.

    Therefore, in PDP some persons are desirous of collecting the party’s ticket from Dickson. Prominent among persons trying to wrest PDP’s ticket from the governor are Senator Emmanuel Paulker and Reuben Okoya.

    There is a belief that the process of selecting the driver of the APC vehicle will generate controversies likely to destroy the party. Most of the bigwigs are aspiring to be at the driver’s seat and unless they bury their ambitions, the dream of the APC to displace the PDP will be a mirage.

    Almost all the heavyweights in the APC want the party’s governorship ticket. Former Governor Timipre Sylva, Alaibe, Ikiogha, Ogoriba, Godnows Powell, Ebitimi Amgbare, Inokoba and many others are struggling to get the party’s ticket. Already over seven aspirants have picked the party’s nomination and expression of interest forms valued at N6.5million. However, some names like Alaibe, Ikiogha and Ogoriba in the governorship race of APC have continued to generate fears and tension in the PDP.

    With the incumbency factor of Dickson who is believed in some quarters to have done well, everybody is waiting to see the kind of candidate that will emerge from the APC. They are waiting to see a popular, credible, political heavyweight, a household name considering the timeline of the election. Bayelsa will then decide its vehicle and driver.

     

     

     

  • Spectacular nature of Ethiopia’s Jerusalem

    Spectacular nature of Ethiopia’s Jerusalem

    The first to notice is the rugged nature of the terrain. Looking at the terrain from the aircraft, the only noticeable thing is the rocky nature of the terrain.

    The land does not look fertile, except for patches of shrubs that dot the rocky hill. On ground, the perception does not change.

    There is a simple, yet very functional airport. The Bombadier  twin propeller aircraft was filled to the brim with tourists.

    There were tour operators with their buses waiting to convey their guests to the ancient town of Lalibella which is about seven to 10 kilometres from the airport.

    The bus negotiated through the single -lane road. While on one side, there was the comfort of being protected by the hill, and while on the other side, it was sharp descent.

    As the vehicle climbed, the road became more steep. It was as if at any moment, the vehicle would come crashing down what seemed an unprotected road side with small boulders as the only wage.

    The driver, obviously used to the road, did not seem to feel any trepidation. Looking outside, some gazelles were jumping smartly from one jutting rock to the other. They balanced on the rocks without falling. Also, donkeys lazily grazed, snapping at the shrubs that their leaves seemed to have dried up.

    It was after one of the snake turnings, winding precariously round the rocks that  Lalibella came into view. There was nothing spectacular. As the bus drove up the rocky hills, the mild cold one felt at the airport was gradually turning icy.

    For many, it was as if a huge stone had been placed on the chest making breathing difficult. It was later the reason became clear. Sitting at about 2600 metres above the sea level, Lalibella, located in the heart of Ethiopia in the Amhara region,  is one of the highest points in the world. The air was thin with little oxygen. For those coming from places with lower altitude, breathing would become difficult.

    The terrain seems uninhabitable. The land is mostly rocks. The farming is not a very attractive venture. There is little or no flat land to build on.  Yet this is one of the most important towns in Ethiopia, and every year, thousands of visitors stream to the town for adventure and religious tourism.

    Lalibella is the second holy site of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church after Axum, in the Tigray region.  The reason is the existence of the monolithic churches. These monolithic churches were hewn out of rocks.

    In building these gigantic structure, what the founder of the town, St. Labilella, a former king of the town, simply carved out the church from the rocks. They are spectacular structures built in  11th century by  the ancient king of Ethiopia, King Lalibella.

    To understand the importance of this holy site of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, one has to understand the romance between Christianity and Ethiopia right from the recorded conversion of the Ethiopian Eunuch in the Bible (Acts 8:26-40) when he was converted by Philip, one of Jesus Christ’s disciples. The Queen of Sheba mentioned also in the Bible (1Kings 10:13-) who came to visit Israel’s King Solomon was said to have come from Ethiopia.

    The town was named after him. His goal was to create a new Jerusalem after it had become difficult for Ethiopians to visit Jerusalem due to war. This led to his hewing 11 churches from the rocks. These churches, referred to as monolithic churches because they were hewn from a single rock, have lasted more than 1000 years. Even by modern standard architecture, they are spectacular.

    Worship still goes on in them. For the Orthodox Ethiopian Christians and Egyptian Coptics, Labilella churches are holy sites and millions annually visit there for worship. They have become a UNESCO Heritage Site.The churches are divided into two groups, the northen and eastern churches.

    The first point of call was to the biggest of the rock churches which is Bieta  Medhane Alem (House of the Redeemer). To protect the structure, the UNESCO has built a shelter over it to reduce the effect of weather.

    There is a  small bridge that links up the space between the rock it was hewn from and the church. The rock leaves one with amazement as to the ingenuity of the builder with crude technology that was available in 11th century.

    The pillars were finely hewn out. The building is about 12 metres high. It has intricate symbols on the walls and pillars each with the meaning of their own. Inside the church, it is cold and well ventilated. No one enters with shoes. The inside was designed in Byzantine style architecture.

    There were worshippers inside. Around the compound are tombs of monks and priests that lived there in the past. Among the eleven were also Biete  Maryam (House of Mary), Bieta Maskal), Biete Denagel (House of Virgins) and  others.

    The most spectacular of this ancient monolithic churches is Bieta Giyorgis (House of St. George). According to history, it was the last of the rock churches built by King Labilella. From the top of the rock, there is a design of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church cross.

    The walkway into the church was also carved out from the rock. The finishing is superb. It has about four floors. Around the rocks within the tombs around the church are bones of monks that died many years ago. They did not decay, but simply dried up.

    They are still inside one of the tombs for people to see with the simple net used to shield the remains that had dried up leaving on bones and parches of flesh clinging to the bones.

    The tour guide that took this reporter and some others around the churches, Mr. Gaitana, talked about the lifestyles of the people and the practice in the churches.

    “We build mostly stone houses. Some construct wooden houses because of cheap labour. It is completed within two or three days, but the rock houses take at least two months. But most prefer rock houses.”

    At the entrance of the each of the churches are wooden staffs. He said they are for chants: “The staffs symbolise the cross of Jesus Christ and each movement during chants has its own symbolic imitation. When they move up and down, it is the symbol of descending and ascending of Jesus Christ. The priests when they are chanting, they put it on their shoulders and move front and back . Jesus carried his cross to climb up Mount Calvary. He fell down on the way. The movement of the priests reminds us of the pains of Jesus Christ . The staff is one of the instruments of the chanters. The chanters are trained. They learn the chants  in the monasteries. Of course, if I know how to chant, I can chant it.

    “ Among the church staff are the Pope who is based in Addis. There are monks; there are administrators; there are priests, deacons and other church workers.”

    The religious activities in these churches involve  a lot of chants. There were even some Egyptian Coptic priests on  a visit to the churches who engaged in the chants.

    Gaitana said: “The chant is different from that of the Egyptian Coptic Christians. The belief is the same, but the chant is different.”

    Unlike the modern day pentecostal churches, women play prominent roles at the Lalibella churches. The activities are male dominated.

    “The nuns have some roles in the church, preparing bread, fetching water and some other activities, but they don’t conduct service. It is only the priests and the men.

    “ The bishops and monks cannot marry. There are two kinds of monks: the first are those since their birth are virgins. The second are those, for example,  persons who lost their wives and decided to become monks and other categories of people. After becoming a monk, you can’t give birth to children again. The priest can marry, but it has to be only one wife throughout his life. If he marries another woman, he loses his priesthood,”he said.

    On the presence of the ancient monolithic churches in Lalibella, Gaitana said: “It has affected us positively. Majority of the people living in the town earn their income from tourism. Outside the town, majority are farmers. But a large number of the people living in the town are also into agriculture. Basically, most people here are into agriculture and tourism.

    “The church servants, guides, hotel owners, workers are souvenir shops are the direct beneficiaries. You know all these people. When they get money from tourism, they would go to market and buy things. This way, the money trickles down.”

    The practice of Christianity in the monolithic churches is distinct from what obtains in today’s churches. The monks and priests, having giving their lives to their maker, have little or no concern for material things. There were no cars packed by the leaders of the church, rather they looked austere, wearing their simple attire with slippers on.

    Some of them slept on bare rocks and tombs with simple clothing to wade off the inclement weather. Despite the huge wealth around them that could be acquired from those who travel far and near to get to Lalibella, material things seem to be of little interest to them. The modern church with all the glitz  that goes with Christianity seems like something from a distant land.

  • How winners emerged for Jerusalem pilgrimage, by MTN

    How winners emerged for Jerusalem pilgrimage, by MTN

    The General Manager, Consumer Marketing, MTN Nigeria, Richard Iweanoge, has said the 20 customers who emerged winners and have been sent to Jerusalem for the holy pilgrimage were selected electronically, adding that the sponsorship was in appreciation of the life-enriching Christian Value Added Services (VAS) they subscribed to.

    Speaking on the electronic selection process of the customers, he explained that subscribers were selected, based on the Christian VAS they subscribed to.

    Represented by the telco’s Senior Manager, Segment, Saidat Lawal-Mohammed, she said: “The selection was based on the daily devotionals, Bible quotes, sermons, songs, prayers, hymns, religious callertunez and other spiritually uplifting and faith enriching content, they subscribed to. The lucky winners were therefore selected through a draw.

    “This is one of the ways we decided to reward our Christian subscribers for their adoption of our Christian VAS. Every subscriber is important to us and we must show appreciation. We will keep going the extra mile to show just how much we care.”

    She admonished the pilgrims to remember Nigeria in their prayers as they embark on this journey, due to the challenges facing the nation at this time in its history.

    Its Chief Marketing Officer, Bayo Adekanmbi explained that the strategic focus for this initiative is to show support to MTN Christian subscribers.

    “We are committed to the total well-being of our customers as we strive to make their lives brighter through our propositions, products and VAS. This is one of such initiatives aimed at uplifting and encouraging our subscribers to get closer to God. Through our bold new digital VAS, we will keep them connected to their Maker on a daily basis.”

    He went further to state that the company will continue to provide exciting innovative initiatives geared at enhancing its customers’ whole new digital experience, while encouraging them to be better in their various fields of human endeavour.

    The pilgrims, who departed the Murtala Mohammed International Airport, Lagos, at the weekend, will be spending eight days in the holy land. They were full of excitement and praises for MTN, as regard the rare privilege the company has given them in fulfilling a life-long desire through the all-expense paid trip.

    One of the pilgrims, Bolaji Adeola, from Ondo state said before their departure, “I really feel blessed being among the selected few. Going to Jerusalem is like a dream come true. I have always wished for travelling to the holy land to build my Christian faith and God has used MTN as an instrument to make my dream come true. I am very grateful to MTN for this rare and wonderful opportunity. This journey to Jerusalem will uplift my spiritual life and move me closer to God.”

  • MTN sponsored-pilgrims leave  for Jerusalem

    MTN sponsored-pilgrims leave for Jerusalem

    The over 20 pilgrims sponsored by the leading ICT and telecoms giant, MTN, have departed for Jerusalem for this year’s pilgrimage.

    The largesse is part of the company’s commitment to uplifting the spiritual life of its subscribers by helping them to be better in their Christian journey.

    The pilgrims, who left via the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos, will be spending 10 days in the holy land. They could not hide their excitement and the rare privilege MTN has given them. They were full of praise to the telecom firm  for not just sponsoring them on an all-expenses paid trip, but for also giving them an opportunity to fulfil a life-long desire.

    One of the pilgrims, Blessing O. Amadi, from Rivers State, said: “I feel fulfilled. Going to Jerusalem is something I have always wished for and have been saving towards this. Now, God has used MTN as an instrument to make my dream come true again.”

    The Senior Manager, Segments, MTN, Saidat Lawal-Mohammed, admonished the pilgrims to put the country in prayer in view of the challenges facing the nation at this time in its history.

    Speaking on the electronic selection of the customers, she explained that subscribers were selected based on the Valued Added Service (VAS) they subscribed to.