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The forgotten Ukrainian roots of a famous “French” saint as an example of imperial unification and denationalization

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By Sergiy Shumilo

A characteristic feature of imperial culture is the absorption of the spiritual, intellectual and creative forces and heritage of conquered peoples. Ukraine is no exception. Take away from the culture of the Russian Empire this Ukrainian contribution, and it will cease to be as “majestic” and “worldly” as it is usually perceived.

Denationalization, the blurring of national consciousness and identity, is a characteristic phenomenon among conquered peoples within the borders of any empire. The Russian Empire for centuries followed this path of general unification, in which there was no place for a separate Ukrainian nation and culture. Instead, a “united Russian people” was to emerge.

Entire generations of Ukrainians have been brought up under the influence of such narratives. In the conditions of losing their own Ukrainian statehood, without prospects for self-realization and career growth in the colonized, divided and devastated by endless wars homeland, many young, educated and ambitious Ukrainians are forced to seek a better destiny in the capital and in the space of the empire , in which there was a demand for educated personnel. Under such circumstances, they were forced to devote their energies and talents to the development of the culture of a foreign empire.

In the Moscow kingdom in the 16th and the first half of the 17th centuries, before the Ukrainian creative and intellectual injection, local culture was a rather unremarkable phenomenon. However, from the second half of the 17th century, many educated Ukrainians contributed to the educational mission (the so-called “Kyiv-Mohyla expansion”) in Muscovy. Under the influence of the people of Kyiv-Mohyla and with their direct participation, education was introduced in Muscovy, educational institutions were created, new literary works were written and a large-scale church reform was carried out. A large number of Ukrainian intellectuals contributed to the creation of the new imperial culture, which, according to their design, was to be somewhat “Ukrainized”. Even in the Russian literary language from the end of the 17th – the beginning of the 18th century, certain influences of Ukrainianization began to be felt. The same thing happens in art. And church life for a long time fell under the “Little Russian influence”, against which native Muscovites began to resist.

Finding self-realization in the boundless and semi-wild expanses of the northern empire, many Ukrainians sincerely believed that in this way they glorified their own “small homeland”. There are a whole galaxy of prominent people who came from Ukraine who are considered “Russian”. This shows the whole tragedy of a captive nation, whose talented and bright representatives had no prospects in their own homeland, absorbed by the empire and artificially turned into a deaf province. They were often forced to give their genius and talents to the foreign country and culture, and very often they had no other choice. At the same time, under the influence of imperial education, they often lost their own national roots and identity.

This tragedy is most clearly manifested in the fate and work of the Russian-speaking Ukrainian writer Mykola Gogol (1809-1852). But many other prominent figures of culture, religion and science in the Russian Empire in the 18-19 centuries were forced to experience this internal division and contradiction between their own Ukrainian origin and the imperial unified education, which denied the very right to be Ukrainian. Here we can list many names – from prominent church hierarchs, to philosophers, artists and scientists. Imperial propaganda worked hard to present them to the world as “Russians”, when in reality they were Ukrainians. Numerous students and teachers of the Kiev-Mohyla Academy in the 18th century had a decisive influence on the development of education, literature and art in the empire.

The Ukrainian Grigoriy Skovoroda (1722-1794) influenced the formation of a philosophical school in the empire as such, and Paisiy Velichkovsky (1722-1794) influenced the revival and renewal of Orthodox monasticism. In the same way, Pamfil Yurkevich (1826-1874) from Poltava continued to lay the foundations of Christian Platonism and Cordocentrism in philosophy. His student was the famous Russian philosopher Vladimir Solovyov (1853-1900), who in turn was the great-great-grandson of the Ukrainian traveling philosopher Grigory Skovoroda. Even the writer Fyodor Dostoevsky (1821-1881) has Ukrainian roots, whose grandfather Andrei Dostoevsky was a Ukrainian priest from Volyn and signed in Ukrainian. The outstanding composer Pyotr Tchaikovsky (1840-1893), the painter Ilya Repin (1844-1930), the inventor of the helicopter Igor Sikorsky (1889-1972), the founder of practical cosmonautics Sergey Korolev (1906-1966), the singer and composer Alexander Vertinsky (1889- 1957), the poet Anna Akhmatova (her real name is Gorenko, 1889-1966), the ballet master Serge Lifar (1905-1986) also have Ukrainian roots. The famous pholosophers and theologians were also natives of Ukraine: Fr. prot. George Florovski (1893-1979), Fr. protoprezv. Vasily Zenkovski (1881-1962), Nikolay Berdyaev (1874-1948) and many others. etc.

Knowing about the world fame and recognition, little attention is paid to the country of origin and roots of these prominent personalities. Usually, biographers limit themselves to a brief mention that they were born in the Russian Empire or the USSR, without specifying that this was actually Ukraine, which at the time was under Russian rule. At the same time, in the life of every person, the environment in which he was born and raised is important in the formation of character, consciousness and attitudes. Undoubtedly, the mental, cultural and spiritual characteristics of the Ukrainian people, their traditions and heritage have in one way or another left their influence on those who were born or lived in Ukraine. This aspect is important to keep in mind when it comes to the phenomenon or genius of a certain personality.

Here, as an example, I would like to mention the famous “French” saint Maria (Skobtsova) of Paris (1891-1945) – Orthodox nun of the Patriarchate of Constantinople, poet, writer, participant in the French Resistance, saved Jewish children from the Holocaust and was executed by the Nazis in the gas chamber of the Ravensbrück concentration camp on March 31, 1945.

In 1985, the Yad Vashem memorial center posthumously honored her with the title of “Righteous One of the World”, and in 2004, the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople canonized her as the Venerable Martyr Mary of Paris. At the same time, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Paris, Cardinal Jean-Marie Lustiger noted that the Roman Catholic Church will also honor Mother Mary as the holy martyr and patron saint of France. On March 31, 2016, the inauguration ceremony of Mother Maria Skobtsova Street was held in Paris, which is adjacent to Lourmel Street in the Fifteenth arrondissement, where Mother Maria lived and worked. On the sign under the name of the new street is written in French: “Mother Maria Skobtsova Street: 1891-1945. Russian poetess and artist. Orthodox nun. A member of the Resistance. Killed at Ravensbrück.’

The French are proud of this name. However, few people pay attention to the fact that mother Maria was Ukrainian by birth. Everyone is misled by her purely Russian surname Skobtsova. However, it is actually the last name of her second husband. She was married twice, in her first marriage she bore the surname Kuzmina-Karavaeva, and in her second marriage she married the prominent figure of the Kuban Cossack movement Skobtsov, with whom she later separated and accepted monasticism.

As a girl, Maria bore the surname Pilenko and belonged to the famous Ukrainian old Cossack family of Pilenko, whose representatives are descendants of the Zaporozhian Cossacks. Her grandfather Dmytro Vasilievich Pilenko (1830-1895) was born in southern Ukraine, was the chief of staff of the Kuban Cossack army and the head of the Black Sea region. Her great-grandfather Vasily Vasilievich Pilenko was born in Poltava region (Poltava region), was an engineer at the Luhansk foundry and head of coal mining in Lisichansk, first discovered iron ore deposits in Kryvyi Rih, and later was head of salt mining in Crimea . Her great-great-grandfather, Vasil Pilenko, was a soldier and regimental standard-bearer of the Persozinkovo Hundred of the Hadiach Cossack Regiment, and later received the rank of second major, and in 1788 was appointed treasurer of the Zinkovo District in the Poltava Region. He died in 1794. Vasil Pilenko’s father also served in the Pervozinkovo Hundred of the Hadiach Regiment, and his grandfather, Mihailo Filipovich Pilenko, served in the same regiment.

The “ancestral nest” of the Pilenko Cossacks is the town of Zenkov – the centenary center of the Hadyach Cossack Regiment in the Poltava Region.

As can be seen, St. Mary of Paris is Ukrainian by birth, although she was raised in the Russian tradition. Skobtsova is her last name from her second marriage, which she later ended by accepting monasticism.

After the canonization of the martyr, she often continued to be called by the secular surname of her second husband – Skobtsova, if only to emphasize her “Russian roots”. This is how, according to a commonly accepted erroneous practice, she was even recorded in the calendar of church saints in Ukraine. In particular, the annex to the decision No. 25 of the Synod of the OCU of July 14, 2023, § 7 states: “… to add to the church calendar prpmchtsa Maria (Skobtsova) Pariska (1945) – to establish March 31 as a day for commemoration according to the New Julian calendar, on the day of her martyrdom”.

At the same time, this widespread practice has recently raised certain doubts. Although after the divorce in civil documents in France, Maria did not change her surname (at that time it was a rather complicated bureaucratic procedure), it is not quite correct to call her in a nunnery by the secular surname of her second husband. Also, saints are not usually called by a secular surname.

It would probably be more correct to call her by her maiden name Pilenko or at least the double surname Pilenko-Skobtsova, which would be more reliable from a historical and biographical point of view.

In any case, St. Mary of Paris is the successor of the glorious Ukrainian Cossack elder. And this is worth remembering both in Ukraine and in France.

In this example we see how the unifying Russian imperial influence continues to subliminally persist in our time even in other countries. Until recently, few people in the world knew and paid attention to Ukraine, its uniqueness, history and heritage. Ukrainians are perceived mainly under the influence of Russian imperial narratives as part of the “Russian world”.

The war of Russia against Ukraine, the heroic and self-sacrificing resistance of Ukrainians against Russian aggression, the desperate struggle for their own freedom, independence and identity made the world realize that people know almost nothing about Ukrainians, including those who lived among them and have become famous in various fields. These Ukrainians, even if they were Russified and brought up in a foreign tradition, remain prominent representatives of Ukraine. We have no right to renounce them and their heritage. They are also an ornament of Ukraine and its colorful and multifaceted culture, equivalent to the great cultures of other nations of the world. The filtering out of certain imperial influences in their heritage, which once arose through the appropriate upbringing in the absence of their own statehood, should return these names to the Ukrainian treasury of world culture.

Photo: Mati Maria (Pilenko-Skobtsova).

Note about the article: Shumilo, S. “Forgotten Ukrainian roots of the famous “French” saint as an example of imperial unification and denationalization” (Шумило, С. „Забытые украинские корни известной „французской“ святой как пример имперской унификации и денационализации“ (Религиозно-информационная служба Украины)– on the page risu.ua (Religious Information Service of Ukraine).

Note about the author: Sergey Shumilo, Candidate of Historical Sciences, Doctor of Theology, Director of the International Institute of Athos Heritage, Research Fellow at the University of Exeter (UK), Honored Worker of Culture of Ukraine.

Embracing change, the demand for tailored education in the Netherlands

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The education system in the Netherlands has gained recognition for its standards and remarkable academic achievements. However, there is now a growing call to revamp the system. Educators and influential thinkers are advocating for a departure from classroom structures that are based on age and instead, they propose personalized learning models that prioritize individual students’ needs. This proposed educational reform aims to create an environment where every student can flourish.

Karin Verheijen, an educator of the Karin Tutoring Center (Karin Bijles Centrum) sheds light on the limitations of a one-size-fits-all approach. She emphasizes that grouping students by age overlooks their learning paces and styles, within a classroom setting. This can lead to a decline in student enjoyment and self-confidence, impeding their educational development.

ywAAAAAAQABAAACAUwAOw== Embracing change, the demand for tailored education in the Netherlands
Embracing change, the demand for tailored education in the Netherlands 3

Peter van de Kuit, a colleague of Verheijen, points out that common learning barriers such as headaches and boredom are often misinterpreted as mere fatigue or disinterest. He champions the study technology developed by L. Ron Hubbard, which equips students with the tools to overcome these obstacles, enhancing their comprehension and retention. Both Karin and Peter are members of the board of the Foundation for Effective Education “Stichting voor Effectief Onderwijs” (established in 2001 and recognized as of public benefit by the Dutch authorities) and work with the Karin Tutoring Center which now operates in 6 locations of which 5 in Amsterdam, and service on average 300 students every week, totalling about 2600 students since 2007.

Evelyne Azih from the Chevylins Care Foundation echoes the sentiment, emphasizing the broader societal impact of education. She argues that by nurturing the abilities and cultural awareness of young people, “we contribute to a more peaceful and well-organized society“. Azih advocates for “the L. Ron Hubbard Study Method” promoted by Applied Scholastics, as “a means to bridge educational gaps and empower individuals with effective learning strategies“.

The positive results of such a method are evident in the achievements attained by the method used by the Karin Tutoring Center. Their approach to tutoring has helped “countless students improve academically and grow in self-confidence, showcasing the transformative potential of alternative educational methods“.

With a hopeful outlook, when asked about the future of education, Peter van de Kuit envisions “an education system reformation that sparks genuine interest in students for their subjects. By making learning more enjoyable and manageable, the teaching process becomes more effective, benefiting both students and educators”.

ywAAAAAAQABAAACAUwAOw== Embracing change, the demand for tailored education in the Netherlands
Embracing change, the demand for tailored education in the Netherlands 4

The call for educational reform in the Netherlands is clear. Personalized learning approaches, such as those inspired by L. Ron Hubbard’s study technology, as praised by thousands of families, demonstrate the potential to revolutionize the educational landscape. As success stories from various foundations and centres accumulate, the evidence mounts in favour of a system that values the individual learning journey of each student. The time is ripe for change, and the Dutch education system may well lead the charge in creating a more fulfilling and effective model for learners worldwide.

Mental health: member states to take action across multiple levels, sectors and ages

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Mental health: member states to take action across multiple levels, sectors and ages
Photo de Anthony Tran sur Unsplash

Europeans has known psychological problem in the last year hence the importance of addressing mental health and well-being

Almost one in two Europeans has experienced an emotional or psychosocial problem in the last year. The recent context of compounded crises (the COVID-19 pandemic, the Russian aggression against Ukraine, the climate crisis, unemployment, and the food and energy price increases) has further worsened the situation, in particular for children and young people.

ywAAAAAAQABAAACAUwAOw== Mental health: member states to take action across multiple levels, sectors and ages

As you know, we are living in a time of polycrisis that has severely hit the mental health of Europeans. The COVID-19 pandemic, the consequences of Russia’s aggression against Ukraine and the climate crisis are just some of the shocks which have exacerbated already poor levels of mental health. Improving mental health is a social and economic imperative. I am extremely pleased that, in the conclusions we have approved today, we have reached consensus on crucial issues such as the need to take a cross-cutting approach to mental health that covers all policies and recognises the social, environmental and economic causes of mental health.

Mónica García Gómez, Spanish Minister for Health

In its conclusions, the Council highlights the importance of addressing mental health and well-being in different contexts in the life course, which benefits both individuals and societies. It recognises the beneficial role of communities, schools, sports and culture in strengthening mental health and life-long mental well-being.

The conclusions invite member states to elaborate actions plans or strategies with a cross-sectoral approach to mental health, addressing not only health, but also employment, education, digitalisation and AI, culture, environment and climate factors, among other things.

Suggested actions aim to prevent and combat mental health problems and discrimination, while promoting wellbeing. Member states are invited to ensure access to timely, effective and safe mental health care, as well as to act across a wide spectrum of areas, sectors and ages, including:

  • early detection and awareness-raising at school and amongst young people
  • tackling loneliness, self-harm and suicidal behaviour
  • managing psychosocial risks at work, with special attention to health professionals
  • social and job reintegration after recovery to prevent relapses
  • measures against mental health stigma, hate speech and gender-based violence
  • using antidiscrimination as a prevention tool, with a focus on vulnerable groups

The conclusions encourage the member states and the Commission to continue moving towards a comprehensive approach to mental health maintaining this subject in the international agenda. This includes cooperation and coordination between EU member states and the Commission, such as exchanging best practices and promoting EU funding opportunities in the area of mental health, as well as designing actions and recommendations and monitoring progress.

The Council conclusions on mental health draw on the Commission’s communication on a comprehensive approach to mental health, published in June 2023. The topic of mental health is of the utmost importance to the Spanish presidency.

This set of conclusions is part of a wider cluster of conclusions on mental health that have been or will be approved during the Spanish presidency, including mental health and its interconnection with precarious working conditions, the mental health of young people, and mental health and co-occurrence with drug use disorders (the latter to be approved in December).

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Children in Armed Conflicts, the UN and the EU

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Photo credit: @UNRWA_EU

In 2022, a total of 2,496 children, some as young as 8-years-old, were verified by the United Nations as detained for their actual or alleged association with armed groups, including groups designated as terrorists by the U.N. The highest numbers were recorded in Iraq, in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and in the Syrian Arab Republic.

These figures were highlighted by Anne Schintgen at the European Parliament during a conference titled “Children Deprived of Liberty in World” organised on 28 November by MEP Soraya Rodriguez Ramos (Political Group Renew Europe). A number of high-level experts had been invited as panelists to speak about their respective areas of expertise:

Manfred Nowak, former UN Special Rapporteur on Torture and an independent expert that led the elaboration of a UN Global Study on Children Deprived of Liberty;

Benoit van Keirsbilck, a member of the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child;

Manu Krishan, Global Campus on Human Rights, researcher with expertise in children’s rights and best practices;

Anne Schintgen, Head of the European Liaison Office of the Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict;

Rasha Muhrez, Syria Response Director for Save the Children (online);

Marta Lorenzo, Director of the UNRWA Representative Office for Europe (United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East).

UN Report on Children in Armed Conflict

Manfred Nowak, former UN Special Rapporteur on Torture and an independent expert that led the elaboration of a UN Global Study on Children Deprived of Liberty, was invited to the conference at the European Parliament and stressed that 7.2 million children are in various ways deprived of freedom in the world.

He referred in particular to the report of the UN Secretary-General about children in armed conflict addressed to the 77th Session of the UN General Assembly Security Council (A/77/895-S/2023/363) on 5 June 2023, which was saying:

“In 2022, children continued to be disproportionately affected by armed conflict, and the number of children verified as affected by grave violations increased compared with 2021. The United Nations verified 27,180 grave violations, of which 24,300 were committed in 2022 and 2,880 were committed earlier but verified only in 2022. Violations affected 18,890 children (13,469 boys, 4,638 girls, 783 sex unknown) in 24 situations and one regional monitoring arrangement. The highest numbers of violations were the killing (2,985) and maiming (5,655) of 8,631 children, followed by the recruitment and use of 7,622 children and the abduction of 3,985 children. Children were detained for actual or alleged association with armed groups (2,496), including those designated as terrorist groups by the United Nations, or for national security reasons.”

The mandate of the UN Special Representative for Children in Armed Conflict

The Special Representative who is currently Virginia Gamba serves as the leading UN advocate for the protection and well-being of children affected by armed conflict.

The mandate was created by the General Assembly (Resolution A/RES/51/77) following the publication, in 1996, of a report by Graça Machel titled the “Impact of Armed Conflict on Children”. Her report highlighted the disproportionate impact of war on children and identified them as the primary victims of armed conflict.

The role of the Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict is to strengthen the protection of children affected by armed conflict, raise awareness, promote the collection of information about the plight of children affected by war and foster international cooperation to improve their protection.

Detention of children in Iraq, DR Congo, Libya, Myanmar Somalia

Six grave violations affecting children in times of conflict were highlighted by Anne Schintgen, a member of the conference panel: recruitment and use of children for combating, killing and maiming children, sexual violence, attacks on schools and hospitals, abduction and denial of humanitarian access.

Additionally, the UN is monitoring the detention of children for their actual or alleged association with armed groups.

In this regard, she named a number of countries of particular concern:

In Iraq in December 2022, 936 children remained in detention on national security-related charges, including for their actual or alleged association with armed groups, primarily Da’esh.

In the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the UN verified in 2022 the detention of 97 boys and 20 girls, between the ages of 9 and 17, for their alleged association with armed groups. All children have been released.

In Libya, the UN received reports of the detention of some 64 children, with their mothers, of several nationalities, for their mothers’ alleged association with Da’esh,

In Myanmar, 129 boys and girls were detained by the national armed forces.

In Somalia, a total of 176 boys, of which 104 were released and 1 was killed, were detained in 2022 for their alleged association with armed groups.

Children should be primarily considered as victims of violations or abuses of their rights rather than as perpetrators and a security threat, Anne Schintgen said, stressing that the detention of children for their alleged association with armed groups is an issue in 80% of the countries covered by the UN Children and Armed Conflict mechanism.

Deportation of Ukrainian children by Russia

During the debate following the presentations of the panelists, the issue of the deportation of Ukrainian children by Russia from the Occupied Territories was raised. Both Manfred Nowak and Benoit Van Keirsblick, a member of the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child invited as a panelist, expressed their deep concerns about this situation.

In a report titled “Ukrainian Children in Search of Way Home from Russia” published in three languages (English, Russian and Ukrainian) on 25 August 2023, Human Rights Without Frontiers stressed that the Ukrainian authorities had a nominative list of about 20,000 children deported by and to Russia who are now being russified and educated in an anti-Ukrainian mindset. However, many more have been taken away from the territories occupied by Russia.

As a reminder, on 17 March 2023, the Pre-Trial Chamber of the International Criminal Court in The Hague issued arrest warrants for Russian President Vladimir Putin and Russia’s Commissioner for Children’s Rights Maria Lvova-Belova on their responsibility in the deportation of Ukrainian children.

A call for the EU

The experts invited to the conference encouraged the European Union to ensure that the topic of conflict affected children is systematically integrated and advanced in its wide range of external actions. They also urged the EU to include the issue of the detention of children for their alleged association with armed groups in its Guidelines on Children and Armed Conflict that are currently being revised.

MEP Soraya Rodriguez Ramos concluded by saying:

“The parliamentary own-initiative report that I am leading and which will be voted on December’s plenary session is an opportunity to give visibility to the suffering of millions of children deprived of liberty in the world and to call the international community for action and the effective commitment to put an end to it.”

Antidepressants and brain stroke

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human anatomy model
Photo by David Matos on Unsplash

It’s cold, Paris at this time of the year is a chilly 83 per cent humidity, and the temperature is a mere three degrees. Fortunately, my usual café au lait and toast with butter and jam allow me to put the computer on the table to get closer to a story that once again takes us into the devastating world of death and the medical establishment.

In a newspaper, on 22 September 2001, many years ago, I came across a small blurb, you know, those short news items that appear in column form and which are used by newspaper editors to fill the page, which read as follows:

Bleeding risk with new antidepressants:
A study published in the latest edition of the British Medical Journal says that new-generation antidepressant drugs that inhibit the reabsorption of serotonin in the brain increase the risk of gastrointestinal bleeding in older people. The research, carried out in several Canadian hospitals, found in particular that the chance of suffering from such a disorder is increased by 10 percent.

Although the research was carried out in a Canadian hospital, the reality is that in the last twenty years, the intake of antidepressants in the world’s population has been and continues to be alarming. The big pharmaceutical industries, aided by general practitioners, the media and psychiatrists, have implanted the idea that any emotional state that upsets us can be declared a “mental illness” and medicated with some glee with new generation antidepressants.

I myself was at the doctor’s in 2010 and the doctor who attended me, when I told her about my state of mind, of a certain apathy, because I had just gone through a process of deep mourning in which I was still immersed, without considering any other type of treatment, prescribed me antidepressants, which of course I did not take. However, every time I visit my doctor for any document related to any test, I am astonished to see that my medical records show me as a person suffering from depression. If I had decided to take medication at that time, today I would be a chronically ill person crammed with pills for my “depressive” treatment.

In November 2022, a geriatric portal published a report with a devastating headline: Cases of stroke will increase by 34% in the next decade in Europe. The Spanish Society of Neurology (SEN) pointed out that 12.2 million people in the world will suffer a stroke in 2022 and 6.5 million will die. It also stated that more than 110 million people who had suffered a stroke were in a situation of disability. 

According to the association and others consulted, the possible causes of stroke include high blood pressure, smoking, physical inactivity, an unhealthy diet, obesity, excessive alcohol consumption, atrial fibrillation, high blood lipid levels, diabetes mellitus, genetics, stress, etc. It seems that living, in general, causes stroke. Once again, medicine lays a huge deck of cards on the table so that whatever card you are dealt, you have no choice but to medicate yourself. And especially for stress or tension, anxiolytics and antidepressants.

In my modest research on the relationship between old age and stroke, I have come across some truly terrifying articles that place all the blame, as justice would have it, of the ordeal on the elderly person (I am an elderly person myself). In an article published on 28 November this year (2023) and entitled: La depresión, un problema de salud pública entre la población mayor (Depression, a public health problem among the elderly). Among the frightening symptoms that can diagnose such a chronic illness, the following can be read:

Depression has become a public health problem that deserves special attention because of its effects on cognitive decline in older people. Its symptoms can vary and affect both the physical and emotional well-being of sufferers.

Common symptoms include loss of energy or constant fatigue, boredom, sadness or apathy, low self-esteem, nervousness, restlessness, delusions, unwarranted fear, feelings of worthlessness, mild cognitive impairment, unexplained or chronic pain and some behavioural disturbances.

Social factors that should in no case be treated with antidepressants. To label such problems as a case of public health is a disgrace that is being imposed in order to permanently medicate people who should only be helped to feel useful again. To claim that such people are “a burden” is to dispossess them of their fundamental rights, especially when they end up in nursing homes not for social and emotional reintegration, but only as “cattle” to be fed and stuffed with drugs until they die and are no longer a nuisance.

Over-medication is a risk factor, especially in people who are already grey-haired. Studies on what causes a certain disease, carried out in any university in the world or “accredited” body, do not necessarily, if ever, analyse who causes it. That is why whenever we are prescribed anything, we should not be tired of asking at all times, even to internet search engines to show us and clarify every last molecule of doubt we have. And if not, I recommend spending a few dollars (euros) to buy a book or two critical of the medical system. I always recommend, because of the author and his medical training, one of these two books: How to survive in an overmedicated world, or Medicines that kill and organised crime.

The global health care system wants us to be over-medicated. Medicine should only be used very occasionally. If we need to be constantly at the doctor’s, then something is wrong, let’s read the pills we take, the side effects they cause, and it may turn out that we are falling into a self-destructive spiral guided by the one-eyed leading the blind.

But as I always say, as I finish my already cold coffee, my articles, my observations, have nothing to do with the honest medical class that tries to bring us closer together so that our health becomes better and better and more stable. And in the same way, it is also convenient for us to be aware of the life we lead. Is it healthy? If it is not, let’s change it.

References:
Los casos de ictus aumentarán un 34% en la próxima década en Europa (geriatricarea.com)
La depresión, un problema de salud pública entre la población mayor (geriatricarea.com)
Diario La Razón, sábado, 22/IX/2021, pág. 35 (España)

MEPs want accurate labelling of breakfast

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MEPs want accurate labelling of honey, fruit juice and jam
Photo de Randy Fath sur Unsplash

The revision aims for more accurate origin labelling to help consumers make an informed choice on a number of agri-food products.

On Wednesday, the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety Committee adopted its position on the revision of EU marketing standards for the so-called ‘breakfast’ directives to update requirements and product definitions with 73 votes in favour, 2 against and 10 abstentions.

Clear labelling of geographical origin of honey

As consumers have shown a particular interest in the geographical origin of honey, MEPs agree that the country where honey has been harvested must appear on the label in the same visual field as the product indication. If honey originates from more than one country, the countries shall be indicated on the label in descending order according to proportion and if more than 75% of honey comes from outside the EU, this information shall also be indicated clearly on the front label. To further limit honey fraud, including the use of sugar syrups in honey that is very difficult to detect, MEPs also want to set-up a traceability system along the supply chain to be able to track the origin of the honey. Beekeepers in the EU with less than 150 hives would be exempted.

Fruit juices and jam

MEPs agree that the label ‘contains only naturally occurring sugars should be allowed for fruit juices. To meet growing demand for low-sugar products, reformulated fruit juices may be labelled ‘reduced-sugar fruit juice’.

MEPs highlight that new techniques that remove naturally occurring sugars in fruit juices, jams, jellies or milk should not lead to the use of sweeteners to compensate for the effect of sugar reduction on the taste, texture and quality of the final product. They also point out that claims regarding positive properties, such as health benefits, must not be made on the labelling of reduced-sugar fruit juice.

For fruit juices, jams, jellies, marmalades and sweetened chestnut purée MEPs also want the country of origin of the fruit used to manufacture the juice to be indicated on the front-label. If the fruit used originates in more than one country, the countries of origin shall be indicated on the label in descending order according to their proportion.

Regarding jams, MEPs agree with the proposal to increase the minimum fruit content, reducing the required added sugar for certain products, and allows the term ‘marmalade’ to be used for all jams (previously this term was only allowed for citrus jams).

Quote

Rapporteur Alexander Bernhuber (EPP, Austria) said: “Today is a good day for more transparent labelling of origin. In addition to stricter quality criteria and controls, the more precise indication of the countries of origin will provide more transparency and will make it easier for consumers to choose healthier and regional products. For honey, the requirements to state the countries of origin on labelling will prevent adulteration and facilitate informed consumer choices.”

Next steps

Parliament is scheduled to adopt its mandate during the 11-14 December 2023 plenary session, after which it is ready to start negotiations with EU member states.

Background

The revision of EU marketing standards for certain ‘breakfast’ directives was proposed by the European Commission on 21 April 2023 to update current standards that are more than 20 years old.

Rights of Religious Minorities in Europe, a Delicate Balance says MEP Maxette Pirbakas

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MEP Maxette Pirbakas - Living together in Peace
MEP Maxette Pirbakas, at the European Parliemant, emphasizes the importance of religious tolerance and freedom in Europe, highlighting the need for dialogue and respect for minority rights. Photo credit: A.S. Pegasus Photo Creations // MEP Maxette Pirbakas - Living together in Peace 30 nov 2023

Brussels – On 30 November 2023, Maxette Pirbakas, MEP for Overseas France, welcomed participants to a conference on the protection of the rights of religious and spiritual minorities in Europe.

In her opening speech, MEP Maxette Pirbakas acknowledged Europe’s complex history when it comes to religion. She pointed out that religions have often been “engines or pretexts for savagery”, referring to the persecution of early Christians and the atrocities committed against Jews in the 20th century. At the same time, Pirbakas pointed out that it was in Europe that the ideas of religious tolerance and freedom were born. “Shadows and light: that’s Europe”, she summed up.

According to Pirbakas, Europe’s founding fathers attached particular importance to the issue of religious freedom from the outset. They made the protection of minority groups an essential part of Europe’s democratic culture.

According to Maxette Pirbakas, a balanced compromise embodies the EU’s global approach. By avoiding the adoption of an EU-wide religious statute and leaving it to the Member States to regulate worship, she believes that Europe has wisely avoided homogenising national points of view. It has left a margin of discretion to the Member States while ensuring that they do not use it to violate fundamental rights, in particular those of religious and spiritual minorities. “Confronting points of view and finding a point of balance” is Europe’s speciality, said MEP Pirbakas.

MEP Maxette Pirbakas, who organized the meeting, addressed leaders of religious minorities in Europe, at the European Parliament. 2023
MEP Maxette Pirbakas, who organized the meeting, addressed leaders of religious minorities in Europe, at the European Parliament. Photo credit: 2023 www.bxl-media.com

Maxette Pirbakas concluded by recalling principles such as individual free will, the protection of minority rights and the fact that States should only restrict religion for demonstrable reasons of public order. She referred to the dangerous attempts to deal with the new “heretics” by trying to create new legislation that would endanger the precious freedom of thought and expression. The standard penal codes, if applied correctly, are more than sufficient to punish anyone who breaks the laws without having to examine the religious, spiritual or political background of the individuals, stating that “the current tools are sufficient if applied correctly“.

Encouraging continued dialogue, Pirbakas described debates on religion as “always passionate”. But she expressed the hope that the EU could remain an ally of all spiritual views by ensuring that Member States respect fundamental freedoms, to help Europe “live together in our differences and diversity”.

The Gucci family sells their Roman villas for 15 million euros

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A few days ago, the Gucci family announced for sale their two villas in Rome, which are as opulent and luxurious as the famous models of the legendary fashion house, located in the most exclusive residential area of Rome.

Built by Aldo Gucci after he moved to Rome in the 1940s, these two villas are located just 10 minutes from the historic city center, in one of the most exclusive residential areas.

The main mansion was where the Gucci dynasty celebrated holidays and other special occasions, and the two villas are surrounded by a huge park and share a swimming pool. Their design, of course, draws inspiration from Italy, but also from English mansions, as Olwen Price, Gucci’s wife, was British – the English flavor can be seen in the columns and arched windows.

The larger villa has a games room, master bedroom with two bathrooms and wardrobe, and staff quarters. The smaller villa needs updating but would make a great guest house, according to Chiara Genarelli, real estate advisor for Forbes Global Properties.

The villas, which are sold within a single listing, are on the market for €15 million.

Photo: Forbes Global Properties

Progress MS-25 docked with the ISS and delivered tangerines and New Year’s gifts

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The cargo spacecraft was launched on Friday from the Baikonur Cosmodrome

The Progress MS-25 cargo spacecraft, which was launched on Friday from the Baikonur Cosmodrome, docked with the Poisk module of the Russian segment of the International Space Station (ISS), Roscosmos reported, as quoted by TASS.

The ship docked at the station in automatic mode, adds BTA. The process was controlled from Earth by specialists from the Mission Control Center, and from the ISS board by cosmonauts Oleg Kononenko, Nikolai Chub and Konstantin Borisov.

“Progress MS-25” delivered 2,528 kg of cargo, including 515 kg of refueling fuel, 420 liters of potable water, 40 kg of compressed nitrogen in bottles, clothing, and about 1,553 kg of various equipment for medical control and sanitary needs. In addition, the ship delivered food to the Russian cosmonauts, including tangerines, oranges, lemons and grapefruits, as the Russian Research Institute of Food Concentrate Industry and Special Food Technologies previously reported.

“Progress MS-25” also brought New Year’s gifts to the station, which were prepared for the crew members by their relatives and friends, the psychological support service of the ISS crew reported. Gift bags also contain dragon keychains.

The ship also delivered a special complex “Incubator-3” and 48 eggs of Japanese quail, with the help of which it is planned to conduct the “Quail” experiment, as well as equipment for the “Quartz-M” experiment, which the cosmonauts will have to install during work session outside the ship.

Illustrative Photo by Suzy Hazelwood: https://www.pexels.com/photo/orange-fruit-on-white-ceramic-saucer-1295567/

What future for Christian culture in Europe?

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By Martin Hoegger.

What kind of Europe are we heading for? And, more specifically, where are the Churches and Church movements heading in the current climate of growing uncertainty? The shrinking of the Churches is certainly a very painful loss. But every loss can create more space and more freedom to encounter God.

These were the questions posed by the German philosopher Herbert Lauenroth at the recent “Together for Europe” meeting in Timisoara. For him, however, the question is whether Christians are credible witnesses to living together. https://together4europe.org/en/spaces-for-life-a-call-for-unity-from-together-for-europe-in-timisoara/

French writer Charles Péguy described the “little sister hope” that carries with it faith and love in a childlike impetuosity. It opens up new horizons and leads us to say “and yet”, taking us into unknown territory.

What does this mean for the Churches? The days of cathedrals seem to be over. Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris is on fire… but Christian life is dying out. However, the charisms of Christian movements can open new paths. It was during the Second World War, for example, that several movements were born, like a baptism of fire.

The fate of societies depends on “creative minorities”.

Joseph Ratzinger, future pope Benedict XVI, has recognised the relevance of this notion since 1970. From its very beginnings, Christianity has been a minority, a minority of a unique kind. A renewed awareness of this characteristic fact of its identity holds great promise for the future.

Questions of gender and authoritarian politics, for example, exclude, divide, and polarise. Reciprocity born of the recognition of charisms and a friendship centred on Christ are the two essential counterpoisons.

Regarding reciprocity, Helmut Nicklas, one of the fathers of Together for Europe, wrote: “It is only when we really succeed in receiving our own experience of God, our charisms and our gifts in a new and more profound way from others that our network will really have a future!”

And, on the importance of friendship, the philosopher Anne Applebaum noted: “We must choose our allies and friends with the greatest care because it is only with them that it is possible to resist authoritarianism and polarisation. In short, we must form new alliances.

The hidden face of Christ on the road to Emmaus

In Christ, the walls of hatred and separation have been torn down. The story of Emmaus makes us understand this: on their journey, the two disciples are deeply wounded and divided, but through the presence of Christ who joins them, a new present is born. Together, we are called to be bearers of this “Emmaus skill” that brings reconciliation.

The Slovakian Mária Špesová, from the European Network of Communities, has also meditated on the disciples of Emmaus. Recently, she met some young people who had mocked Christians, claiming that they were mistaken. 

The experience of the Emmaus disciples gives her hope. Jesus hid his face to bring their hearts to the light and fill them with love. She hopes that these teenagers will have the same experience: discovering the hidden face of Jesus. And that face shows through our own!

Ruxandra Lambru, a Romanian Orthodox and member of the Focolare Movement, feels the divisions in Europe when it comes to the pandemic, vaccines against the Coronavirus and the state of Israel. Where is the Europe of solidarity when the arguments exclude the values we hold dear, and when we deny the existence of others or demonise them?

The road to Emmaus showed her that it is essential to live the faith in small communities: it is together that we go to the Lord.

Influencing social and political life through Christian values

According to Valerian Grupp, a member of the Young Men’s Christian Association, only a quarter of the population of Germany will belong to the Catholic and Protestant Churches in 2060. Already today, the “big Church” no longer exists; less than half the population belongs to it, and common convictions are disappearing.

But Europe needs our faith. We need to win it back by meeting people and inviting them to enter into a relationship with God. The current situation of the Churches is reminiscent of that of the first disciples of Jesus, with their “mobile Churches”.

As for Kostas Mygdalis, adviser to the Interparliamentary Assembly on Orthodoxy, an Orthodox movement that brings together parliamentarians from 25 countries, he notes that certain political circles are mystifying the history of Europe by trying to erase the heritage of Christian faith. For example, the 336 pages of a book published by the Council of Europe on the values of Europe nowhere mention Christian values!

Yet our duty as Christians is to speak out and have an impact on society… even if the Churches sometimes view people involved in politics with suspicion.

Edouard Heger, former President, and Prime Minister of Slovakia, also calls on Christians to go out and speak out, with courage and love. Their vocation is to be people of reconciliation.

“I’ve come here with just one request, he says. We need you as politicians. We also need Christians in politics: they bring peace, and they serve. Europe has Christian roots, but it needs to hear the Gospel because it no longer knows it”.

The call to courage and trust that I received from Timisoara is summed up in these words from Saint Paul: “We are ambassadors sent by Christ, and it is as if God himself were making his appeal through us: we beseech you, in the name of Christ, be reconciled to God” (2 Cor 5,20).

Photo: Young people in traditional dress from Romania, Hungary, Croatia, Bulgaria, Germany, Slovakia, and Serbia, all present in Timisoara, reminded us that we are at the heart of Europe.