Romania creates a consultative scientific and ethical council in the field of artificial intelligence (AI), reports the Ministry of Research, Innovation and Digitization (MCІD), cited by Romania Іnѕіdеr.
The newly created council unites skilled specialists “who can offer their expertise for the benefit of the public, for the development of the AI cloud in Romania”.
Above all, the new world will have the task of controlling and protecting the artificial intelligence, which destroys it before it can be of benefit to society.
The group consists of the Romanian researchers and innovators of leading companies, as well as the specialists in the field of living sheep. Therefore, they have extensive experience in the research and development of AI technologies.
The rapid development of AI could lead to the automation of a quarter of jobs in the US and Europe, which could leave around 300 million people without a job. and their job. This is the reason for the investigation of Goldman Sachs.
The Investment Bank has announced that “genetic” AI systems such as RTG, which can create behavior indistinguishable from human-made ones, will probably A boom in manufacturing that could increase annual global GDP by 7% per year period of 10 years.
Against this background, however, the technology may also lead to “significant job shifts”, exposing about 300 million jobs in Europe and the United States to peak automation.
Illustrative Photo by ThisIsEngineering: https://www.pexels.com/photo/code-projected-over-woman-3861969/
Pride Month provides an opportunity to celebrate the resilience, diversity, and achievements of LGBTQI individuals, UNAIDS said in a press release, while also reflecting on continuing struggle for full equality, dignity and recognition.
This momentous occasion also serves as a reminder of the important collective commitment to human rights, equality, and the urgent need to decriminalize same-sex relationships, the agency continued.
Cleiton Euzebio, Senior Advisor for Communities and Key Populations, UNAIDS said, “As a gay man, and as an activist for social justice for all, I am so proud to work for the UN’s Joint Programme to end AIDS.
“The UN is standing with communities, supporting them in leading the HIV response, confronting stigma, and building societies where every person is valued. This month and every month, may everyone feel pride in who they are.”
Thanks in large part to efforts led by key populations, the world has seen substantial progress in the HIV response, said UNAIDS, creating the real possibility that AIDS can be eradicated once and for all.
But discrimination, violence, and stigma against LGBTQI people persist in many parts of the world, limiting access to essential services, including HIV prevention, treatment, care, and support.
Barrier to justice, equality, health
The agency said that criminalization of same-sex relationships remains a significant barrier to achieving social justice and equality for LGBTQI individuals, and to ensuring health for all.
Laws that criminalize consensual same-sex activity perpetuate stigma, contribute to violence and discrimination, and obstruct access to vital healthcare services, the agency reminded, calling on all governments to urgently repeal discriminatory laws and policies, and to work towards creating an enabling legal and social environment that respects and protects the rights of LGBTQI people.
Decriminalizing same-sex relationships, is a crucial step in the collective push to ends the AIDS pandemic, said UNAIDS.
Progress is real
Significant gains have been won in advancing LGBTQI rights in many parts of the world, including the decriminalization of same-sex relationships in several countries in recent months, from Angola to Singapore to Barbados.
However other countries are imposing harsher criminal laws on same sex relationships, including only this week, Uganda, where the so-called Anti-Homosexuality Act” came into force, with some offences incurring the death penalty, and a sentence of up to 20 years in jail, merely for promoting gay rights.
The High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Türk, added his congratulations in a festive tweet, calling on the whole international community to appreciate the richness and diversity of the LGBTIQ+ community, “and honour their immense contributions to the human rights movement.”
The cuts will reduce the value of rations provided to Rohingya refugees to $8 per month, or 27 cents per day.
At the beginning of the year, refugees were receiving a ration of $12 per person per month, which was just enough to meet daily needs, but on 1 March, that was cut to $10 – due to lack of funding support.
“We are extremely concerned that WFP has been forced to cut food aid for the Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh”, said the UN Resident Coordinator in Bangladesh, Gwyn Lewis.
“The nutrition and health consequences will be devastating, particularly for women and children and the most vulnerable in the community. We urgently appeal for international support.”
The mostly-Muslim Rohingya, fled by the hundreds of thousands after a military crackdown in Myanmar’s Rakhine State in August 2017, that the UN human rights chief at the time described as a text book case of ethnic cleansing.
Those fleeing persecution joined around 300,000 already sheltering in Bangladesh from previous waves of displacement, and close to a million now live in what is, in effect, the largest refugee camp in the world.
Dependent on rations lifeline
Only 24.6 per cent of the response effort for the mostly-Muslim Rohingya, is funding allocated to provide basic health services, nutrition, food, and education for refugees, who do not have any other source of support.
People living in Rohingya camps are barred from working by Bangladeshi authorities, “and they are completely dependent on international community funding,” added Mr. Lewis.
His call was echoed by three of the UN Human Rights Council-appointed independent experts who are monitoring the situation.
Tom Andrews, Michael Fakhri, and Olivier De Schutter, warned that the cuts will have devastating consequences, and urged donors to provide enough funds to restore rations in full.
“In the span of three months, Rohingya refugees have seen their food rations cut by a third, further eroding the health and security of a population already suffering from severe trauma and deprivation,” the experts said.
‘Devastatingly predictable’ consequences
“The consequences of the rations cuts will be devastatingly predictable: spiking rates of acute malnutrition, infant mortality, violence, and even death.
“It also will contribute to increased regional instability, and some Rohingya may decide that it is better to trust their lives to traffickers and smugglers and risk their lives at sea, than to face hunger and even death in the camps,” the independent UN experts warned.
Child development impaired
“The impact on the Rohingya will be severe and long-lasting, stunting the development of children and dimming the hopes of future generations. Vulnerable populations, including pregnant and breastfeeding women, adolescent girls, and children under five will bear the brunt of the cuts and be further exposed to exploitation and abuse,” they said.
Even prior to the first round of rations cuts, health indicators for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh were grim, the experts warned.
Forty-five percent of Rohingya families were not eating a sufficient diet. Forty percent of Rohingya children experienced stunted growth, and more than half suffered from anemia.
Cyclone Mocha, which made landfall in western Myanmar on 14 May, damaged or destroyed the shelters of approximately 40,000 Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh, exacerbating suffering and adding to budgetary needs.
Course reversal essential
“Member States must urgently act to close the $56 million funding shortfall for food rations that has led to these cuts”, calling on those who’ve already scaled back, to reverse course.
“Member States that have not yet provided financial support to the Rohingya should do so without delay,” the experts said.
“The failure to provide Rohingya families in Bangladesh with sustainable levels of food is a stain on the conscience of the international community. They are in Bangladesh not by choice, but because of genocidal attacks by the Myanmar military,” the experts concluded.
Russian attacks overnight, killed three people – including the girl’s mother – and wounded 11 others, according to news reports. It followed a reported 17 strikes on the capital during May, and the fourth this week.
Ms. Brown expressed her sympathy to the families of “over 1,500 children killed and injured in Ukraine” since Russia’s full-scale invasion began 15 months ago.
Ms. Brown added that the UN continued to follow closely reports of Ukrainian children being forcibly sent to Russia.
“Behind every death there is an immeasurable human tragedy. This must stop now,” she said.
According to UN monitors, six children were killed and 34 were wounded in the month of May alone.
Towns and cities under attack
The Mission said that a total 535 children were killed and 1,047 injured since the start of the conflict. A vast majority – 87 per cent – of the casualties were caused by “explosive weapons with wide area effects”, including artillery, missile and air strikes, and “loitering munitions” also known as suicide drones.
The findings align with earlier warnings from the UN-appointed Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine about Russian armed forces carrying out attacks with explosive weapons in populated areas “with an apparent disregard for civilian harm and suffering, failing to take the required precautions”.
“The attacks were indiscriminate and disproportionate, in violation of international humanitarian law”, the Commission wrote in March.
Impact on health
Bringing even more evidence of the suffering of civilians in the war, just two days ago, the World Health Organization (WHO) verified the 1,000th attack on healthcare in Ukraine since the full-scale Russian invasion.
The agency said that this was the highest number it had ever recorded in any humanitarian emergency.
UN humanitarian coordinator Denise Brown also highlighted the “devastating impact” of the war on the mental health and well-being of children, “including millions who have had to flee for their lives”.
She pledged the humanitarian community’s support to Ukraine’s children “for as long as it is necessary.”
Mounting evidence of child deportations
The Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine said in March that cases of transfer and deportation of children which it had examined, amounted to war crimes.
That same month, the UN’s rights monitoring mission released a report documenting cases of children subjected to forced transfers, arbitrary detention, enforced disappearance, torture and ill-treatment.
The report called on Russia to ensure that any evacuation, including of children, is conducted in full respect of international human rights law and international humanitarian law, and to “adhere to the prohibition of changing the personal status of children displaced from Ukraine, including nationality, and of adoption” during or immediately after an emergency, in line with international standards.
Echoing the allegations, on 17 March, the UN-backed International Criminal Court (ICC) issued arrest warrants for Russia’s President Vladimir Putin and Commissioner for Children’s Rights Maria Lvova-Belova, in connection with possible war crimes concerning the deportation and “illegal transfer” of children from occupied Ukraine.
The number fleeing violence in Sudan since fighting between rival militaries began in mid-April in Khartoum, quickly destabilizing the entire country, has now topped 100,000.
The majority of arrivals in eastern Chad – particularly Ouaddaï, Sila, and Wadi Fira provinces – are from the Darfur region, which has been deeply impacted by violence for decades, reminded UNHCR.
“Reports from our teams on the border indicate that new waves of arrivals are still ongoing”, the agency said in a press release, estimating that up to 200,000 people may be forced to flee to eastern Chad in the coming three months.
UNHCR and its partners have been working closely with the Chadian government, providing support and coordinating the emergency response to address the needs of the newly arrived refugees.
Laura Lo Castro, UNHCR Representative in Chad, said humanitarians had “been working around the clock providing protection services, including specialized assistance to survivors of violence and children at risk, constructing boreholes and well, installing emergency latrines, running mobile clinics, organizing complex relocation convoys, scaling up camps capacity to accommodate newly arrived refugees in existing refugee camps, building family shelters and community infrastructures and we are starting to build new camps.”
The agency said the rainy season was fast approaching, requiring a massive logistical exercise to move refugees from border areas for their safety and protection.
Scrambling to build new camps
“We need to establish immediately new camps and extension of existing camps”, the agency said. “As host populations are gravely affected by the situation in Sudan, some assistance will need to be extended to the most vulnerable among the host population.”
UNHCR stressed that more funding was essential to provide lifesaving interventions.
Long-standing crisis
Prior to this crisis, Chad already hosted nearly 589,000 refugees, including 409,819 Sudanese fleeing conflict in Darfur, as of March 2023.
Nearly 128,000 refugees are in the country from the Central African Republic; 21,287 Nigerians escaping violence by Boko Haram, are present in the Lake region; 28,311 Cameroonians affected by inter-communal tensions, and 1,507 refugees from other nations.
Tens of thousands of refugees have arrived in Chad from Sudan.
Additionally, an estimated 381,289 Chadians are internally displaced, primarily in the Lake Chad Province.
Displaced communities continue to face insecurity in Chad and neighboring countries, compounded by food insecurity, malnutrition, the effects of climate change, and a lack of livelihood opportunities.
The protracted nature of displacement has strained services, natural resources, and social cohesion, said UNHCR.
‘Beacon of hope’
“For families uprooted by the crisis, the humanitarian assistance is their beacon of hope”, added Ms Lo Castro. We rely on the compassion and generosity of our partners to rally together to ensure the provision of critical protection and life-saving support. Together, we can save lives and restore dignity to those in desperate need”.
There is a need for $214.1 million urgently, to provide lifesaving protection and assistance to Chad’s forcibly displaced, which includes $72.4 million for the emergency response for refugees fleeing conflict in Sudan, reiterated UNHCR.
The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe hearing with experts held last week looked into the discriminatory ideology at the root of why the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) limits the right to liberty and security of persons with psychosocial disabilities. At the same time, the Committee heard what the modern human rights concept promoted by the United Nations lays out.
As the first expert Prof. Dr. Marius Turda, Director of the Centre for Medical Humanities, Oxford Brookes University, UK described the historical context in which the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) had been formulated. Historically, the concept of ‘unsound mind’ used as a term in the ECHR Article 5, 1(e) – in all its permutations – played a significant role in shaping eugenic thinking and practice, and not only in Britain where it originated.
Prof. Turda laid out that, “it was deployed in a variety of ways to stigmatise and dehumanise individuals and also to advance discriminatory practices and marginalisation of individuals with learning disabilities. Eugenic discourses as to what constituted normal/abnormal behaviours and attitudes were centrally framed around representations of mentally ‘fit’ and ‘unfit’ individuals, and ultimately led to significant new modes of social, economic, and political disenfranchisement and the erosion of rights for women and men labelled of ‘unsound mind’.”
Ms Boglárka Benko, Registry of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), presented the case law of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). As part of this, she indicated the problem that the Convention text exempts persons deemed of “unsound mind” from the regular protection of rights. She noted that the ECtHR has only very limited regulated its interpretation of the Convention text in regards to the deprivation of liberty of persons with psychosocial disabilities or mental health problems. The courts in general follow the opinions of medical experts.
This practice is in contrast to other chapters of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), where the European court more clearly has considered the human rights violation of cases per the ECHR while also looking at other international human rights instruments. Boglárka Benko noted that the Human rights protection may thus be in danger of fragmentation.
Another expert, Laura Marchetti, Policy Manager of Mental Health Europe (MHE) delivered a presentation on the human rights dimension of the detention of persons of psychosocial disabilities. MHE is the largest independent European network organisation working to Promote positive mental health and well-being; Prevent mental health problems; and support and advance the rights of people with mental ill-health or psychosocial disabilities.
“For a long time, people with psychosocial disabilities and mental health problems were often considered to be inferior, inadequate or even dangerous for society. This was the result of a biomedical approach to mental health, which framed the topic as an individual fault or problem,” Laura Marchetti noted.
She expanded on the historical discrimination which had been presented by Prof. Turda. “Policies and legislation developed following this approach notably legitimized exclusion, coercion and the deprivation of liberty,” she told the Committee. And she added that “people with psychosocial disability were framed as a burden or danger to society.”
Psychosocial model of disability
In the past decades, this approach has increasingly been questioned, as public debate and research started to point to the discrimination and flaws coming from a biomedical approach.
Laura Marchetti pointed out, that “Against this background, the so-called psychosocial model to disability posits that the problems and exclusion that persons with psychosocial disability and mental health problems face are not caused by their impairments, but by the way society is organised and understands this topic.”
This model also draws the attention to the fact that human experiences are varied and that there are a series of determinants impacting a person’s life (e.g. socio-economic and environmental factors, challenging or traumatic life events).
“Societal barriers and determinants are therefore the problem that should be addressed by policies and legislation. The focus should be on inclusion and support provision, rather than on exclusion and lack of choice and control,” Laura Marchetti pointed out.
This shift in approaches is enshrined in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), which has the objective to promote, protect and ensure the full and equal enjoyment of all human rights by all persons with disabilities.
The CRPD has been signed by 164 countries, including the European Union and all its Member States. It enshrines into policies and laws the shift from a bio-medical approach to a psychosocial model of disability. It defined persons with disabilities as people who have long-term physical, mental, intellectual or sensory impairments which in interaction with various barriers may hinder their full and effective participation in society on an equal basis with others.
Laura Marchetti specified, that “The CRPD stipulates that individuals cannot be discriminated on the basis of their disability, including psychosocial disability. The Convention clearly indicates that any form of coercion, deprivation of legal capacity and forced treatment are human rights violations. Article 14 of the CRPD also clearly states that “the existence of a disability shall in no case justify a deprivation of liberty”.”
European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), Article 5 § 1 (e)
The European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) had been drafted in 1949 and 1950. In its section on the right to liberty and security of person, ECHR Article 5 § 1 (e), it notes an exception of “persons of unsound mind, alcoholics or drug addicts or vagrants.” The singling out of persons considered affected by such social or personal realities, or differences in viewpoints has its roots in widespread discriminatory viewpoints of the first part of the 1900s.
The exception was formulated by representatives of the United Kingdom, Denmark and Sweden, led by the British. It was based on a concern that the then drafted human rights texts sought to implement Universal human rights including for persons with psychosocial disabilities or mental health problems, which conflicted with legislation and social policy in place in these countries. Both the British, Denmark and Sweden were strong proponents of eugenics at the time, and had implemented such principles and viewpoints into legislation and practice.
Laura Marchetti concluded her presentation stating that
“It is therefore crucial for the text to be reformed and to remove sections that allow for the perpetuation of discrimination and unequal treatment,” she emphasized in her final statement.
On a shallow level, ‘Teshuvah’ simply refers to someone who goes back to the Jewish faith and resumes its practice after lapsing. On a deeper level, it is much more.
You ‘return’ from the midst of evil in yourself, and retrace your steps back, through hell, to the truth of the heart. This is a path of experiencing and undergoing radical heart problems that must be embraced, bc through such honesty and courage these hidden and obscure heart ‘moves’ are understood from the inside. You struggle in the heart. That is the hardest ‘labour of the heart’, as it is termed in Hebrew.
The Hasids say the Returning One is closest to God, more ‘profound’ than the saint, the zadik, the guru, the geron, the staretz, the holy man or holy woman, of old. The Returning One must face the deeps of the heart as no saint is required to do. In Judaism, the Way of Teshuvah is regarded as very rare= very few people can do such ‘return’ from the heart of stone to the heart of flesh without being destroyed in the canyons and caverns, ravines and abysses, of the hell that lodges in the deep heart. If saints are rare in any human population, then the Returning Ones are rare even among the population of saints.
The second passion book closes with the theme all the passion writings culminate in. Christ’s Cross, Descent into Hell, and Resurrection, is God as human walking the Way of Return, in its depth, its darkness, its suffering, in order to open the Return through hell to all people. The righteous reject it, thinking they don’t need it. In a way, they don’t [which is why Christ says he did not come for the righteous, but for the sinner, the person ‘failing to hit the mark’]. These upright persons are on the saint path, of Light and Joy, but no heart depth. The Way of Teshuvah is most relevant to the broken, the defeated and ruined, the morally bankrupt, provided they know they are in such a condition in the heart, and both take responsibility in acknowledging it yet also put their hellish heart into the hands of the Messianic Path of Teshuvah.
Christ opens a door previously locked, the ‘gates of the deepest darkness’ in the Book of Job, and invites even the ‘worst’ in the human tragedy — especially the worst who can have no pretensions and delusions about the human heart — to pass through that now open door. The First shall be last, the Last shall be first. The broken and tempted of heart, who pass through that hell to emerge out the other side, will know the heart greater than good and deeper than evil long before the saintly, the morally righteous, the mystically enlightened. The Messiah incarnates the Way of Return as the Way of Reversal.
This is why God said of the ‘wave tossed’ David that he was ‘a man after my own heart’, something God never said of Moses.
This road involves profound lamentation, grief and anger, yet in its dark deeps, in its ‘black inexplicable pain’, the Fire of Spirit is kindled and burns in the heart.
The old saints and gurus and masters were men and women of the Light, the Uncreated Light of God. The Light Bringers.
The new persons of Teshuvah, a few in Judaism yet paradoxically opening to everyone in Christianity [which is why redemption in Christianity is universal and unconditional], are the suffering and burning ones, the Fire Bearers.
From Cleopatra to Razia Sultan, history is full of powerful women who defied the norms of their time. But have you ever heard of Queen Kubaba? Ruler of Sumer around 2500 BC, she may be the first recorded female ruler in ancient history. Queen Kubaba (Ku-Baba) is a fascinating figure in Mesopotamian history, believed to have ruled the city-state of Kish in the third millennium BC. One of the earliest female leaders in history, her story is an important piece of the puzzle for understanding the role of women in ancient societies, writes Ancient Origins.
Kubaba and the list of kings
Kubaba’s name appears in a list known as the “King List”, which is the only written record of her reign. The list is exactly what the name suggests – a list of Sumerian kings. It notes briefly the duration of each individual reign and the city in which the ruler reigned. In this list she is called “lugal”, or king, not “eresh” (king’s wife). Of this comprehensive list, hers is the only female name attested in it.
Kubaba is one of the very few women to have ever ruled in their own right in Mesopotamian history. Most versions of the king list place her alone in her own dynasty, the 3rd Dynasty of Kish, following the defeat of Sharrumiter of Mari, but other versions combine her with the 4th dynasty, that followed the primacy of the king of Akshak. Before becoming monarch, the king list says she was an alewife.
The Weidner Chronicle is a propagandistic letter, attempting to date the shrine of Marduk at Babylon to an early period, and purporting to show that each of the kings who had neglected their proper rites had lost the primacy of Sumer. It contains a brief account of the rise of “the house of Kubaba” occurring in the reign of Puzur-Nirah of Akshak:
“In the reign of Puzur-Nirah, king of Akšak, the freshwater fishermen of Esagila were catching fish for the meal of the great lord Marduk; the officers of the king took away the fish. The fisherman was fishing when 7 (or 8) days had passed […] in the house of Kubaba, the tavern-keeper […] they brought to Esagila. At that time BROKEN[4] anew for Esagila […] Kubaba gave bread to the fisherman and gave water, she made him offer the fish to Esagila. Marduk, the king, the prince of the Apsû, favored her and said: “Let it be so!” He entrusted to Kubaba, the tavern-keeper, sovereignty over the whole world .”
Her son Puzur-Suen and grandson Ur-Zababa followed her on the throne of Sumer as the fourth Kish dynasty on the king list, in some copies as her direct successors, in others with the Akshak dynasty intervening. Ur-Zababa is also known as the king said to be reigning in Sumer during the youth of Sargon the Great of Akkad, who militarily brought much of the Near East under his control shortly afterwards.
Ku-Baba, “the woman innkeeper who established the foundations of Kish,” is said to have ruled for 100 years. The catch here is that the list is not the most reliable historical source. He often blurs the line between history and legend. An example of this is the name of Enmen-lu-ana, who is said to have ruled for 43,200 years! Or Kubaba’s reign itself, which indicates that she had an unlikely 100 years at the helm of Sumer! At the same time, there is a possibility that the interpreted concept of time is different from the system we follow today. An innkeeper turned goddess? Next to Kubaba’s name is written “The Innkeeper Woman Who Established the Foundations of Kish.” Kubaba’s rise to power in Kish is shrouded in mystery, but it is agreed that she was an innkeeper, which may have been related to prostitution according to ancient Sumerian texts. The city of Kish was known for its wealth and power and played a significant role in the development of Mesopotamian civilization. Notable feminist revisionist scholars, such as Claudia E. Suter for example, have written that Kubaba was sometimes characterized as a brothel keeper, a way of denigrating her and demonstrating “the treatment of women in the male-dominated early Mesopotamian society”. On the contrary, brewing and selling beer in the ancient Mesopotamian world was a highly respected endeavor. There was an ancient association between the female divinity and alcohol, and according to theologian Carol R. Fontaine, Kubaba would be seen as a “successful business lady.” Lost 4,500-year-old palace of mythical Sumerian king discovered She is said to have been kind and fair to her customers, earning her a reputation as a benevolent person. Over time her reputation grew and she began to be worshiped as a goddess. This explains her ascension as queen, as she did not marry a king, nor did she inherit power from a parent. A cuneiform tablet from ancient Sumer depicts the importance of beer in the economy and society of ancient Mesopotamia.
There is a legend that those rulers who did not honor the god Marduk with fish offerings in the temple of Esagila met an unhappy end. Kubaba is believed to have fed a fisherman and in return asked him to offer his catch to the Esagila temple. Marduk’s benevolence in response is not surprising: “So be it,” said the god, and with that he “entrusted Kubaba, the innkeeper, with sovereignty over the whole world.” Some sources suggest that she was a member of the ruling Kish dynasty and that she inherited the throne from her father. Others suggest that she was an ordinary woman who rose to power through her own abilities and charisma. Whatever the truth, Kubaba was a wonderful leader who left a lasting mark on Kish. The Achievements of Queen Kubaba In ancient Sumerian tradition, the kingdom was not tied to a fixed capital, but rather moved from place to place, bestowed by the gods of a city and transferred at their will. Before Qubaba, who is the only member of the Third Dynasty of Kish, the capital was at Mari for more than a century and moved to Akshak after Qubaba. However, Kubaba’s son Puzer-Suen and grandson Ur-Zababa temporarily moved the capital back to Kish. Facade of the Temple of Inanna in Uruk, Iraq. Female deity pouring life-giving water.
One of Kubaba’s most significant achievements was the construction of a temple dedicated to the goddess Inanna. This temple was located in the heart of Kish and was one of the most important religious sites in the region. Kubaba is believed to have been a devoted worshiper of Inanna and the temple is a reflection of her religious beliefs and values. How the Universe Was Made: The Sumerian Version It’s Hard Not to Admire In addition to her religious projects, Kubaba was also a military leader at the head of a powerful army. She is said to have expanded Kish’s territory through a series of military campaigns that helped establish Kish as a major power in the region. Qubaba’s military power was an important factor in her rule and helped to ensure her continued dominance over Kish. Why did her reign end? Kubaba faced opposition from rival city-states and from Kish itself. Some say she was overthrown by her own subjects, while other better accounts suggest she abdicated the throne and retired into seclusion.
Photo: The Sumerian King List inscribed onto the Weld-Blundell Prism, with transcription / Public Domain
A documentary explores the Church of Scientology Padova and its activities while covering the rich diversity of the city.
PADOVA, PADOVA, ITALY, June 1, 2023/EINPresswire.com/ — Padova, a contemporary centre of culture and commerce, has remained faithful to its past as a medieval hub of learning, science, and innovation. The attractiveness of its public squares, its historical buildings and museums, and its distinctive cuisine are highly regarded.
The northern Italian city of Padova is home to a wide range of religious traditions and customs. Padova is a location where people of different religions can join together to celebrate their customs and beliefs, from the historic churches that dot the city’s landscape to the contemporary mosques that have sprung up in recent years and even a Church of Scientology. Come along on an exploration voyage as we uncover the depth of Padova’s religious variety.
In addition to having a long history of Christianity, Padova is also home to a rising Scientology population that dates back to 1980. The Church of Scientology Padova relocated in October 2012 to Villa Francesconi-Lanza, which is 15 minutes from the city centre. There, it gives individuals who are interested in L. Ron Hubbard‘s teachings a warm and welcoming environment. Scientology has grown to be an appealing choice for many people in Padova looking for a deeper understanding of themselves and the world around them because of its emphasis on spiritual enlightenment and personal growth.
Villa Francesconi-Lanza is a historic site (that one must visit if passing through Padova) that exemplifies the style of villas that flourished in the Veneto region during the 16th and 18th centuries. The property’s first documents show that the aristocratic Francesconi family of Padova built it in 1744. The villa prospered while they were in charge of it. An appraisal from 1785 hailed the “palace with its annexes that contain nine rooms with a central hall, its huge annexed stable 36 meters long, and the first floor that contains an additional nine rooms.” Additionally, the expert stated that “the building is in excellent condition and has been renovated and expanded to be used as a magnificent dwelling place.”
Due to its beauty and influence on the province, Scientology TV just published a documentary about it. The documentary demonstrates how Padova’s Scientology Church exemplifies the traditional ideals that are highlighted in a recent episode of Destination: Scientology. As they follow in Galileo’s footsteps at the University of Padova, one of the oldest universities in the world and founded in 1222, viewers get a glimpse into the rich history of the city in this episode. The documentary highlights the diversity of churches and the cooperation that weaves every Church of Scientology into the local community fabric through concerts, volunteering, drug prevention, and human rights education. Young people from all over Italy come to Padova to study at the university, adding to the vibrancy of the city.
What to visit from Judaism, Christianity and Islam while in Padova?
Visit the Basilica of Saint Anthony of Padua.
The Basilica of Saint Anthony of Padua is among the most well-known religious locations in Padova. Saint Anthony, a revered figure famed for his miracles and commitment to the underprivileged, is the subject of this gorgeous church. There are numerous exquisite pieces of art throughout the basilica, including frescoes created by well-known masters like Titian and Donatello.
Additionally, a chapel inside the church houses Saint Anthony’s grave, which is open to visitors. The Basilica of Saint Anthony of Padua is a must-visit location in this lovely city, regardless of whether you are a spiritual traveller or merely a fan of art and architecture.
Explore the Mosque of Padova.
In addition to having numerous churches, Padova also has a thriving Muslim community and a stunning mosque that is open to tourists. One of the biggest mosques in Italy, the Mosque of Padova, was constructed in the 1970s. The interior is embellished with beautiful tilework and calligraphy, and its remarkable architecture includes a dome and tower. Visitors are welcome to observe religious ceremonies or just take in the beauty of this significant location. The Padova Mosque is evidence of the city’s dedication to religious tolerance and diversity.
Experience Jewish Life in the Ashkenazi and the Sephardic Synagogues.
Additionally, Padova is home to two ancient synagogues that provide a window into the city’s Jewish history. The Ashkenazi Synagogue, which dates back to the 16th century and is a spectacular example of Renaissance architecture, has gorgeous murals and dexterous woodwork. Jewish exiles from Spain and Portugal constructed the Sephardic Synagogue in the 16th century, and it is just as magnificent with its elaborate embellishments and exquisite stained glass windows. Visitors interested in learning more about the lengthy history of Jewish life in Padova are welcome to visit both synagogues, which both provide guided tours.
Trace Christianity’s Origins at the Baptistery and Cathedral of San Pietro Martire.
Two of the most significant religious sites in Padova are the Baptistery and the Cathedral of San Pietro Martire, both of which date back to the 13th century. Given that Saint Anthony of Padua is thought to have been baptized there, the Baptistery is of exceptional historical significance. On the other side, the Cathedral is devoted to Saint Peter the Martyr, a Dominican friar who was killed for his faith in the 13th century. Both locations are a must-see for anybody interested in religious history, as they provide a fascinating look into the early days of Christianity in Padova.
On Wednesday afternoon, Georgian President Zourabichvili addressed the European Parliament in Brussels.
The first Georgian head of state to give a speech in the hemicycle for 13 years, President Salome Zourabichvili called for her country’s ‘reunification with its European family’ and for Georgia to be granted EU candidate status by the end of 2023. She stressed that Georgia’s European future starts with its European past, and recalled the price Georgia’s people have paid in the face of Russian aggression.
President Zourabichvili said the granting of EU candidate status to Georgia would give recognition to the Georgian people’s relentless fight for their European identity, provide protection and security for a Georgia that experienced multiple Russian occupations, help safeguard democracy, and cement the country’s role as a pro-European force in the Caucasus.
“Your recommendations are not some foreign ideas imposed on us – as was Soviet ideology. These are in essence Georgian. What you are recommending is that Georgia eliminates the remnants of the totalitarian past and reunite with itself and its European roots,” she said.
President Zourabichvili also emphasised the fact that EU candidate status will cement progress in a country marked by recent political polarisation and democratic backsliding.
‘While we are the first to understand our current shortcomings, we do not want those to overshadow our achievements. That for the past 30 years – that is one generation! – we have made extraordinary progress through substantial reforms,’ President Zourabichvili said.