Ottawa names street ‘St. Charbel Way’ after Lebanese saint

One of the largest Lebanese communities in North America successfully renamed a section of Donald Street in Ottawa, Canada to St. Charbel Way, according to the Ottawa-based news outlet CTV News Ottawa.

The celebration included fireworks, speeches and a visit from the Maronite Patriarch Bechara Boutros al-Rahi, who entered on a horse-drawn carriage.

WATCH: Patriarch Rai enters on a horse-drawn carriage:

Rai was present to mark the occasion while he was on a ten-day tour of eastern Canada, where he visited other cities to meet with members of the Maronite Catholic community.

Maronite Patriarch Bechara Boutros al-Rahi visits the Lebanese community in Ottawa, Canada. (Facebook/Maronites Canada)
Maronite Patriarch Bechara Boutros al-Rahi visits the Lebanese community in Ottawa, Canada. (Facebook/Maronites Canada)

RELATED: Pope approves Lebanon to list of ‘Christian pilgrimage’ sites

The day ended with a Lebanese heritage celebration mass and gala dinner.

WATCH: Unveiling of Saint Charbel Way in Ottawa, Canada:

The Lebanese community in Ottawa is one of the largest in Canada, and holds one of the largest Lebanese festivals in the world every year.

St. Sharbel Maronite Catholic Church opens in Michigan

Named after a saint known for his miracles around the world,  St. Sharbel Maronite Catholic Church announced its opening of a 29,000-square-foot church in Clinton Township, Michigan.

The church is home to one of the largest Maronite communities in the United States. It was formerly located in Warren, but moved to Clinton Township as part of a major expansion and construction project.

St. Sharbel Maronite Catholic Church is located at 43888 Hayes Road in Clinton Township, Michigan. (Lebanese Examiner)
St. Sharbel Maronite Catholic Church is located at 43888 Hayes Road in Clinton Township, Michigan. (Lebanese Examiner)

“We are delighted to welcome our parishioners to their new home,” said Chorbishop Alfred Badawi, pastor of St. Sharbel Maronite Catholic Church. “This beautiful new church helps accommodate our growing parish, which is a testament to the vibrancy of the Maronite Catholic faith in Michigan.”

The church features architectural influences from among the world’s most historic churches in Lebanon, where St. Sharbel was born and lived as a solitary hermit. St. Sharbel was beatified Dec. 5, 1965, and canonized Oct. 9, 1977.

Thousands of tourists from around the world visit St. Sharbel in Annaya, Lebanon annually. (Lebanese Examiner)
Thousands of tourists from around the world visit St. Sharbel in Annaya, Lebanon annually. (Lebanese Examiner)

“It is humbling to build an honor for St. Sharbel, who has performed dozens of miracles right here in metro Detroit, and who inspires devotion among Christians of all denominations, “Chorbishop Badawi added. “This move to Clinton Township secures the foundation of our future and safeguards the mission of the Maronite community, allowing us to preserve the treasures of our traditional values and culture for decades to come.”

For more than three decades, St. Sharbel Maronite Catholic Church has served a diverse population of parishioners in southeastern Michigan, including a large population who immigrated to Detroit from Lebanon and other Middle Eastern countries.

Ancient relics of Saint Marina the Monk arrive in Lebanon

The ancient relics of Saint Marina the Monk have landed at the Beirut Rafic Hariri International Airport, the state-run Lebanese National News agency reported.

Saint Marina’s preserved body arrived in a glass box, and was transported to the Maronite Patriarchate in Dimane.

According to Christian teachings, Marina lived in Lebanon’s Kadisha Valley as a monk in the 5th century. She was disguised as a man under the name Marinos.

Marina renounced women’s clothing and said she wanted to live as a monk to dedicate her life to religion, Maronite accounts said.

Saint Marina the Monk arrives at the Beirut International Airport. (Lebanese National News Agency)
Saint Marina the Monk arrives at the Beirut International Airport. (Lebanese National News Agency)

Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil and Maronite religious representatives welcomed the relics of Saint Marina at the airport, and watched the transfer from Venice to Lebanon.

The relics were kept and venerated in Venice by the Catholic Church for nearly 200 years.

The relics will remain in Lebanon until July 23, NNA added.

Report: Pope approves Lebanon to list of ‘Christian pilgrimage’ sites

Pope Francis has reportedly approved Lebanon to the official list of Christian pilgrimage sites in 2019, according to the state-run Lebanese National News agency.

Lebanese Charge d’Affaires in Vatican City Khalil Karam told NNA the authorization will put Lebanon back on the list of official pilgrimage destinations for the first time in 12 years.

Lebanon was previously on the list in 2007.

Worshipers gather at the site of St. Sharbel in Annaya, Lebanon. (Lebanese Examiner)
Worshipers gather at the site of St. Sharbel in Annaya, Lebanon. (Lebanese Examiner)

Karam said President Michel Aoun discussed the potential move with senior Vatican officials during a visit in March 2017.

He said leaders from the Lebanese government have been holding meetings with Vatican officials about recommended pilgrimage sites, hotels and accommodations.

The announcement is expected to attract thousands of Christian pilgrims to Lebanon, and boost the tourism industry. Lebanon relies heavily on the tourism industry, accounting for about 18 percent of the country’s GDP.

Lebanon is one of the earliest regions to adopt Christianity, and was mentioned in the Old Testament. The country is also home to the Maronite Church and the birthplace to several Maronite saints.

Maronite church in Virginia to hold large Lebanese food festival

Members of a Maronite Catholic community in Virginia are planning a large Lebanese food festival from May 18 to May 20 on church grounds.

St. Anthony Maronite Church in Glen Allen, Virginia will serve up a smorgasbord of Lebanese dishes — everything from spinach and cheese pies to shawarma sandwiches.

lebanese food festival va 2

The three-day festival is a glimpse into Lebanese food, dessert and culture for the Virginia town and its nearby communities.

lebanese food festival va 1

For the first time this year, festival organizers invited members of the St. Rafqa Choir from Lebanon to perform folk and religious music on Friday and Saturday night.

Admission is free, but food prices range from $2 to $9. The festival is fundraising opportunity for the church.

For a full list of menu items, click here. For more information about the festival, click here.

St. Sharbel relics make rounds through Metro Detroit

(DETROIT) — The historic relics of Saint Sharbel made rounds through Metro Detroit this month, appearing in three Maronite parishes for believers to see and pray over.

More than 2,000 people visited the relics on Saturday at St. Matthias Catholic Church in Sterling Heights, Mich.

Hundreds of Chaldeans packed an evening mass presided over by Bishop Francis Kalabat of the Chaldean diocese.

“We’re very proud and we’re happy that it gets all the community together with the Lebanese people,” Lamia Sitto, a Chaldean parishioner from St George Chaldean Catholic Church, said.

Hundreds of people stood in line to touch and pray over the relics, which are visiting the U.S. from Lebanon.

“The Chaldean people have been shopping, praying and coming through for the last two days all day long,” St. Sharbel parishioner Char Fortuna said. “We kind of expected a huge crowd tonight.”

WATCH St. Sharbel Relics Visit Detroit:

Maronite Patriarch Rai on pastoral visit in Syria

(DAMASCUS, SYRIA) — Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai arrived in Syria on Sunday for a pastoral visit to participate in Maronite and Orthodox celebrations in Damascus this week.

Rai accepted the invitation of Orthodox Patriarch Youhanna X Yazigi to witness the opening of the new Orthodox Patriarchate in Syria’s capital.

Walid Ghayyad, director of Bkerke’s media office, said Rai’s visit will not include any political meetings. He said the meeting has three objectives — inaugurating the Maronite Social Center, participating in a Christian spiritual summit, and attending the inauguration of the Orthodox patriarchate.

“We came for peace and for peaceful solutions in Syria and for the endurance of Syrians in their land, both Christians and Muslims,” Rai said, following a visit to a French hospital in Damascus.

LBCI television reported that Syrian Islamic Endowments Minister Mohammed Sayyed and a delegation of Muslim clerics met with Rai at the Maronite Archbishopric on Sunday.

He later delivered a sermon at the Maronite church in the Christian Bab Touma neighborhood.

“In this Levant, we are witnessing a strategy of absurd wars aimed at chaos, destruction and killing,” he said. “We demand an end to the injustice against our people, we demand peace, we demand an end to the war and we demand political solutions.”

Rai admitted that his previous visits to Syria have “(been criticized),” even though the Maronite church has churches and offices in Syria.

LBCI reports that Rai was welcomed by Maronite Archbishop of Damascus Samir Nassar and Greek Orthodox Vicar General Bishop Ephraim Maalouli at the Syrian border area of Jdeidet Yabous when he arrived.

Rai: Christian exodus weakens moderate Islam

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — The exodus of Christians from the Middle East will weaken moderate Islam “which, thanks to the Islamic-Christian conviviality, is so far the vast majority of Muslims in the Middle East,” said Lebanese Cardinal Bechara Rai.

Speaking at UNESCO in Paris on April 25, the cardinal said Christians were “irreplaceable peacemakers” and, without them, “Islam will fall into the hands of fundamentalists.” He called on Europe and the international community “to ensure that Christians remain in their countries.”

The first condition to save this presence, he said, is “the resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.”

The speech at UNESCO was on the first day of a four-day visit to France, where the cardinal inaugurated the new Maronite Diocese in Meudon, near Paris. There are approximately 85,000 Maronite Catholics in France.

In his speech, the cardinal pleaded for an end to the ongoing conflicts, particularly in Syria, Iraq and Yemen, “through political negotiations and dialogue between the conflicting parties.”

“Stop supporting the belligerents with arms and money,” he urged. Instead, he said, “It is essential to assist countries in the region to emerge from the bloody conflicts that consume them, peoples and civilisations.”

Cardinal Rai also spoke on behalf of people uprooted from their homes in the region.

“I came to UNESCO to bring the voice of those who had it taken from them. I come here to vouch for the plight of millions of refugees, displaced people, children and seniors, women and men who lost loved ones, who had their country and property stolen, their future destroyed,” he said.

Lebanon is now hosting more than 1.5 million Syrian refugees. In April, Antonio Guterres, UN high commissioner for refugees, said that would be the equivalent of 80 million refugees entering the United States.

Thousands of Christian Iraqi families have also come to Lebanon since the Islamic State’s takeover of Mosul and the Ninevah Plain last summer.

Prior to the influx of refugees, approximately 33 percent of Lebanon’s existing population of about four million was Christian. That sectarian equation has shifted, as most of the Syrian refugees are Muslim.

Cardinal Rai was scheduled to meet French President Francois Hollande on April 28. High on the agenda, in addition to the crisis of the Christian presence in the region, was Lebanon’s presidential vacuum. Under Lebanon’s power-sharing system, the post is reserved for a Maronite but has been vacant since May, when the term of Michel Sleiman ended without the election of a successor due to ongoing disputes between rival political parties over a compromise candidate.

Source: Catholic Herald

Australian PM attends Good Friday mass at Lebanese church

(SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA) — Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott attended Good Friday mass at St Charbel Maronite Catholic Church in southeastern Sydney, Australia on Friday.

“It was an honour for Margie and I to attend Bishop Tarabay’s Good Friday Liturgy in Punchbowl this morning,” he wrote on Twitter.

Abbott joined thousands of Maronite Catholics for the traditional Christian holiday, which commemorates the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. He also delivered the fifth reading during the service.

“For through the law I die to the law so that I might live to God,” he read from Galatians.”I have been crucified with Christ and it is no longer I that live, but it is Christ that lives in me.”

Australian media reports say St. Charbel draws one of the largest gathering of Catholics in Australia. It is estimated that 53 percent of Lebanese-Australians are Maronite Catholic.

Photo: Tony Abbott reads from the Bible during a Good Friday service at St Charbel's Church in Sydney's south-west. (ABC News: Mhairi McClymont)
Photo: Tony Abbott reads from the Bible during a Good Friday service at St Charbel’s Church in Sydney’s south-west. (ABC News: Mhairi McClymont)

St. Charbel was first established in Australia in 1972 when Cardinal James Darcy Freeman gave the Lebanese Maronite Order a green light to build a chapel. Since then, the church has become one of the largest Maronite communities in the world.

Catholic Archbishop of Sydney Anthony Fisher used his Easter message to discuss the religious persecution of Christians around the world.

“Terrorism and religious persecution are now also major concerns, especially in the Middle East, Africa and Asia,’ he said.

Australian Labor MP Tony Burke also attended and spoke at the service.

Maronite Bishop urges ‘profound defiance’ in face of Christian persecution

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(NASHVILLE, TN) — Maronite Bishop Gregory Mansour of Brooklyn told students at Belmont University students about the need for all Christians to respond to persecution with “profound defiance.”

Pointing out that this was markedly different from vengeful retaliation or submissive inaction, Bishop Mansour said: “Jesus was not a passive victim. Christians are not just asked to be nice people and doormats.”

He told the Belmont students that they are called to stand in solidarity with the persecuted Christians in the Middle East, and to join forces with other Christians, Jews and Muslims of goodwill to raise a voice against “the worst injustice you can imagine,” that is currently happening at the hands of Islamic State militants.

Bishop Mansour spoke at Belmont as part of the Nashville university’s “Chapel Speakers” series co-sponsored by the College of Theology and Christian Ministry.

“We try to bring in speakers from across the denomination spectrum,” said Todd Lake, vice president for spiritual development at Belmont. “We are a multidenominational Christian university,” said Lake, noting that about 15 percent of the student body is Catholic.

When Lake approached Nashville Bishop David Choby about his recommendation for someone who could speak on the plight of persecuted Christians in the Middle East, he suggested Bishop Mansour.

In addition to leading the Eparchy of St Maron of Brooklyn, Bishop Mansour is also a leader of Christian Arab and Middle Eastern Churches Together, based in Lebanon, where he was ordained a bishop in 2004. He did his graduate work at The Catholic University of America in Washington, Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome and at the University of California-Los Angeles in the Near Eastern languages and cultures program with an emphasis on Islamic studies.

The Maronite Catholic Church is one of the largest Eastern Catholic churches in the world, with more than 3.3 million members. Bishop Mansour’s eparchy includes Maronite churches in 13 states in the eastern United States and the District of Columbia. There are currently no Maronite churches in Tennessee.

Bishop Mansour visited Syrian refugee camps in Lebanon, his ancestral homeland, over the summer, and saw firsthand the suffering of Christians and other minorities who have been violently forced from their homes.

Witnessing the refugees’ plight was difficult, but visiting the region “made me proud to be a Christian,” Bishop Mansour said, noting the hospitals, schools, and centers for the poor and disabled that Catholic groups continue to operate in the midst of the chaos.

Even though “Christians in the Middle East are under persecution from every side,” he said, they “are the salt and light.”

During his talk, Bishop Mansour noted the historical divisions among Christians, even within the Catholic Church, but said that “amazing unity is happening today.”

Eastern Catholic patriarchs from around the world recently visited Iraq to show their solidarity with the persecuted Iraqis. Additionally, Bishop Mansour was part of a major In Defense of Christians summit in Washington in September that brought together nearly a thousand Christian leaders, politicians and laypeople to launch a massive effort on behalf of the minority communities of the Middle East.

In remarks at the summit and at Belmont, Bishop Mansour championed the art of nonviolent resistance, which he said worked for the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr., Mahatma Gandhi and St John Paul II. This requires “much prayer, much fasting, much building of solidarity,” he said.

“Peace is possible, but it takes a lot of hard work.”

Catholic News Service

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