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Agenda informativa de Europa Press La Rioja para hoy, viernes 25 de julio, en La Rioja

10.50.- En Logroño, reunión anual de los Testigos de Jehová en Las Gaunas.
http://www.finanzas.com/noticias/bolsas/2008-07-25/28273_agenda-informativa-europa-press-rioja.html

MADRID ACOGE LA ASAMBLEA ANUAL DE LOS TESTIGOS DE JEHOVÁ

MADRID ACOGE LA ASAMBLEA ANUAL DE LOS TESTIGOS DE JEHOVÁ

SERVIMEDIA

MADRID,

Miles de testigos de Jehová de Castilla-La Mancha, Castilla y León, Extremadura y Madrid se reunirán desde mañana hasta el domingo en el Palacio de los Deportes de Madrid para celebrar su asamblea anual, que tratará sobre “dónde encontrar guía confiable en la vida”.

Según informó esta organización religiosa cristiana, está previsto que se reúnan en la capital cerca de 12.000 personas en este congreso, así como en otro que se celebrará los días 1, 2 y 3 de agosto.

El contenido de la asamblea, indicaron los organizadores, se centrará en dos aspectos: “por qué se necesita guía confiable hoy día, y quién puede dar a las personas los mejores consejos en todo aspecto de la vida”.

Según datos de la organización, en España hay más de 105.000 testigos de Jehová, mientras en todo el mundo hay casi siete millones repartidos en más de 101.000 congregaciones o comunidades locales.

http://www.discapnet.es/Discapnet/Castellano/Actualidad/Noticias/Linea+Social/detalle?id=130508

Bethel de Brazil

Bethel from Brazil (São Paulo)

Bethel de Colombia

Cow Palace in Daly City (San Francisco),California

Tornado, neosho, MO Missouri.- Hope of the Resurrection

http://www.neoshodailynews.com/homepage/x934421120

Neosho, Mo Missouri. Let Jehovah deal with your losses Perhaps you don’t understand the faith this brother has. He has faith in Jehovah his God, that soon he will see his family coming back in life in God’s promised a new world and new system. John 11:25, Jesus said: I’m the resurecction and the life. He that exercises faith in me, even though he dies, will come to life. The resurrection hope is a real source of comfort to him and countless others who have lost loved ones. It can be to you too!!

Four members of the local Monroe family were killed in Saturday’s tornado, and now the remaining siblings are calling on their faith to help them deal with their losses. But they say, they will be just fine. Jeremy Monroe says, “You cannot go through something like this and not be marred, however, Jehovah has put his hand around me like i have never felt it before.” Jeremy Monroe says his parents and brothers loved their god and their family with their whole hearts, and his family is coping with the losses the only way they can. Jeremy says, “There’s only one way and it is my faith. There is only one God and it is Jehovah God.” Jeremy’s brother Daniel Junior and his wife Heather were injured, but he says they’re in great hands at Freeman Hospital. “They’re currently in there mending, they’re receiving fabulous care. I have gratitude for every staff member in that hospital.” The Monroes were remembered at a memorial service thursday at Memorial Hall in Joplin, and now the family says they will leave it up to Jehovah to take care of them. Jeremy monroe says they don’t ask for money or much assistance, they just ask the community to listen. “The next time a Jehovah’s Witness stops, just listen and let Jehovah take care of them,”

Alrededor de 200 Testigos de Jehová asisten al encuentro anual en Madrid

Se estima que asistirán a la cita 10.000 personas procedentes de Madrid, Castilla León y Extremadura. Entre ellos figuran alrededor de 200 placentinos.

Cada año una amplia representación de los Testigos de Jehová se reúne en la capital española. En esta ocasión, el acto tiene lugar en el Palacio de los Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid el próximo fin de semana.

Desde el viernes 25 de julio y durante tres días se suceden una serie de actos en los que participan las 25 congregaciones que conforman los miembros de las citadas regiones. Todos pertenecientes a un mismo distrito. Acuden también numerosos asistentes que no son testigos. El motivo de la reunión no es otro que «encontrar una guía confiable en la vida». Por ello la asamblea lleva por título ‘Guiados por el espíritu de Dios’.

La organización prevé una excelente asistencia.

http://www.hoy.es/20080723/plasencia/alrededor-testigos-jehova-asisten-20080723.html

Para los que aman a Jehová

RUSSIA: Is mass disruption to Jehovah’s Witness congresses coordinated?

By Geraldine Fagan, Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org>, and
Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org>

The authorities have prevented about eight Jehovah’s Witness congresses from taking place so far this summer while about thirty have gone ahead despite official attempts to obstruct them, Marina Topuriya of the Jehovah’s Witnesses told Forum 18 News Service. The FSB security service, local administrations and Prosecutor’s Offices have all been involved. Congresses in Kemerovo and Kirov due to have begun on 25 July are the latest to be abruptly cancelled. “We suspect it’s co-ordinated, because everywhere the methods are the same,” she noted. “It’s difficult to say where the wind is blowing from. But we can see the results.” The FSB security service in Moscow refused to discuss with Forum 18 their role in the cancellations, but an officer in Vladikavkaz denied that the FSB had obstructed the local Jehovah’s Witness congress. A pending legal case in Sverdlovsk Region could see many Jehovah’s Witness books and magazines – including “Watchtower” – declared extremist and banned. Acting Public Prosecutor Aleksei Almayev denied that this was a “witch hunt” and dismissed Jehovah’s Witness fears that the magazine could be banned in its entirety. Religious freedom lawyer Anatoli Pchelintsev shares the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ concerns. “I feel [the authorities] want to close down the Jehovah’s Witnesses in Russia, though of course they physically couldn’t do this.”

Officials in dozens of cities across Russia are moving to try to block Jehovah’s Witnesses’ regional summer congresses, Forum 18 News Service has learnt. Four such events set for 18-20 July alone faced disruption and pressure to close them down. “We’ve seen nothing like this before,” lawyer Marina Topuriya of the organisation’s St Petersburg headquarters told Forum 18 on 22 July. “We suspect it’s co-ordinated, because everywhere the methods are the same.” However, she declined to speculate who might have taken the decision to launch such a coordinated campaign. “It’s difficult to say where the wind is blowing from. But we can see the results.”

Jehovah’s Witnesses say obstruction and pressure to cancel the congresses came from the Federal Security Service (FSB), local administrations, the local police and the Prosecutor’s Office. “There’s a ladder, but when things happen so fast it’s clear it comes from the top,” Topuriya told Forum 18.

Anatoli Pchelintsev of the Moscow-based Slavic Centre for Law and Justice, which has taken up many religious freedom cases, notes that while other religious communities face obstruction from the authorities, the Jehovah’s Witnesses currently face the most serious problems. “The attempts to obstruct their congresses and ban their literature could be coordinated, though I have no proof,” he told Forum 18 from Moscow on 22 July. “I believe the law-enforcement agencies are behind it. I feel they want to close down the Jehovah’s Witnesses in Russia, though of course they physically couldn’t do this.”

Pchelintsev pointed out that the reasons officials have given in some places for cancelling the Jehovah’s Witness congresses – particularly accusations that they have violated the 2004 Demonstrations Law – are not legally valid. “The Demonstrations Law doesn’t cover religious events,” he told Forum 18. “In law religious organisations don’t have to inform anyone that they’re holding a meeting – they can just rent premises and go ahead. If they’re renting a stadium, it is sensible to tell the police so that they can manage security, but they don’t have to.”

Given the reported involvement in many of the incidents of the FSB, Forum 18 tried to find out if it had coordinated the actions. However, an official of its Public Relations Department in Moscow declined to give any information. “I won’t give you any comment,” the official – who refused to give his name – told Forum 18 from Moscow on 22 July. “I won’t help you.” He then put the phone down.

In Russia as elsewhere, numerous Jehovah’s Witness congregations come together for a special programme of religious instruction at annual congresses. Topuriya reported that as of 22 July, some eight congresses had been prevented from taking place, while some 30 had gone ahead with difficulty. “Of these, six or seven faced serious obstruction. They even obstruct congresses held on our own property.” She said she feared that the forty or so more that are due to take place might be obstructed.

Topuriya said the latest congresses to be obstructed were due to have begun in Kemerovo in south-western Siberia and Kirov (Kirov Region) on 25 July. “Agreements had been signed to rent premises in both cities, but the directors then cancelled, apparently under pressure,” she told Forum 18. “When our people started to book buses to take our members to the venues, moves started and the directors quickly cancelled.”

Topuriya said that because of the growing difficulties, the Jehovah’s Witnesses have been forced to organise the events as quietly as possible to try to prevent the authorities finding out. “We’re forced to be cautious,” she explained. “In Kemerovo they approached a Jehovah’s Witness trying to find out from her when and where the congress was to take place. She immediately understood and didn’t say.” Topuriya insists that the authorities listen in to telephone calls to try to find out.

In the Urals city of Yekaterinburg, the municipal authorities issued a decree banning the gathering on the grounds that it violates the 2004 Demonstrations Law, Topuriya told Forum 18. Like Pchelintsev, the Jehovah’s Witnesses insist that religious events held on private premises do not come under the 2004 Law. They point to Article 16, part 2 of the 1997 Religion Law, which says that worship meetings can be held without obstruction in premises made available to religious organisations.

Speaking from Yekaterinburg on 18 July, Jehovah’s Witness press officer Yaroslav Sivulsky said that the first day of the congress had gone ahead at Uralmash Stadium with approximately 4,000 participants despite visits from police and other local state representatives, who maintained that they should have informed the authorities 20 days in advance under the Demonstrations Law. However, Article 7, part 1 of this law requires notice of between 10 and 15 days. “This is just sloppiness on their part – they don’t know the law,” Sivulsky complained.

The lawyer Pchelintsev agrees. “The Demonstrations Law nowhere demands 20 days’ notice,” he told Forum 18.

Separately, FSB security service officers acting under the auspices of Asbest Interdistrict Investigation Section of Sverdlovsk Regional Public Prosecutor’s Office raided the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ local kingdom hall in Yekaterinburg on the morning of 16 July, Sivulsky told Forum 18. “They confiscated a great deal of literature – one copy of everything from the library,” he reported. Books and journals were taken as part of a local investigation into their allegedly extremist content (see F18News 14 July 2008 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=1159).

The duty officer at the Sverdlovsk Region FSB and a colleague to whom he directed the enquiry – neither of whom would give their names – refused to discuss the 16 July Yekaterinburg raid with Forum 18 on 22 July.

Asbest’s acting Public Prosecutor Aleksei Almayev defended the FSB seizure of the literature but denied that it had been a raid. “It was a search and the literature was taken as part of the investigation,” he told Forum 18 on 22 July. “They just took one or two copies of each publication. There was so much literature that there were not enough staff to take it all.”

Almayev also defended the investigation into the Jehovah’s Witness literature. “It’s not a witch hunt.” He said it was launched after complaints from “citizens of the Russian Federation”. Asked who had complained, he responded: “Catholics, Orthodox, Buddhists and Muslims – they all believe their rights have been harmed by this literature.”

While several Jehovah’s Witness magazines, including “Watchtower”, are among the publications being investigated, Almayev insisted that no court has the right to ban an entire magazine. “The court would determine that a concrete article in a concrete issue of a concrete magazine had violated the law,” he maintained. “Of course they can’t ban the whole publication.”

Yet this is precisely what Sivulsky fears. “It’s not logical from a legal point of view, but we’re afraid that they’ll ban all issues of our journals, not just individual articles or individual issues,” he told Forum 18. The lawyer Pchelintsev agrees. “The Jehovah’s Witnesses are right to be worried. The court could deem the whole publication extremist under the Extremism Law and then anyone distributing it would face prison and the religious organisation itself could be closed down.”

Numerous Muslim works have been placed on the Federal List of Extremist Materials after courts found them to be “extremist”, often with no specific proof being cited (see F18News 17 July 2008 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=1160).

The local authorities in the northern port of Murmansk are also insisting that the Jehovah’s Witnesses should have notified the mayor, police and emergency services 20 days before their 18 to 20 July congress. Viewed by Forum 18, a 7 July letter from the city’s October District Administration maintains that this is required according to a 5 December 2006 decision on public meetings by Murmansk City Council. October District received the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ notification on 7 July, 11 days before the event. Their congress nevertheless went ahead at the city’s Central Trades Union Stadium.

In May 2007 the Jehovah’s Witnesses were refused permission to build a kingdom hall in a Murmansk suburb, Regnum news agency reported.

In the Siberian city of Irkutsk, the Jehovah’s Witnesses began their congress at Labour Stadium on 18 July despite warnings by visiting local officials that it was in violation of a local public prosecutor’s office injunction, according to Sivulsky. “They asked why we were holding the event despite the ban, but as we had a valid contract before it was issued, we will follow that,” he told Forum 18. Prior to the congress, the Prosecutor’s Office wrote to the stadium director and warned of a possible fine, the Jehovah’s Witness press officer added.

In Nizhny Novgorod, 2,000 Jehovah’s Witnesses convened at premises belonging to one of their members, Topuriya told Forum 18. On 19 July the FSB detained some of the community and queried the presence of children at the event, she said, but the congress went ahead nevertheless.

Two congresses set for 11-13 July were also beset by difficulties. In the Siberian city of Novosibirsk, a holiday camp director backed out of an agreement shortly before Jehovah’s Witnesses were due to meet, citing police pressure, Topuriya told Forum 18. The event went ahead elsewhere.

In the Urals city of Perm, it is unclear whether a congress originally scheduled for 11-13 July will take place later. A local public prosecutor insisted that the Jehovah’s Witnesses should have notified the local authorities at least 20 days beforehand in accordance with the 2004 Demonstration Law, according to Topuriya.

For the first time, the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ federal body could not hold a congress in Moscow, Sivulsky told Forum 18. Despite support from the city authorities, Luzhniki Stadium refused to lease its premises on 4-6 July “due to some sort of pressure,” he said. Some 30,000 participants were due to attend the event, which in summer 2007 was held at the same stadium.

The Russian capital’s Golovinsky District Court banned the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ Moscow local religious organisation in 2004 (see F18News 25 May 2004 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=327).

In the southern city of Volgograd, police and public prosecutor representatives tried to prevent a 5-6 July congress but backed off when the Jehovah’s Witnesses pointed out their legal rights, Sivulsky told Forum 18.

In the north-eastern European cities of Izhevsk and Kirov, local Jehovah’s Witnesses were unexpectedly unable to secure rented premises for their congresses, Sivulsky told Forum 18. Never having been refused previously in Izhevsk, “this time they couldn’t get any rental agreement anywhere,” he explained. “Last year the police came and shut off the water and electricity, but we managed to continue at a sports arena outside town.”

In the North Caucasus city of Vladikavkaz, the local FSB told the director of the Manezh centre where the Jehovah’s Witnesses intended to hold their congress to agree to lease the premises but to cancel the agreement the day before the event, which he did, Sivulsky maintained to Forum 18. He said the Manezh centre – the biggest sports hall in the city – had been happy to rent the premises to them in earlier years.

The operational duty officer of the North Ossetian FSB in Vladikavkaz – who refused to give his name – denied that the FSB had been involved in cancelling any religious event. “According to the law the FSB doesn’t obstruct the activity of religious organisations,” he told Forum 18 from the city on 22 July. Told that the Jehovah’s Witnesses insist that the FSB had been behind the sudden cancellation of the rental agreement, the duty officer responded: “This is a delusion. I don’t know why they think that.”

Sivulsky pointed out that officials have been repeatedly conducting “check-ups” – such as tax inspections – on the Jehovah’s Witness headquarters in St Petersburg since 2004. “They’ve been looking for reasons to close down the headquarters,” he told Forum 18.

Testigos de Jehová cerró su asamblea anual en Tenerife

Testigos de Jehová cerró su asamblea anual en Tenerife
Unas 3.000 personas acudieron este fin de semana al Santiago Martín


El pabellón Santiago Martín acogió a la asamblea de los Testigos. / l. l.

DIARIO DE AVISOS
SANTA CRUZ

El Pabellón Insular Santiago Martín acogió ayer la clausura de la asamblea anual de los Testigos Cristianos de Jehová, inaugurada el pasado viernes y en la que más de 3.000 personas procedentes de las islas de La Palma, La Gomera, El Hierro y Tenerife, asistieron a este encuentro en el que el eje central fue dónde encontrar una guía confiable en la vida, según explicó la organización en una nota.

El programa comenzó el pasado viernes centrado en dos aspectos fundamentales: por qué se necesita guía confiable hoy en día, y quién puede dar a las personas los mejores consejos en todo aspecto de la vida.

Los Testigos que integran las 30 congregaciones de habla española, así como la congregación de habla China, han conformado una excelente asistencia comparable a la magnífica acogida de su asamblea de distrito del año pasado, que tuvo por tema, ¡Sigamos a Cristo! La reunión también dio la bienvenida a los numerosos asistentes que no son Testigos.

Tan solo en España se celebrarán 305 asambleas de distrito en 76 ciudades. En todo el territorio nacional hay más de 105.000 Testigos, mientras que en todo el mundo hay casi 7.000.000 repartidos en más de 101.000 congregaciones o comunidades locales. El año pasado asistieron más de 12.000.000 de personas a las 3.200 asambleas de distrito que los testigos celebraron por todo el mundo.

Historia.

Testigos de Jehová es el nombre de una organización religiosa internacional que promueve y practica una religión entendida por sus adherentes como una restauración del modo de vida e ideas originales de los primeros cristianos del siglo I.

Creencias.

Basan sus creencias en la Biblia, usando para ello preferentemente la Traducción del Nuevo Mundo de las Santas Escrituras (edición publicada por la propia organización) aunque también aceptan y citan otras traducciones bíblicas. Para la interpretación y estudio emplean las publicaciones editadas por las diferentes sociedades que los representan legalmente (denominadas comúnmente como Sociedad Watchtower), cuyos ejemplos más conocidos son las revistas La Atalaya: Anunciando el Reino de Jehová y ¡Despertad!, que también distribuyen públicamente y se originó en el siglo XIX en Estados Unidos.

http://www.diariodeavisos.com/diariodeavisos/content/215382/

El Papa tiene una prima testigo de Jehová

El articulo completo aqui : http://noticias.amigostestigos.com/pope-remembers-steffie/

LA ANCIANA, QUE AHORA VIVE EN AUSTRALIA, FUE SU COMPAÑERA DE JUEGOS DURANTE LA INFANCIA
El Papa tiene una prima testigo de Jehová
RD/Agencias
Viernes, 18 de julio 2008

http://www.periodistadigital.com/religion/object.php?o=947969

Steffie Brzakovic es una anciana que vive en Cooma, una localidad australiana de 8.000 almas cerca de Canberra. Tiene 81 años, como el Papa, y también es alemana. Más allá de estas coincidencias, al Pontífice le unen estrechos vínculos de sangre: la señora Brzakovic es prima segunda del Papa (su madre, Katherine, era prima de la madre de Joseph Ratzinger). Mientras su ilustre primo se convertía en guardián del Santo Oficio antes de subir al trono de San Pedro, ella abandonaba la religión católica para abrazar la fe de los Testigos de Jehová.
Brzakovic Kopp, una prima de Benedicto XVI que vive en Australia desde 1955, perderá la oportunidad de ver al pontífice, debido a que su avanzada edad la obliga a permanecer confinada en su casa de una localidad cercana a Melbourne.

La mujer no ve a su pariente Joseph Ratzinger desde 1979, cuando éste era aún arzobispo de Munich; en 2005, al ser electo Papa, ella expresó su deseo de poder verlo de nuevo y la visita apostólica a Sydney parecía ser el momento ideal.

Kopp creció con Ratzinger jugando durante la guerra en Alemania. El padre de Erika era hermano de la madre del pontífice, María Ratzinger. Kopp emigró a Australia en 1955.
Benedicto XVI se muestra comprensivo con la fe de su prima, según declaró ella en una entrevista al diario Canberra Times. «Me dijo: estáis haciendo lo que deberíamos hacer nosotros», refiriéndose a la actividad misionera de los Testigos de Jehová. «Y añadió: tenéis salas pequeñas, pero llenas; nosotros tenemos catedrales e iglesias, a menudo vacías».

Norco, Jehovah’s Witnesses Bible Convention for deaf, ASL

The Press Enterprise

Slideshow: A Jehovah’s Witness meeting in sign language

As many as 2,000 Jehovah’s Witnesses are expected to attend the first day of an American Sign Language Bible convention today in Norco, a sign of expanding efforts by religious denominations to reach out to the deaf and hard-of-hearing.

An increasing number of congregations offer worship services that are either fully in sign language or are interpreted for deaf people. The Jehovah’s Witnesses, which began ASL interpretations of spoken services in the 1940s, has been one of the leaders in deaf outreach in recent decades. Deaf churches have been around since the late 1800s. Four Inland Jehovah’s Witness kingdom halls — similar to churches — offer meetings entirely in ASL or have sign-language interpretation of spoken meetings.

Many members of the San Bernardino Jehovah’s Witness deaf ministry grew up as Catholics or members of other faiths, said Michael Gallagher, an elder with the ministry who is almost fully deaf.

Gallagher’s parents required him to attend Catholic Mass even though he did not understand it. When Gallagher, 56, of Colton, first started attending Jehovah’s Witnesses meetings in 1975, there were ASL interpretations only of spoken meetings. In 1989, the first entirely ASL Jehovah’s Witnesses congregation was set up in New York. Today there are more than 100.

Gallagher said interpreters cannot always capture the full meaning or spirit of what speakers are saying.

“Some of the brothers would speak really fast and the interpreter would miss some of the information,” he said through an interpreter. “It caused a lot of stress on us and the interpreters. Being in a full sign-language congregation, we feel more involved.”

The San Bernardino kingdom hall is outfitted with two video screens and a wall upon which ASL communicators’ signs are projected.

Wendy Barnes sings in American Sign Language at a Jehovah’s Witnesses meeting in ASL in San Bernardino.

Bible on DVDs

Jehovah’s Witnesses are creating an ASL version of the Bible on DVD so viewers can watch a verse-by-verse ASL reading; several books of the Bible already are available. A Mormon ASL Bible and Book of Mormon were released several years ago.

Some deaf people have little or no understanding of written English, so Bibles and religious readings can be unintelligible. ASL has different syntax than English.

Jehovah’s Witnesses Congress 2008 in Aruba

Jehovah’s Witnesses Congress 2008 in Aruba

Jehovah’s Witnesses Congress 2008 in Aruba

Sigi e Guia di Dios su Spiritu Santu
Guide by God’s Spirit
Geleid door God Geest
Guiados por el Espiritu de Dios

Hamburg Convention 2008

Hamburg Convention 2008