Friday, November 27, 2009

End Stage Liver Disease How Much Time

Immigrants, Pope's appeal: "They have inalienable rights"

The Vatican expresses "sorrow" and "sadness" for the operation of "White Christmas" in the town of Coccaglio

CITY 'OF THE VATICAN - "The migrant is a human person with inalienable fundamental rights to be respected by all and always." This was the thrust of Benedict XVI, referring to the Day of Migrants and Refugees is scheduled for January 17 next year. The Pope stressed the importance of taking care of migrants and refugees, minors, remembering that Jesus, as a child, she experienced on their own experience of migration. Even so, he continued, "the children of immigrants must be given the opportunity to attend school and enter the world of work." With this in mind, then, that "an unaccompanied minor can not be returned."

"I sincerely hope that we reserve the right attention to minor migrants in need of a social environment that permits and fosters their physical, cultural, spiritual and moral," the Pope said while the president of the Pontifical Council for the pastoral care of migrants, Mgr. Antonio Maria Veglio, said that very often the rights of the children are not respected. One above all, the one for which an "unaccompanied minor can not be returned" to establish, are international standards.

Day of Migrants 2010 will be dedicated to them, children, entitled "Migrants and refugee children. "It said the Pope," a look that Christians evaluate very carefully, mindful of the admonition of Christ, who in the final assessment will consider referring to himself all that was done or refused to smaller. "" And - has asked Pope Benedict XVI - how can we consider even the smallest children migrants and refugees? Jesus himself - he said - he lived as a child because of the migrant experience, as recounted in the Gospel, to escape the threats of Herod had to flee to Egypt with Joseph and Mary. "

The Vatican has also expressed" sadness "and "pain" for the so-called "Operation White Christmas, White Christmas, the administration of Coccaglio League (near Brescia) has decided to expel the immigrants before the arrival of Christmas. "The White Christmas is a song about snow, it is very sad what is written," said Msgr. Antonio Maria Veglio, president of the Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People. "It 's a sad story," said Msgr. Agostino Marchetto, secretary of the department. "Christmas celebrates the mystery of the Annunciation to the Virgin Mary and called the reception of the infant Jesus. He, like the Pope said in his message, was a refugee in Egypt."

The members of the Pontifical Council for Pastoral Care of Migrants have also focused on the reasons often condemn underage underground, such as "the difficulty, or sometimes impossible, to access the desired country of destination." "This pushes - said Msgr. Vegliò - minors and families groped illegal immigration. In these cases, parents put all their hopes in the success of the child who migrates, which is ready to suffer injustice, violence and ill-treatment in order to obtain a residence permit, perhaps an education, especially work to help the family. " All this, Archbishop Marchetto said, "is often not understood by members of civil society, who act and react according to stereotypes, prejudices prejudices and the arrival of refugees. "" Therefore - he concluded - the conduct of discrimination, xenophobia and racism must be addressed with policies that preserve, protect and reinforced the rights of refugees and displaced persons. " (La Repubblica, November 27 2009)

Fell On My Elbow How Do I Treat The Pain?

Finance, League proposal: "Only 6 months of cig to foreigners"

Carroccio The proposed different treatment of immigrants in terms of social safety nets.
Opposition: "Amendment racist." The Minister Carfagna: "A provocation "

ROME - Redundancy Fund Limited for non-EU nationals working in Italy. The league opens a new front of conflict and proposes an amendment that six months beyond the means of income support. To assume the ad is the deputy Maurizio Fugatti. What explains the output of the Northern League: "The resources are those that are first and foremost we must look to Italian citizens. So let's layoffs also non-EU nationals but only for six months. If there is no work for the Italians , for there is none. Before we think about Italians. "

few minutes pass and the opposition begins. "That amendment and 'patently unconstitutional and I am sure that the presidency of the Chamber shall pronounce him' unacceptable - cuts short the leader of the Democratic Party in the House Committee on Constitutional Affairs, Sesa Friends - rules are barbaric racist and totally devoid of any foundation and raison d'etre.'' Even harder
Democratic Senator Paul Nerozzi: "The League's proposal is a new form of racial laws in the world of work." And the accusation of racism back in the words of the IDV in the House leader, Massimo Donadi. But even within the government are growing doubts: "It 's a challenge, and I sure will have no following in Parliament," said Equal Opportunities Minister Mara Carfagna. and Welfare Minister Maurizio Sacconi recalled that the IGC is an individual right of all workers.
The union makes its voice heard: "A xenophobic initiative and a genuine legal nonsense - says CGIL - These employees are charged as for all other fees for access to social security benefits. So it's impossible unless an amendment that the league does not think that foreign workers should only pay is difficult to receive the consideration of the amount paid. It 'an explicit incitement to illegal work. "
Critics also CISL, who through the Secretary Raffaele Bonanni note the initiative:" Migrant workers pay regular fees and taxes in Italy and have equal rights of all workers Italians. "
words echoed by former Labour Minister Cesare Damiano," Not only is affecting workers objectively weaker but creates a condition of employment break that will push inevitably these people in the blind alley of clandestine and illegal labor. " (La Repubblica, November 27, 2009)

Sunday, November 22, 2009

How To Make A Printer Print Without Borders

The "White Christmas" that insults all of us (Francesca Comencini)

The Letter to the Republic of Francesca Comencini, the daughter of film director Luigi Comencini, who died in 2007.

Dear Editor, I read in the newspapers of the "White Christmas", implemented by the Mayor of Coccaglio, which is to identify, house by house, all the foreign people who do not comply and hunting, with a view Christmas. The news struck me, not just the idea of \u200b\u200bacceptance, citizenship and Christianity that underlies it, but also because it is the place Coccaglio resting place of my grandparents, and Mimi Caesar Comencini Hefti Comencini. For them I feel compelled to write this letter.

My grandmother, the daughter of a German-Swiss family, fell in love with Caesar and to marry my grandfather had to fight against all the prejudices that the Italians were victims in her country. The Swiss Germans did not like the Italians, they were considered dirty, primitive, they were afraid of, at most they used in their manufacture or to clean their homes. But my grandmother did not budge, he married his Caesar and came to live in Italy. My grandfather was of modest origins, but with many sacrifices he had managed to graduate in engineering. However, in Italy could not provide a sufficiently dignified life his wife and their two children were born in the meantime, my father, Luigi, and his brother Gianni. They lived in Salo, where business was very bad. One day my grandfather decided to immigrate to France, had heard that there is land bought at low prices, because the French left the countryside, and in each there was an Italian, two French. So they went away.

Their life in France was not easy, my grandparents, with little experience of farm work, had to learn everything. In his book, "Childhood, vocation and early experiences of a director," my father says: "Now it is difficult to imagine what our lives in the rural South-west France. We had no electricity, no running water. But we had the piano. Every night after dinner, my father sat in a chair, and, lulled by the music of my mother, slowly sinking into sleep. "At school, my father, who arrived in France when she was six, was always put yourself last counter, and regularly called "Macaroni", as in France were called the Italian immigrants. It was my grandfather Cesare to suffer most of all for the distance from Italy. My father recalls that he had built a crystal radio, which every night persisted in trying to run. When my grandfather became ill began to say "I do not want to die in France, I will not die in France." So my grandmother took him home, in Italy, his brother, in Coccaglio.

He was buried in the small cemetery Coccaglio, where many years later joined him my grandmother, who after his death had been living in Italy, in Milan. My grandparents knew what to leave their country to work, what they were strangers, they knew what to save the dignity for themselves and for their children. At the funeral of my grandmother I remember my father read the passage from the Gospel of Matthew in which Jesus says "Love your neighbor as yourself." My grandmother was a believer in his own way, religion Valdese. I remember one day, a Friday, she had come to visit us in Rome for Easter, and I found her in her room, crying slowly, and when I asked her why she answered, drying quickly eyes with a handkerchief that he always kept in the sleeve of his sweater: "I think of Jesus, as he should feel alone and frightened in the Garden of Gethsemane." My grandparents buried in the cemetery of Coccaglio, which is not only home to those who temporarily administers the town in recent years, though it was theirs, and so now is a bit 'my and many others, who, like me, are descendants of those who had to leave Italy to work, with fatigue, pain, humiliation. And I'm sure my grandparents, if they could get up and arise from memory, condemn those who dared to invent the operation "White Christmas." On their behalf, through these lines, I do. (La Repubblica, November 19, 2009)