http://www.tldm.org/news/martin.htm
<http://www.tldm.org/news/martin.htm>

Concurrent satanic rites reportedly took place in the U.S. and St.
Paul's Chapel in the Vatican on June 29, 1963, barely a week after
the election of Paul VI

Fr. Malachi Martin affirmed:
Satanism has been practiced in the Vatican

...........



A Dark Vision
Just how bad did Martin judge things to be? Extremely so:

"Suddenly it became unarguable that now during this papacy, the Roman
Catholic organization carried a permanent presence of clerics who
worshipped Satan and liked it; of bishops and priests who sodomized boys
and each other; of nuns who performed the "Black Rites" of
Wicca, and who lived in lesbian relationships . . . every day, including
Sundays and Holy Days, acts of heresy and blasphemy and outrage and
indifference were committed and permitted at holy Altars by men who had
been called to be priests. Sacrilegious actions and rites were not only
performed on Christ's Altars, but had the connivance or at least the
tacit permission of certain Cardinals, archbishops, and bishops. . . In
total number they were a minority—anything from one to ten percent
of Church personnel. But of that minority, many occupied astoundingly
high positions or rank.... The facts that brought the Pope to a new
level of suffering were mainly two: The systematic organizational
links—the network, in other words that had been established between
certain clerical homosexual groups and Satanist covens. And the
inordinate power and influence of that network." (pp. 492-3)

--- In proletar@yahoogroups.com, "sunny" <ambon@...> wrote:
>
> http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2011/03/16/tales-holy-land.html
>
> Tales from the Holy Land
>
> Al Makin, Yogyakarta | Wed, 03/16/2011 10:24 PM | Opinion
> In Indonesia, religious piety has become a public norm. Indonesian
Muslims pray five times a day, fast during Ramadhan, and perform
pilgrimage (haj) to the holy land, Hijaz, a province in the kingdom of
Saudi Arabia, once or more in their lifetime.
>
> No Indonesian Muslim dares to say in public that he or she has
intentionally abandoned these Islamic religious rites. Those who are
accused of ignoring these religious duties are usually branded as Islam
KTP (Muslim by ID card). This is a form of contempt.
>
> Mecca and Medina, where the Prophet Muhammad was born and passed away
respectively, are regarded as sacrosanct. The Indonesian Muslims regard
the two cities, which play a central role in their religiosity, in high
regard. The Kabah in Mecca is the one direction which Muslims face
during daily prayers.
>
> During Ramadhan many TV and radios stations broadcast the tarawih
(evening) prayers from the Prophet's Medina mosque. The audience watches
and listens the program attentively.
>
> During the haj season, many Indonesian Muslims sacrifice their
properties - land, savings, farm animals, or anything else that can be
sold - in order to pay for their journey to the holy land. Many Muslims
have a dream of making a pilgrimage to the sacred shrines of the
Prophet, regarded as a spiritual achievement.
>
> Back home, the pictures of the Kabah and the Prophet's mosque are
often hung on the wall.
>
> Besides ritual purposes, not only do Indonesians go to the holy land
to seek for knowledge at the universities, they also go to find jobs. In
terms of numbers, we export more migrant workers than scientists or
students.
>
> However, the tales from the holy land are not always wonderful. The
image of the sacred cities has been tainted by some accounts of tragic
events that have befallen Indonesian migrant workers.
>
> Last year, Sumiati, a domestic worker from West Nusa Tenggara, was
tortured. Her suffering was described to have been worse than "slavery"
(The Jakarta Post, Nov. 18, 2010). More detailed accounts, which are too
horrible to be recounted here, are abundant on the Internet.
>
> Various Indonesian media reported that many Indonesian workers are
stranded under the bridge in Jeddah. Their dream of finding work in the
holy land ended up in such a place where they stayed during the days and
nights. Some were then sent home.
>
> Eny Binti Katma, a domestic worker from Sukabumi, West Java, who was
accused of killing a baby, faces the death penalty. So does Darsem from
Subang West Java, who was charged with the murder of his master, who
wanted to rape her.
>
> Beheading is a common practice in Saudi Arabia, which has a record in
discrimination against women, religious minorities and human rights
violations, among which are those related to the abuse of Indonesian
domestic workers. House of Representatives (DPR) Speaker Marzuki Alie
once put it that "the torture has humiliated us as a nation" (The
Jakarta Post, Nov. 20, 2010).
>
> The holy status of Hijaz should not prevent the Indonesian Muslims,
and particularly the government, from speaking of what befell their
fellow citizens abroad. In the name of humanity and human rights a
concrete step should be taken to save Darsem from execution and to
prevent similar violence from occurring. To deal with the issue, besides
collecting coins to pay the ransom of death penalty, as "Migrant Care"
Indonesia did, diplomatic and political pressure should be on the table.
>
> Yes, Arabic is a sacred language, by which God in the Scripture speaks
to us. Muslims believe that an angle guards every Arabic letter. But,
not all of those who speak the language, like some of us, commit good
deeds. Some, just like some of us, violate the divine law.
>
> Although the Muslims' direction of prayers is the Kabah in Mecca, it
is hard to take the holy land as an example of democracy and human
rights. By contrast, whereas other Muslim countries, such as Turkey and
Indonesia, have advanced in blending democracy, secularization, and
local Islamic characters, the kingdom remains kingdom.
>
> An ongoing wave of democratic protests in the Middle East has hit
Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, Bahrain and Libya. The sacred land remains
sacred.
>
> The writer is a lecturer at Sunan Kalijaga State Islamic University,
Yogyakarta.
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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