Monday, July 16, 2012

Syria:Cleric who fervently supports the regime Melkite Patriarch Gregory III Laham. He puts the current chaos down to shady international conspiracies artfully masterminded by Zionists.

It is no secret the Vatican, a strong supporter of Zionism covertly meddles in wars for its own interests. The house of peadophilllia exposed only last week for its heavy involvement and complicity with JPMorgan in money laundering, murder and deep mafia connections.

The Pope has now hired a PR man for GOD , an ex journalist from Rupert Murdoch's FOX  team


SNIP


The Holy See’s conviction that the regime is on its last legs and that the country needs to prepare for what will happen afterwards, contrasts with the support the Syrian government continues to receive from the country’s Christians and important religious figures. 

One cleric who fervently supports the regime is Melkite Patriarch Gregory III Laham. He puts the current chaos down to shady international conspiracies artfully masterminded by Zionists. Only in the past few weeks, having witnessed the situation worsen dramatically, did the patriarch opened up to the idea of a “national dialogue” able to get Syria out of its impasse.
 
The stances taken by the patriarch, who heads Syria’s main Catholic denomination, are indicative: faced with an Islamic radicalisation of the political opposition, the majority of Christians seem to be running towards the safe haven that is the old regime. A second point must, however, also be taken into consideration: the Melkite (or Greek Catholic) Church represents a community that is for the most part present in (and dispersed across) the Near East, which has always been very sympathetic to certain pan Arab demands and quite attentive to requests made by Arab nations, notably in the conflict with Israel. As such, the consensus, albeit cautious, shown in relation to the Syrian Baathist regime is not surprising. This regime is a final incarnation of pan Arabism and of a nation and lay based Arabic identity, which has probably occurred too late.
 
A similar although more cautious stance has been taken by the Syro-Catholic Church, which also has a strong presence in the region: Patriarch Ignatius III Younan, who unlike Laham usually resides in Lebanon, has often made his voice heard, denouncing the dangers Christians - who are present across the whole of Syria but have no power over any area - would be faced with if the central government fell.


http://vaticaninsider.lastampa.it/en/homepage/documents/detail/articolo/16742/