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I had a close look at a nearby washroom and the connected drainage system that passed underneath the concrete base of the cross. I removed some stones from the drain and found it was blocked. I touched the walls, the base, and the cross and took some photographs for documentation. It was very simple: Water from the washroom, which had been blocked in the clogged drainage system, had been transmitted via capillary action into the adjacent walls and the base of the cross as well as into the wooden cross itself. The water came out through a nail hole and ran down over the statue's feet.
What was the so-called miracle you recently investigated in Mumbai?
The priest and the very active Catholic laity organizations associated with the Our Lady of Velankanni Church in Mumbai were promoting the idea that water dripping from the feet of a statue of Jesus was a sign from God. Hundreds of believers flocked to the dripping cross, collecting and consuming "holy" drainage water that they believed would cure all ailments.
....
It was very simple: Water from the washroom, which had been blocked in the clogged drainage system, had been transmitted via capillary action into the adjacent walls and the base of the cross as well as into the wooden cross itself. The water came out through a nail hole and ran down over the statue's feet.
...
Do you have any regrets about intervening?
Why would one not intervene when somebody gives gullible people sewage to drink? But my reason is broader. The promotion of superstition and belief in paranormal phenomena dulls people's minds and establishes dangerous misconceptions about reality in our society. Such efforts have to be countered.
Why do people so readily believe in miracles?
For many, the regressive belief in superstitions and miracles is an escape from the hardships of life. Once trapped into irrationalism, they become more incapable of mastering reality. It is a vicious circle, like an addiction. They become vulnerable to exploitation by astrologers, godmen, dubious pseudo-psychologists, corrupt politicians, and the whole mega-industry of irrationalism.
I'm glad that in the US, it is not illegal to offend people and I would opine, that this is really more about the lack of fundimental freedoms across the world rather than yet another reason to hate on religions.
Originally posted by wildtimes
reply to post by NavyDoc
I'm glad that in the US, it is not illegal to offend people and I would opine, that this is really more about the lack of fundimental freedoms across the world rather than yet another reason to hate on religions.
In the US, it is illegal to DEFRAUD people.
I see you are implying I look for reasons to "hate on religions". NavyDoc, if religions are LYING TO PEOPLE, they are lying to people. Why do you want to defend the indefensible?
Perhaps the followers and believers, perhaps even the priest, with their miracle-spying-bias, WANTED it so much to be a miracle that they wouldn't even have looked into it. Defrauding people is wrong, I don't care if the culprit is a priest, a banker, a Ponzi-schemer, a snake-oil salesman, big Pharma, or a couple of crack-heads living in a seedy motel producing counterfeit currency (as recently happened in my own metro area), or a casino dealer stacking cards.
Counterfeiters are counterfeiters, in whatever venue they appear.
IT IS WRONG.
edit on 7-12-2012 by wildtimes because: (no reason given)
But, clearly, you didn't look into the sources. You simply knee-jerked because you don't like the stuff I bring to the table. It even states in several of the articles that I linked that India has Freedom of Speech laws. That means "offending" people is not unlawful......but woe to the person who states that a miracle is fake - he is a Blasphemer. The two laws cancel one another out in favor of religion.edit on 7-12-2012 by wildtimes because: (no reason given)
I looked into the sources, I've even spent time in India (apparently you haven't) and the Catholics are nowhere a law-making majority. The law is a hold over from when India was largely a Hindi state.
They were not hurting anybody, leave 'em alone. I wonder just how empty someone'e life is when they have to run around finding reasons to take a leak in other people's breakfast cereal. Live and let live, dude. If he is more enlightened then the superstitious, he should act like it.
reply to post by wildtimes
They are accusing him of interfering with people's religion.
Home-made Catholic "miracle" at Ballinspittle
Travelling South and North Ireland during the last week of November, Sanal Edamaruku spoke in public meetings in Dublin, Cork, Galway and Belfast and met politicians, professors and students and supporters of atheist and rationalist organisations in several places. Before he left for Germany, the leaders of Atheist Ireland, who organized and hosted his journey, invited Sanal to visit the village Ballinspittle, the place of the famous Catholic “miracle” of the “Moving Mary” statue.
‘Blasphemy law is unworthy of secular democracy’
In a long and very open interview, Sanal Edamaruku speaks in Stockholm to Pallavi Polanki from FIRSTPOST about the draconian Blasphemy Law that has to be abolished, about his life in exile, about his "underground" times in Delhi, about failed attempts to win the support of Indian politicians and about his next plans. (Click here to read the interview)
India awakes
This TV program is a breakthrough. CNN IBN, a leading English-language channel, started a campaign for the freedom of Sanal Edamaruku. “Does a rationalist deserve to be jailed for questioning a religious miracle?”, asked firebrand moderator Sargarika Ghose on 4th December in CNN IBN’s flagship program Face the Nation, calling upon the public to take a stand. The response was impressive: people from all walks of life expressed unequivocal support for Sanal, on camera, on twitter and on facebook. The wave keeps running... And 87% of the viewers who participated in a public internet ballot answered the question “Are blasphemy laws out of place in a secular democracy?” with a clear Yes! The blasphemy law should go.
Stony silence from the government is what India’s best-known Rationalist Sanal Edamaruku has met with in response to his appeals to defend free speech and send out a strong signal that the state’s “laws are not to be used to suppress scientific knowledge and reasonable criticism of religious mysticism.”
In 21st century India, in Mumbai, no less, an endeavour to expose a fraud has cost the president of the Indian Rationalist Association his freedom.
Edamaruku’s perfectly logical explanation of ‘tears’ dripping from a statue of Christ at a church in Mumbai being the result not of a ‘miracle’ but of capillary action sucking up drain water from a leaky pipe, and therefore a health risk to devotees drinking it, was considered a blasphemy. He has been charged under Section 295(a) of the Indian Penal Code for ‘deliberately hurting religious feelings and attempting malicious acts intended to outrage the religious sentiments’.
Cultural Sensitivity
Germany's military history is subject to additional laws regarding cultural sensitivity. To promote and foster a culture of tolerance, sensitivity and freedom from hate, German lawmakers have instituted cultural sensitivity laws. For example, it is illegal to deny the Holocaust, a law which does not exist in many other Western nations. It is also illegal to promote hate or engage in Nazi activity. The punishments for doing so are very strict.
Read more: German Culture Laws | eHow.com www.ehow.com...
Is not forcing people to accept the "truth" as you see it just as arrogant as those prostelytizing (sp) true believers?
In Mumbai, India, a crucifix was "weeping" sewer water and the priests were offering this sewer water (caused by a leaking pipe) to Catholics to drink and lick....
Originally posted by wildtimes
reply to post by NavyDoc
Is not forcing people to accept the "truth" as you see it just as arrogant as those prostelytizing (sp) true believers?
Forcing? I'm not forcing anyone; neither is the exiled guy.
Yes, to answer your question at face value, "forcing" anyone to accept something they don't agree with is imposing your values upon them. Not okay. That's a totally different thing.... if the "true believers" are being duped, is it not incumbent upon us to let them know?
MLK, Jr. said:
"Our lives begin to end the day that we remain silent about things that matter."
It matters to me that people are being fooled.