Friday, December 19, 2008

Christmas - and Standing on One's Head



Christmas - and standing on one's head
By Horacio de la Costa, S.J.

(These are excerpts from a homily delivered by the late Fr. Horacio de la Costa, SJ, at the old Ateneo de Manila College of Law chapel in the mid-1950s)

Christmas is when we celebrate the unexpected; it is the festival of surprise.

This is the night when shepherds wake to the songs of angels; when the earth has a star for a satellite; when wise men go on a fool's errand, bringing gifts to a Prince they have not seen, in a country they did not know.

This is the night when one small donkey bears on its back the weight of the world's desire, and an ox plays host to the Lord of heaven.


This is the night when we are told to seek our King, not in a palace, but in a stable.

Although we have stood here, year after year, as our fathers before us, the wonder has not faded, nor will it ever fade; the wonder of that moment, when we push open the little door, and enter, and entering find in the arms of a Mother, who is a Virgin, a baby who is God.

Chesterton said it for all of us: "The way to view Christmas properly is to stand on one's head."

Was there ever a house more topsy-turvy than the House of Christmas, the cave where Christ was born?

For here, suddenly, in the very heart of earth, is heaven; down is up and up is down; the angels and the stars look down on God who made them and God looks up at the things He made.

There is no room in an inn for Him who made room and to spare, for the Milky Way. And where God is homeless, all men are at home.

We were promised a Savior. But we never dreamed that God, Himself would come to save us.

We knew that He loved us. But we never dared to think that He loved us so much. As to become like us.

But that is the way God gives. His gifts are never quite what we expect, but always something better than we hoped for.

We can only dream of things too good to be true; God has a habit of giving things too good to be false.

That is why our faith is a faith in the unexpected, a religion of surprise.

Now more than ever, living in times so troubled, facing a future so uncertain, we need such faith We need it for ourselves and we need it to give to others.

We must remind the world that if Christmas comes in the depth of winter, it is that there may be an Easter in the spring.

Lecture-Visit of H.E. Prof Jose Ramos-Horta


Is Lasting Peace an Attainable Dream?
H.E. Prof. Jose Ramos-Horta
President of Timor-Leste
1996 Nobel Laureate for Peace

14 January 2009; 2:00 PM
Auditorium, Finster Hall
Ateneo de Davao University
Jacinto St., Davao City

Open to General Public
RSVP: (82) 221.2411 local 8201
e-Mail: pres@addu.edu.ph

This Lecture-Visit is part of a program to bring Nobel Laureates to the Philippines, coordinated by Bridges: Dialogues Towards a Culture of Peace and International Peace Foundation based in Bangkok, Thailand.

H.E. Prof. Jose Ramos-Horta is a 1996 Nobel Laureate for Peace, the President of Timor-Leste and a Patron of the International Peace Foundation.

Jose Ramos-Horta was born in Dili, the capital of East Timor, to a Timorese mother and a Portuguese father who had been exiled to what was then Portuguese Timor by the Salazar dictatorship. He was educated in a Catholic mission in the small village of Soibada. Of his eleven brothers and sisters, four were allegedly killed during the struggle between Fretilin and Indonesian military.

A moderate in the emerging Timorese nationalist leadership, Jose Ramos-Horta was appointed Foreign Minister in the "Democratic Republic of East Timor" government proclaimed by the pro-independence parties in November 1975. When appointed minister, Jose Ramos Horta was only 25 years old. He left East Timor three days before the Indonesian troops invaded to plead the Timorese case before the United Nations.

Jose Ramos Horta arrived in New York to address the UN Security Council and urge them to take action in the face of the Indonesian military onslaught which would result in over 200,000 East Timorese deaths between 1976 and 1981. During the 24 years of the occupation of East Timor José Ramos-Horta was the international voice of the Timorese people. In exile from his country from 1975 to 1999, he was the Permanent Representative to the United Nations for the Timorese independence movement. The youngest UN diplomat in history and an international human rights figure, he is one of the three central figures in the country's struggle for independence.

In 1996 he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize with Bishop Carlos Belo, the religious leader of East Timor, "to honour their sustained and self-sacrificing contributions for a small but oppressed people". A portion of the funds received from the Nobel Prize were used to establish the José Ramos-Horta Microcredit Fund for the Poor, which is in full operation today, with a payback rate of 97%.

In 1999, under the umbrella of the United Nations, East Timor held a referendum allowing the Timorese to vote on independence. When the referendum results showed more than 85% favoring independence, Indonesia-backed militia were unleashed across the country. They killed thousands in the streets, displaced hundreds of thousands and burned 85% of the buildings in the country. After the entry of a UN peacekeeping force, Jose Ramos-Horta returned to his homeland to help rebuild the country from the devastation. Working closely with the UN and Sergio Vierra de Mello, the head of the UN Adminstration in East Timor until 2002, he helped to bring about peaceful elections of the country's President and Parliament, who in turn drafted the country's constitution.

After serving for seven years as the new country's Minister of Foreign Affairs, when turmoil and civil war threatened the new country, he stepped into the shoes of Prime Minister and immediately set about restoring calm to the country.

Before his appointment as Prime Minister, Jose Ramos-Horta was considered a possible candidate to succeed Kofi Annan as United Nations Secretary-General.[9] He dropped out of the race in order to serve as East Timor's Prime Minister, but he has indicated that he might run for the UN position at some time in the future. In May 2007 Jose Ramos-Horta was elected President of Timor-Leste.

José Ramos Horta studied Public International Law at the Hague Academy of International Law and at Antioch University where he completed a Master of Arts degree in Peace Studies. He was trained in Human Rights Law at the International Institute of Human Rights in Strasbourg and attended Post-Graduate courses in American Foreign Policy at Columbia University in New York. He is a Senior Associate Member of the University of Oxford's St Antony's College and until today continues in his role as the international voice of East Timor.

Partners






Yuchengco Group of Companies
Presidential Assistant for the Peace Process
City Mayor of Davao City
University of the Immaculate Conception, Davao City




Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Misa de Gallo in Ateneo


SCHEDULE OF UNIVERSITY MASSES FROM DECEMBER 16, 2008 TO JANUARY 5, 2009

MISAS DE GALLO (Dec. 16 to 24) WILL BE AT 4:30 A.M. IN THE JACINTO CAMPUS COVERED COURT
CHRISTMAS MASS ON DECEMBER 24TH AT 8 P.M. IN THE COVERED COURT
NO MASS ON CAMPUS ON DECEMBER 25

USUAL 5 P.M. ANTICIPATED SUNDAY MASS IN THE UNIVERSITY CHAPEL
DECEMBER 20 (4TH SUNDAY OF ADVENT)
DECEMBER 27 (FEAST OF HOLY FAMILY)
and
DECEMBER 31, WEDNESDAY, (ANTICIPATED MASS FOR THE SOLEMNITY OF MARY, MOTHER OF GOD)

7 A.M. SUNDAY MASS ONLY ON DECEMBER 28 (FEAST OF HOLY FAMILY)

NO MASS ON CAMPUS ON JANUARY 1.

JANUARY 3, SATURDAY, (ANTICIPATED SUNDAY MASS FOR SOLEMNITY OF THE EPIPHANY OF OUR LORD)
REGULAR SCHEDULE OF NOON AND 5 P.M. MASSES WILL TAKE EFFECT
WITH THE RESUMPTION OF CLASSES ON JANUARY 5TH.

THANK YOU.

Fr. Rene C. Ocampo S.J.
University Chaplain
(82) 221.2411 local 8227

Monday, December 15, 2008

Weeweechu




It's a romantic full moon, when Pedro said, "Hey, mamacita, let's do Weeweechu."

Oh no, not now, let's look at the moon!" said Rosita.

Oh, c'mon baby, let's you and I do Weeweechu. I love you and it's the perfect time," Pedro begged.

"But I wanna just hold your hand and watch the moon." replied Rosita.

Please, corazoncito, just once, do Weeweechu with me."

Rosita looked at Pedro and said, "OK, one time, we'll do Weeweechu."

Pedro grabbed his guitar and they both sang.....





"Weeweechu a Merry Christmas, Weeweechu a Merry Christmas, Weeweechu a Merry Christmas, and a Happy New Year."

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Stealing Beauty (1996)

Stealing Beauty
Directed by Bernardo Bertolucci

After her mother commits suicide, nineteen year old Lucy Harmon travels to Italy to have her picture painted. However, she has other reasons for wanting to go. She wants to renew her acquaintance with Nicolo Donati, a young boy with whom she fell in love on her last visit four years ago. She also is trying tosolve the riddle left in a diary written by her dead mother, Sara. Written by Kale Whorton

For 20 years many visitors have come to the villa on an Italian hilltop owned by an English artist. Lucy, a 19-year-old American, was last there four years ago and wants to meet up again with the young Italian who kissed her and corresponded for a while. And she has brought the diary of her late mother filled with enigmatic poems that suggest Lucy was conceived on that hilltop. Lucy wants to find out if Daddy is the Italian war correspondent who wrote to her mother for 20 years. Then again Daddy could be the dying English playwright in residence or the artist who uses a chainsaw on tree trunks for his sculptures. The three, of course, have no idea that Lucy is there to solve a mystery. They, the artist's wife, daughter of that wife and the daughter's American lover are most intrigued by Lucy's virginity. Written by Dale O'Connor

Lucy Harmon is a 19-year old American girl who is the daughter of poet Sara Harmon. After Sara commits suicide, Lucy travels to Italty and visits her mother's friends, Diana and her husband, Irish artist Ian, where Lucy wants a picture of her painted. Lucy decided to return to Italy to reunite with Nicolo Donati, a Italian boy she once fell in love with four years ago, when she last visited Italy. But reuniting with Nicolo isn't the only reason why Lucy decided to return to Italy, Lucy is on a personal journey, as she sets out to solve a mystery in her Mother's diary and discover who her father is who conceived her 20 years ago. Lucy's journey leads her to befriend Alex, a play-writer who is dying of cancer whom Lucy thinks may be her father or her father could be the artist who makes statutes from trees and sets out to loose her virginity as Diana and her daughter Miranda's boyfriend Richard become intrigued by her. Written by

Three Poems:

The three poems we see Lucy (Liv Tyler) compose while in Italy are: - 1. I have her secret deep within for years I've had to hide I've bought the clues And now I'm hope To bring the truth outside - 2. I wait I wait so patiently I'm as quiet as a cup I hope you'll come and rattle me Quick! Come wake me up. - 3. The dye is cast The dice are rolled I feel like shit you look like gold.


Director: Bernardo Bertolucci


Writer: Bernardo Bertolucci (story) Susan Minot (writer)


Release Date: 14 June 1996 (USA)


Genre: Drama; Romance


Tagline: The most beautiful place to be is in love.