Belo, Carlos Filipe Ximenes child of Domingos Vaz felipe and Ermelinda Vatican appointed carlos Filipe ximenesbelo as Apostolic administrative policies, Bishop carlos belo has encouraged http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/biographies/mainbiographies/b/belo/belo.htm
Extractions: Belo, Carlos Filipe Ximenes Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo was born in Wailakama, a village in Vemasse, Baucau, East Timor on 3 February 1948. He was the fifth child of Domingos Vaz Felipe and Ermelinda Baptista Filipe. His father, a school teacher, died two years later. The Belo family had a background of farming. In his childhood the young Belo developed skills in shepherding water buffaloes in Kekeli, the village of his ancestors. Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo then made a brief return visit to East Timor where he taught for a short time at the Salesian College at Fatumaca, near Baucau. He returned to Portugal for philosophical studies over the next two years, followed by three further years at the Portuguese Catholic University. Next, he was sent to Rome where he furthered his ecclesiastical studies at the Pontifical Salesian University. On returning to Portugal, Carlos Filipe Belo was ordained a priest in 1980. In March 1981 Father Belo returned to East Timor, and was appointed Director of Fatumaca College. During this time he experienced two formative influences that would stand him in good stead in the future. Firstly, he developed a capacity to relate to youth. His obvious and deeply felt links with the young men and women of his country gave him an authentic bond with those who are now playing an important role in the history of East Timor. Secondly, he directly experienced the severe pressure and intimidating tactics of the military authorities, who persistently pressured the college to conform with the standards they wished to impose. The College's success at providing authentic East Timorese and modern technological education was quickly perceived by the authorities as a deep threat to their own policies.
Missioni Translate this page lungo, ma che vale la pena di mandare a memoria per esteso, trattandosi di MonsignorCarlos felipe ximenes belo, lArcivescovo di Dili Premio nobel per la http://www.gianfrancopaglia.com/Pagine/Timor.htm
Extractions: Timor Est La Storia La tragedia di questa terra e del suo popolo, per l85 per cento di religione cattolica, era iniziata all'alba del 7 dicembre 1975. Quel giorno, Radio Dili aveva lanciato al mondo il suo ultimo, disperato appello: «Ci uccideranno tutti. Ripetiamo, ci uccideranno tutti. Vi scongiuriamo, fate qualcosa per fermare l'invasione». Fino a quel momento la porzione orientale dell'isola era appartenuta al Portogallo, che aveva fatto di Timor un proprio possedimento coloniale a partire già dal XVI secolo. Quella occidentale, invece, era stata ceduta agli Olandesi nel 1618. Solo nel 1946 l'Olanda l'aveva ceduta alla Repubblica Indonesiana, che con i suoi 200 milioni di abitanti sparsi su 14 000 isole è il primo Paese musulmano del mondo. Nel 1974 la storica vittoria della cosiddetta "rivoluzione dei garofani" non solo sancisce la fine del lunghissimo regime salazarista e il ristabilimento per via pacifica del sistema democratico in Portogallo, ma apre anche la strada dell'indipendenza alle ex colonie di Lisbona. E siamo già al dramma anticipato via etere dai microfoni di Radio Dili. Seguendo l'esempio di Angola e Mozambico, Timor Est dichiara, il 28 novembre 1975 la propria sovranità piena. Meno di dieci giorni più tardi (a dimostrazione dell'esistenza di un piano messo a punto da tempo) le truppe indonesiane la invadono. Negli anni che seguiranno, la spietata repressione dei soldati di Giakarta, concentrata sui timoresi di fede cattolIca, farà qualcosa come 200 000 vittime, un quinto esatto della popolazione originaria, scesa oggi a circa 800 000 abitanti. La resistenza armata contro gli occupanti è condotta dai guerriglieri del Falintil, braccio armato del Fretilifl (Fronte rivoluzionario di Timor Est) guidato da José Alexandre Gusmao, detto Xanana.
Untitled So it has been this year, with the award of the nobel Peace Prize jointly to BishopCarlos felipe ximenes belo, the apostolic administrator of East Timor, and http://www.catholic.net/rcc/Periodicals/Igpress/CWR/CWR1296/easttimor.html
Extractions: The Nobel Peace Prize is undoubtedly the most controversial of the bequests of Alfred Nobel, the Swedish industrialist and inventor of dynamite, who bequeathed his fortune to the annual awarding of prizes for literature, the sciences, and peace. The prizes for physics, chemistry, and medicine are generally awarded to scientists who have made advances so esoteric as to be incomprehensible to the public at large. In recent years the literature prizes has often recognized works printed in a language little known outside the country of the author himself. But everyone in the world has his own opinion as to what constitutes peacemaking, and with modern communications, everyone can expect to have some knowledge of the efforts which brought the peace prize. Yet the Nobel Peace Prize can throw up some odd paradoxes. Dr. Andrey Sakharov, the 1974 winner, was one of the chief designers of the Soviet hydrogen bomb. True, this was a special case; Sakharov had long repented of his connection with weaponry, and emerged first as an advocate of peaceful coexistence and then as a champion of human rights. Butexcept for cases when a peace prize has been shared by two former enemies who have found some means of resolving a longstanding conflict (the Israeli and Egyptian leaders, Menachim Begin and Anwar Sadat, for example), the peace prize has tended, in recent decades, to go to those who have campaigned not so much for peace
U.S. Catholic Bishops - Social Development & World Peace The news today of the awarding of this year's nobel Peace Prize to Bishop CarlosFelipe ximenes belo, SDB, and to Mr. Ramos Horta, is a cause for true rejoicing http://www.usccb.org/sdwp/international/belstat.htm
Extractions: T he news today of the awarding of this year's Nobel Peace Prize to Bishop Carlos Felipe Ximenes Belo, S.D.B., and to Mr. Ramos Horta, is a cause for true rejoicing. For years, both men, in their separate ways, have tirelessly pursued the path of peace with justice for the people of East Timor. In the name of the USCC Committee on International Policy, I offer congratulations and prayerful best wishes to both. Bishop Belo, who I understand is the first Catholic bishop ever to receive this award, has had a long and close relationship with the Church in the United States, and with our Conference. In 1985, shortly after then Monsignor Belo was named Apostolic Administrator of the diocese of Dili in East Timor, my predecessor as chairman of this Committee, New York Cardinal John O'Connor, issued a message of solidarity and support for Msgr. Belo and the people of East Timor. In 1987, the USCC Administrative Board issued a comprehensive policy statement on East Timor, which was circulated widely in the United States and abroad. In addition to other letters of support, our Committee on International Policy issued a second major policy statement on East Timor in July 1994, expressing solidarity with Bishop Belo and with the church and people of East Timor. On several occasions, Bishop Belo has visited with bishops of our country. He attended the Spring 1993 meeting of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops in New Orleans, and in June of that year was a guest of Cardinal O'Connor in New York, and later visited Washington as a guest of the USCC. Bishop Belo returned in June 1995 when he addressed a meeting of our Committee on International Policy, following the bishop's presence at the Vienna "All-Inclusive Inter-Timorese Dialogue," held under United Nations auspices earlier that month.
Laureats Du Prix Nobel De La Paix Translate this page LES LAUREATS DU PRIX nobel DE LA PAIX Conférence de presse tenue le ARLOS FELIPEXIMENES belo 1996 Évê de l'Est Timor, FX carlos belo travaille, avec http://membres.lycos.fr/jecmaus/Laureats.html
The Michigan Daily Online DILI, Indonesia (AP) Days after winning the nobel Peace Prize, Bishop carlos FelipeXimenes belo recharged his mission yesterday with a strident condemnation http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/1996/oct/10-15-96/news/news15.html
Extractions: DILI, Indonesia (AP) - Days after winning the Nobel Peace Prize, Bishop Carlos Felipe Ximenes Belo recharged his mission yesterday with a strident condemnation of Indonesia's military rule in East Timor and a fresh call to end the 21-year conflict. The Roman Catholic bishop, in his first interview since being named co-recipient of the award Friday, said he hopes the prize will increase international pressure to stop fighting on the island for good. Belo urged a referendum on autonomy as the best way to do that. Indonesia has repeatedly rejected the idea, saying the East Timor issue has been settled. Belo said the government was wrong." Then what does it want?" Belo demanded. "That the 700,000 East Timorese people just bow their heads?" Tens of thousands of people have been killed in Indonesia's attempt to crush an independence movement on the island territory it invaded in 1975, after Portugal pulled out during a civil war. Belo insisted the annexation of East Timor is not final. "Have you asked the people in villages what they really want?" he said in an interview with The Associated Press. "Don't think that all Timorese people have accepted the integration, and that everything is OK."
Belo-E BISHOP belo AND RECONCILIATION. Extracts from an interview with Bishop CarlosFelipe ximenes belo, SDB, Bishop of Dili Diocese and nobel Peace Laureate. http://www.easttimor-reconciliation.org/Belo_Interview-E.htm
Extractions: BISHOP BELO AND RECONCILIATION Extracts from an interview with Bishop Carlos Felipe Ximenes Belo, SDB, Bishop of Dili Diocese and Nobel Peace Laureate. Cidadaun, No. 10, October 2001 Translated by Jose Estevao Soares, Interim Office, CRTR What is your opinion about reconciliation? Many people talk about reconciliation but unfortunately we do not have comprehensive, complete justice yet. A commission, which in Portuguese we call Comissão de Acolhimento, Verdade e Reconciliação , similar to the South Africas, is being established. My hope is that all political parties and sections of society will have enough humility to cooperate with that Commission. Some political leaders propose general amnesty, but the people want something different. They should listen to the people! Because the voices coming loudly from the ground are demanding justice. They dont understand amnesty or its purpose. If theres amnesty, who should offer it? If its given, some will try and take the law into their own hands. Amnesty will never work. So justice and truth must be upheld. If someone has done wrong, thats wrong. If someone has not done wrong, then he has nothing to answer for. Should reconciliation and justice go together?
Ëàóðåàòû Íîáåëåâñêèõ ïðåìèé ìèðà nobel Peace Prize Winners 19971901. 1996 The prize was awarded jointly to CARLOSFELIPE ximenes belo and JOSE RAMOS-HORTA for their work towards a just and http://orel.rsl.ru/archiv/nob_w.htm
Extractions: Alphabetical listing of Nobel Peace prize laureates Name Year Awarded Addams, Jane The American Friends Service Committee Amnesty International Angell, Sir Norman Arafat, Yasser Arnoldson, Klas Pontus Asser, Tobias Michael Carel Bajer, Fredrik Balch, Emily Greene Beernaert, Auguste Marie Francois Begin, Menachem Belo, Carlos Felipe Ximenes Borlaug, Norman Bourgeois, Leon Victor Auguste Brandt, Willy Branting, Karl Hjalmar Boyd-Orr Of Brechin, Lord John Briand, Aristide Bride, Sean Mac Buisson, Ferdinand Bunche, Ralph Butler, Nicholas Murray Cassin, Rene Cecil, Lord Edgar Algernon Robert Gascoyne Chamberlain, Sir Austen Constant, Paul Henribenjamin Balluet D'estournelles De Corrigan, Mairead Cremer, Sir William Randal Dalai Lama Dawes, Charles Gates De Klerk, Fredrik Willem Ducommun, Elie Dunant, Jean Henri Esquivel, Adolfo Perez Fontaine, Henri La Fried, Alfred Hermann The Friends Service Council Gobat, Charles Albert Gorbachev, Mikhail Sergeyevich Hammarskjoeld, Dag Hjalmar Agne Carl
August 24: Tuesday Front Page Text (index.htm) CATHOLIC OF THE CENTURY one of the modern crusaders for freedom Bishop CarlosFelipe ximenes belo, the 51 year-old recipient of the 1996 nobel Peace Prize http://www.dailycatholic.org/issue/archives/1999Aug/159aug24,vol.10,no.159txt/
Extractions: below On this date 692 years ago French-born Pope Clement V , the 195th successor of Peter who would be influenced by King Philip IV into fixing the Holy See at Avignon, began his association with this wily French monarch by issuing a letter to Philip the Fair in which the Pope outlined the growing danger of the Knights Templar who had gone out of control through greed. The king would curtail their activities three months later and abolish them in 1312 for malpractices. The teaming of Clement and Philip consolidated France's influence on the Church and caused the Templars to go underground, only to eventually emerge as the part of the Masonic Lodge and the growth of Free Masonry. For other pertinent events throughout the centuries that are memorable in Church history today, click on MILLENNIUM MILESTONES AND MEMORIES The 77th selection of the TOP 100 CATHOLICS OF THE CENTURY A review of this year's FOOD FOR THOUGHT APPETEASERS Biography on Cardinal Silvio Oddi , the 89th Prince of the Church we feature in COLLEGE OF CARDINALS COLLECTION Time Capsules in Church History with MILLENNIUM MILESTONES AND MEMORIES focusing on August 25th.
Nobel Peace Laureats Speak Out With Deepest Respect The nobel Peace Prize Laureates Signed by Mairead carlos FelipeXimenes belo Jose RamosHorta Norman Borlaug Oscar Arias Sanchez UNICEF http://www.casi.org.uk/discuss/2000/msg00186.html
Extractions: The following is an archived copy of a message sent to a Discussion List run by the Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq Views expressed in this archived message are those of the author, not of the Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq. Main archive index/search List information Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq Homepage Date Prev ... Thread Index [NOTE ADDED BY CASI: THE CONTENT OF THE MESSAGE BELOW WAS FOUND TO BE INACCURATE AFTER IT WAS POSTED TO THE LIST. (see following messages)] FOUNDATION APPEAL OF THE NOBEL PEACE LAUREATES FOR THE CHILDREN OF THE WORLD Email : info@nobelweb.org Fax : +33 (0)3 44 86 39 07 Web : http://www.nobelweb.org/ http://www.afsc.org/iraqhome.htm - This is a discussion list run by the Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq For removal from list, email soc-casi-discuss-request@lists.cam.ac.uk Full archive and list instructions are available from the CASI website: http://welcome.to/casi
Extractions: June 20, 1997 LANI SILVER Bulletin Correspondent "The Jewish people are historically the most oppressed people in the world," said Jose Ramos-Horta, the 1996 Nobel Peace Prize winner from East Timor. "They've been persecuted for 2,000 years." Ramos-Horta, a guest speaker at a conference held in San Francisco last week with the Dalai Lama, spoke about his concerns for Jews. "We must speak out time and again against racism...and against anti-Semitism," said the exiled freedom fighter whose troubled, tiny island lies 300 miles off Australia. Ramos-Horta, who is Catholic, was among 100 writers, community organizers and political activists sharing the stage with the Dalai Lama at the event, titled "Peacemaking: The Power of Nonviolence." The conference, held at the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium, was sponsored by Tibet House of New York, and co-sponsored by the California Institute of Integral Studies. In seven public appearances, addressing several thousand people, Ramos-Horta talked in-depth, and lovingly, about the Jewish people. Twice a day in plenary sessions, the Dalai Lama, Ramos-Horta and Guatemalan activist Anita Menchu, the sister of Nobel Peace Prize laureate Rigoberta Menchu, regaled audiences with lessons on peacemaking, forgiveness and strategies for global rebuilding.
MDO - World Nation Briefs - 10/15/1996 DILI, Indonesia (AP) Days after winning the nobel Peace Prize, Bishop CarlosFelipe ximenes belo recharged his mission Monday with a strident condemnation http://www.mndaily.com/daily/1996/10/15/world_nation/wn15a.ap/
Extractions: OCT. 15, 1996 WORLD/NATION Netanyahu-Arafat Meeting Possible JERUSALEM (AP) Israel and the Palestinians moved closer Monday to an agreement on Israel's long-delayed withdrawal from the last major West Bank city it occupies, and both sides said a summit of their leaders was imminent. Officials were trying to arrange a meeting between Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, with U.S. envoy Dennis Ross shuttling between the two leaders Monday night. Both sides warned of a possible last-minute snag, but the atmosphere appeared markedly improved over the past weeks' acrimony. Palestinians walked out of peace talks last week over an Israeli proposal to withdraw troops from the West Bank town of Hebron. Agreement on Hebron would go a long way toward rescuing the Mideast peace effort from the crisis brought on by Islamic militants' suicide bombings in Israel last winter, the May election of conservative Netanyahu and last month's deadly gun battles between Israeli and Palestinian forces. Israel Radio said the sides had already reached broad agreement on the main sticking point security arrangements in Hebron, the volatile town where 450 Jews live among 94,000 Palestinians.
Human Rights Internet - The Human Rights Databank original 1895 legacy, and shared equally among the 5 nobel prizes. 1996 carlos FelipeXimenes belo, and José RamosHorta (see East Timor section that follows http://www.hri.ca/doccentre/docs/handbook97/nobel.shtml
Extractions: (for current year Peace Prize press release and concise Alfred Nobel bio and prize history: call +47-22-44-36-80, or fax +47-22-43-01-68, or write Norwegian Nobel Committee, Drammensvn. 19, N-0255, Oslo, Norway.) Peace Prize is part of family of 5 annual Nobel awards (physics, chemistry, literature, physiology or medicine, and peace) + Nobel memorial prize in economics added in 1968 (The Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel). ONLY the Peace Prize is decided by Nobel Committee in Oslo Norway ; others chosen by the Nobel Committee in Stockholm, Sweden October = winners announced; December 10 = simultaneous award ceremonies in Stockholm and Oslo each year (date Alfred Nobel died); by February 1 , nominations must be received for that year's award. right to put forward candidates is restricted to present and past members of the Nobel Committee or "Storting" (Norwegian pariament), members of the different countries' national assemblies and governments, and members of the Inter-Parliamentary Union
Peace2.htm Patronage The eighteen nobel Peace Prize Laureates Oscar Arias, carlos FelipeXimenes belo, Norman Borlaug, Mairead CorriganMaguire, The XIV. http://www.globalmeditations.com/peace2.htm
Extractions: MORE PEACE ORGANIZATIONS IPU has offered more than 600 courses and events, with a total of 250 speakers in the fields of education and academics, culture, art, creativity, medicine and health, personal and spiritual development, environment and ecology, science and future studies, politics, religion, social questions, and the economy. International headquarters, Berlin. Tel: (+49-30) 782-3077, Fax 782-3085, E-mail: peace-university@gmx.net http://www.peace-university.net THE GOI FOUNDATION is a nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting world peace from a wholly neutral position, transcending all boundaries of race, religion, or politics, with a belief that peace begins in the mind of each individual....The mission of the Goi Peace Foundation is to bring together the hearts and wisdom of all people for our common goal of peace on Earth. Contact: info@goipeace.or.jp http://www.goipeace.or.jp THE WORLD PEACE PRAYER SOCIETY, which has planted over 100,000 peace poles throughout the world, stems from the Goi Foundation. http://www.worldpeace.org
Peace 1996 The nobel Peace Prize 1996 Press Release Presentation Speech carlos Filipe XimenesBelo nobel Symposia. José RamosHorta Curriculum Vitae nobel Symposia. http://www.nobel.se/peace/laureates/1996/