@mrjyn
November 10, 2011
Barry Seal "La Reforma"
Catholic kingpin religion
Order to turn prison that housed narco-trafficking kingpin into religious site
- By Mike Ceaser
- 9/10/2007
- Catholic News Service (www.catholicnews.com)
BOGOTA, Colombia (CNS) – An infamous Colombian prison named "La Catedral," once home to narco-trafficking kingpin Pablo Escobar, soon will be turned into a center of prayer.
The administration of the prison site recently was given to the Monastic Brotherhood of St. Gertrude the Great, which plans to invest less than $60,000 to turn the ruins into a religious site and spiritual retreat. A cross will stand at the site of an old guard tower and a sculpture of St. Gertrude will look down on the city. The brotherhood also plans to build a chapel and rooms to serve as spiritual retreats.
When Colombian authorities finally were ready to arrest Escobar in 1991, he agreed to go to prison – but in a luxury facility built to his own specifications on a mountainside above the city of Medellin. From inside the prison, which was equipped with a soccer field, a waterfall and a giant dollhouse for his daughter, Escobar continued ruling his drug empire and ordering murders.
But Escobar lived there only one year and one month before learning that he was to be transferred to a real prison. He fled in July 1992, but was hunted down by police and shot dead on a rooftop the next year.
After Escobar's demise, the neighbors of the prison searched the grounds fruitlessly for valuables they believed Escobar had hidden there. Since then, the building has stood as a decaying reminder of the tyranny of the man who ruled the world's cocaine markets but also bought popularity by building homes and soccer fields for the city's poor.
During a ceremony before a Mass Sept. 2 at the prison, Benedictine Father Gilberto Jaramillo Mejia told journalists that "our presence here signifies our commitment ... to seeking pardon for that turbulent past, not just here but in all of the city and the nation."
"We are here to return to God that which belongs to him," Father Jaramillo said.
Hector Londono, mayor of the neighboring suburb of Envigado, said at the ceremony: "We want to convert a place of prison and pain into a center of prayer.
"We turn it over to be administered by the religious community for the enjoyment of the whole community," he said.
Order to turn prison that housed narco-trafficking kingpin into religious site By Mike Ceaser 9/10/2007 Catholic News Service ( www.catholicnews.com ) BOGOTA, Colombia (CNS) – An infamous Colombian prison named "La Catedral," once home to narco-trafficking kingpin Pablo Escobar, soon will be turned ...»See Ya
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Gamal Ibrahim, an Egyptian man living in Cairo, welcomed a new daughter into the world this week. Did he give her a traditional Arabic female name like Leila, Rania or Hend? Nope, Mr. Ibrahim named his baby daughter: "Facebook."
Yes, you heard me - he named his daughter "Facebook." Not Facebook.com, just Facebook.
Now, before you start making jokes about this choice of name -which I will do later in this article-keep in mind the long list of ridiculous names Americans have bestowed upon their children, such as Gwyneth Paltrow's daughter named "Apple," or illusionist Penn Jillette's son "Moxie Crimefighter," and then there is actor Rob Morrow who astoundingly named his son, "To," so that his full name is "To Morrow," and, of course, we can't forget Jermaine Jackson's child, "Jermajesty."
All of a sudden, "Facebook" is looking a lot better.
So why did Mr. Ibrahim do it? Is naming your child after a popular social media website a part of Arab culture? No, I'm Arab-American and I can assure you that I don't have a "Cousin MySpace" or "Uncle Twitter."
The reason he chose such a unique name for his daughter is actually very noble: He wanted to honor the role that Facebook -- the media website, not his daughter -- played in fueling the recent revolution in Egypt.
While not common in the US, in other parts of the world, people have historically named children in honor of triumphant events occurring at the time of their child's birth. For example, during last year's soccer World Cup in South Africa, a woman there named her baby "FIFA," as an homage to the organization which governs the World Cup. While another South African woman named her child "Soccer City," after the stadium where many of the big World Cup soccer matches were being held.
In America, thankfully we don't name our children after big events occurring at the time of their birth, because if we did, there would be a lot of recent newborns with names like: "Jersey Shore," "Dancing with the Stars" and "Charlie Sheen just got arrested again."
But I will be honest, Facebook is a challenging name for a child. She might get picked on in school a lot by the other kids -or even worse: poked. (I know you were waiting for at least one "poked" reference.")
And what will young Facebook's nickname be, "Face," making her sound like a character from "The A Team." Although as an infant, her nickname might be "Baby Facebook"- which does sound pretty cool.
However, if I was going to name my daughter after Facebook, I would have tweaked the name to make it more feminine sounding, such as "Facebooka" or "Fecebooke." Either of those names conjures up exotic, attractive women. The name "Facebook" makes me think of Jesse Eisenberg from the movie "The Social Network," not an attractive mental image for a woman.
But there are benefits to the name Facebook. For example, everyone will know how to spell her name. Plus she will likely have the most friends in class- albeit, they will mostly be Facebook.com friends.
Also, on a personal note, when I was a child, all my friends could buy toys with their names pre-engraved on it, like those mini license plates or key chains. Not me. There were no trinkets with the name "Dean" on it. I felt left out. In contrast, young Facebook will have tons of things with her name on it.
Plus she should look at the bright side - with her father committed to honoring Facebook, he could've named her "Mark Zuckerberg." Let's be honest, "Mark Zuckerberg Ibrahim" sounds worse than "Facebook."
To me, though, Facebook would have been a better middle name than a first name for a girl-"Leila Facebook Ibrahim," actually sounds pretty good.
Overall, I can understand why Mr. Ibrahim was swept up in the excitement of the revolution and wanted to give his new daughter a name that honors a new Egypt. I hope that young Facebook is able to grow up in an Egypt that offers her all the opportunities and freedoms that her father dreams for her. And maybe one day, when Facebook grows up, we can be friends, or at the very least, Facebook friends.
(once again no one knows how to title which is where i come in)