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  1. Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Posts
    26,787
    #1
    Nun birth: Nun know she was pregnant

    A nun birth occurred in Rieti, Italy, which was a shock to her and her fellow-nuns at the convent, according to the BBC on Friday. The nun, a 31-year-old Salvadoran, gave birth after experiencing abdominal pains which she thought were simply stomach cramps. After the nun was taken to a hospital, she gave birth to a baby boy – and named him Francis - named after Pope Francis.

    When the nun was told by doctors that she was having contractions and giving birth, she reportedly told the doctors, "It's not possible - I'm a nun." .

    The location of the nun birth - Rieti - is a small city located in the central part of Italy which has a population of some 47,700 people. The nun belongs to a convent - the Little Disciples of Jesus - which is located near the city. The convent manages an old folks’ home. As the news of a nun having a baby goes viral, the mayor of the city, Simone Petrangeli, has asked persons and the media to give the women privacy.

    more.....
    Nun birth: Nun know she was pregnant - Chicago Top News | Examiner.com
    baka kailangan pa DNA test....

  2. Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Posts
    8,451
    #2
    Ano yan, Virgin Mary? Imposible naman di niya alam na nabuntis siya at imposible naman na hindi niya alam na nakipag-popoy siya

  3. Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Posts
    1,870
    #3
    "It's not possible..." daw.

    Baka naman bakla siya... it's a miracle nga naman. Lalo na kung normal delivery. :hysterical:

  4. Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Posts
    25,070
    #4
    Naghahanap ang RCC ng "miracle(s)" para bumalik ang pagtiwala ng mga faithful... Sira kasi ang imahe ng RCC sa mga kalokohan nila. Saan ka makikita isang religion na under investigation ng United Nations???


    Pope Francis’ Vatican to Be Grilled by U.N. on Child *** Abuse

    By Kharunya Paramaguru


    Follow *TIMEWorld
    Pope Francis has won over many critics in his brief time as head of the Catholic Church by presenting a more humane and empathetic face of the Church. His calls for compassion for vulnerable and marginalized members of society have won praise from Catholics and non-Catholics alike, leading in part to his selection as TIME’s Person of the Year for 2013.

    However, his biggest test may be yet to come: dealing with the Vatican’s infamous record of ***ual-abuse cases against children and the alleged cover-ups protecting pedophile priests. The scandals suggest decades-long histories of abuse, spanning continents and implicating eminences high up in the church.

    On Jan. 16, this will come to a head when a U.N. committee concludes its investigation into the Holy See’s compliance with the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child. Vatican officials will be subject to a daylong public grilling in Geneva. It’s the first time the Holy See will be called to answer, at length, for its record of tackling child *** abuse before an international body. Leading the church’s delegation of five will be Archbishop Silvano Tomasi, the Vatican’s representative in Geneva, and Monsignor Charles Scicluna, its former chief ***-crimes prosecutor.

    Katherine Gallagher, a senior attorney with the U.S.-based advocacy group Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), says: “While we may have seen a different tone for marginalized groups from Pope Francis, we have yet to see a change with the way the Vatican deals with ***ual violence by members of the Catholic clergy.” The CCR has called for an investigation and prosecution of those allegedly responsible by the International Criminal Court, collecting more than 22,000 pages of supporting evidence, including testimonies from victims, police reports and findings of international commissions of inquiry and grand juries. It has also submitted evidence to the U.N. committee’s investigation, writing, “serious breaches of obligations under the Convention [on the Rights of the Child] continue under the new Pope” and “children continue to be at risk.”

    Gallagher points to two recent developments as examples of the Vatican’s troubled record on the issue: its refusal in November to share with the U.N. details of its own investigations into cases of alleged ***ual abuse of children and reports from Polish prosecutors in January that the Vatican had turned down an extradition request from Warsaw for Archbishop Jozef Wesolowski, who is under investigation for alleged *** abuse, making him the highest-ranking Vatican official ever to be investigated on the issue.

    Wesolowski was removed from his post as papal ambassador to the Dominican Republic in August and dismissed from office when allegations emerged that he had ***ually abused young boys. The Vatican has since denied that there was such an extradition request, but have indicated that Wesolowski is facing a criminal investigation by the Vatican’s own criminal court — which John L. Allen Jr., senior correspondent for the National Catholic Reporter, describes as “revolutionary” for the church.

    Though Pope Francis has remained relatively quiet on ***-abuse cases, there have been several steps taken on the issue during his leadership. In April, shortly after becoming Pontiff, Francis directed the church’s enforcement arm, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, to act more decisively on abuse cases. In the summer, the Holy See’s criminal code was updated to criminalize ***ual violence against children, which in the previous law existed in a general form as a crime against “good customs.” And just before the close of last year, Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston, one of the eight cardinals advising the Pope, announced Francis’ decision to establish a commission on the ***ual abuse of children by priests, focused on providing emotional and spiritual care for victims of abuse rather than playing any judicial function.

    For some victims and survivors, these steps are not enough. “Pope Francis, as boss, is enabling ***ual predators by failing to hold them accountable,” says Barbara Blaine, the founder and director of the group Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. Blaine, who says her priest in Toledo, Ohio, abused her as a teenager between 1969 and 1974, criticizes the church’s emphasis on conducting its own investigations, arguing that historically it has failed to address the problems. “Many of us who were abused by an assistant pastor looked to the pastor to make things right, then the bishop, then the Vatican,” she says. “No one fixed the problem. What authority in the world can hold the Vatican accountable?”

    Blaine says however that she and other survivors do hold out hope: “We have to have hope because of what is at stake. What’s at stake is more children being violated. I believe change is possible, with the reforms that Pope Francis is bringing about, why not?”

    “The church is trying to change, but for some people it is taking too long,” acknowledges Danny Sullivan, who heads the U.K.-based National Catholic Safeguarding Commission, an independent body that works within the framework of the Catholic Church in England and Wales to police its approach to abuse cases and safeguarding work. Sullivan welcomes Francis’ decision to establish a commission on ***ual-abuse cases, given the many areas he has to deal with, but accepts that from the victims’ perspective, “the jury is still out until they see that the Vatican has made significant changes.”

    The Vatican turned down TIME’s request for comment on the upcoming hearing, but among the questions church officials will be expected to address in Geneva include how it is making sure that known abusive priests are kept from further contact with children. The U.N. committee, which is made up of independent experts, will make its final observations and recommendations on Feb. 5. While their recommendations are not binding, Gallagher hopes the process will encourage meaningful reform and make people “recognize that this is not a problem of the past.”


    Read more: Vatican to Face U.N. Committee on Its Child-***-Abuse Record | TIME.com Vatican to Face U.N. Committee on Its Child-***-Abuse Record | TIME.com

  5. Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Posts
    1,557
    #5
    The location of the nun birth - Rieti - is a small city located in the central part of Italy which has a population of some 47,700 people. The nun belongs to a convent - the Little Disciples of Jesus - which is located near the city. The convent manages an old folks’ home. As the news of a nun having a baby goes viral, the mayor of the city, Simone Petrangeli, has asked persons and the media to give the women privacy.
    Baka naman naman nasobrahan niya ang pag aalaga doon sa isa nilang old folk kaya nagkaroon ng bunga.

  6. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    3,754
    #6
    naku lagot si father baka ituro sakristan

  7. Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Posts
    2,209
    #7
    Mother of god!

  8. Join Date
    Jan 2003
    Posts
    3,779
    #8
    It's a miracle, how do you get pregnant kung BJ at by the ass lang ? ask the nun...

  9. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    10,820
    #9
    ^ hindi naman daw niya ni-swallow e paano siya mabuntis.

  10. Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    2,450
    #10
    Alam na. Walang himala. Umuwi sa bansa nila 9 months para mag-renew ng passport. Baka nakita niya boypren niya.

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