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Best photos of May 30: Fishermen in Gaza to triathlon in Seoul
Best photos of May 30: Fishermen in Gaza to triathlon in Seoul

The National

time3 days ago

  • General
  • The National

Best photos of May 30: Fishermen in Gaza to triathlon in Seoul

Community volunteers have swung into action delivering food packages and toiletries to the men. When provisions are distributed, the men line up in long queues for packets of rice, flour, sugar, salt, pulses, milk, biscuits, shaving kits, soap and telecom cards. Volunteers from St Mary's Catholic Church said some workers came to the church to pray for their families and ask for assistance. Boxes packed with essential food items were distributed to workers in the Dubai Investments Park and Ras Al Khaimah camps last week. Workers at the Sonapur camp asked for Dh1,600 towards their gas bill. 'Especially in this year of tolerance we consider ourselves privileged to be able to lend a helping hand to our needy brothers in the Actco camp," Father Lennie Connully, parish priest of St Mary's. Workers spoke of their helplessness, seeing children's marriages cancelled because of lack of money going home. Others told of their misery of being unable to return home when a parent died. 'More than daily food, they are worried about not sending money home for their family,' said Kusum Dutta, a volunteer who works with the Indian consulate.

Plan for 130 new homes in Blandford St Mary gets go-ahead
Plan for 130 new homes in Blandford St Mary gets go-ahead

BBC News

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • BBC News

Plan for 130 new homes in Blandford St Mary gets go-ahead

A plan for 130 new homes has been given the go-ahead after it was originally turned down by a Hallam Land Management appealed the application for land north of Ward's Drove in Blandford St Mary after it was rejected by Dorset authority said it was concerned about the impact on the Cranborne Chase National Landscape and on nearby listed buildings, including the village's Grade II* listed St Mary's planning inspector Matthew Jones said the impact on them would be acceptable and approved the application on 21 May. Mr Jones said he acknowledged there might be some impact on local services but that it was not the role of the development "to alleviate existing issues or the effects of other developments".The new homes will sit close to Bellway's 350-home development, St Mary's Hill. You can follow BBC Dorset on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.

Oxford restaurant named in UK top 100 spots for outdoor dining
Oxford restaurant named in UK top 100 spots for outdoor dining

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Lifestyle
  • Yahoo

Oxford restaurant named in UK top 100 spots for outdoor dining

A popular restaurant in the centre of Oxford has been named in a list of the top 100 spots in the UK for outdoor dining. Quod Restaurant and Bar in the Old Bank Hotel on Oxford High Street was the only venue from Oxfordshire mentioned on the prestigious list. Each year, restaurant platform OpenTable puts together the top 100 list by looking and diner reviews and demand metrics to determine the perfect outdoor spots for summer. READ MORE: Oxfordshire solar farm plans approved amid traffic fears It's no surprise that high-end eatery Quod made the cut with its unrivalled location looking out onto St Mary's Church at the Radcliffe Camera. Flash Sale Alert! 🌟 Dive deeper into the stories that shape Oxfordshire with Oxford Mail. Unlimited local news, an ad-free app, and a digital replica of our print edition—all with 80 per cent fewer ads on our site. 🗞️ 👇#StayInformed — Oxford Mail (@TheOxfordMail) May 26, 2025 Reviews praise the ambience of the restaurant, with its setting in the historic building of the Old Bank Hotel and stylish decoration. The service is another great attraction for Quod, with unfussy, professional servers providing attentive accompaniment to the dining experience. READ MORE: Christ Church commis chef wins Oxford Guild of Chefs award The food, too, is praised by diners, with a huge range of options on its menu from its breakfast or set lunch menus, to afternoon tea, to dinner and cocktails. Bringing it all together is the outdoor dining space in a shielded private terrace, creating a pocket of luxury off the busy high street, and guaranteeing Quod a spot of OpenTable's list. Although Oxfordshire got just one mention, Berkshire and Buckinghamshire enjoyed a few names on the list, including The Loch & The Tyne y Adam Handling in Windsor, The Greyhound in Beaconsfield and The Three Oaks in Gerrards Cross.

Disused Sunderland church to become arts and learning centre
Disused Sunderland church to become arts and learning centre

BBC News

time13-05-2025

  • Business
  • BBC News

Disused Sunderland church to become arts and learning centre

A historic church building could receive a new lease of life as an adult learning and arts City Council's planning department has approved the change of use of St Mary's Church in South Grade II listed structure, which sits on the corner of Wear Street and Church Street, dates to the 1800s and has been vacant for some time.A previous property listing for the site said the church had "formally closed for worship" and described it as a "redevelopment opportunity for a range of possible new uses". The applicant is a firm called Pecorino Properties, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service.A statement of intended use submitted to the council said the aim was to "use the building for adult education and arts-related activities", with a focus on "learning, participation and cultural engagement".The space would host arts exhibitions and a range of other creative initiatives alongside educational programmes involving maths and literacy.A council report said there would be no external changes made to the church as part of the any future building work to facilitate the new use "may require planning permission and/or building regulations approval", planning documents recent months, a company with the same name has also been progressing plans to repurpose another Grade II listed church in the city, St Mark's, off Hylton Road in the Millfield included plans to revive the space to attract not-for-profit organisations, local artists and small start-up businesses to occupy new units on site. Follow BBC Sunderland on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

How the new Pope Leo XIV's childhood church in Chicago fell into disrepair — and what may lie ahead
How the new Pope Leo XIV's childhood church in Chicago fell into disrepair — and what may lie ahead

Yahoo

time10-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

How the new Pope Leo XIV's childhood church in Chicago fell into disrepair — and what may lie ahead

Above the door of the church in the last blocks of Chicago, the Virgin Mary still stands with her arms wide open. The double doors beneath the statue's feet are shut, but a disintegrating wooden side door swings freely, leading to a set of stairs with chipped paint scattered on them. Above, a pool of blue light from a stained-glass window illuminates a balcony where the St. Mary of the Assumption Church choir — including a young boy who would later become the first American-born pope — once sang. Antoinette Nuzzo stepped inside the sanctuary earlier this week, took a look around and thought out loud: 'Wow, they took a lot of stuff out of here.' Nuzzo, 71, had not been inside St. Mary's since the church's final Mass in the summer of 2011. But she came back Thursday to see what remained of the old sanctuary because it is where Robert Prevost, now Pope Leo XIV, began his formal religious journey. The rail where Nuzzo knelt for her first communion as a fourth-grader was gone. The front of the sanctuary where Prevost first served the Catholic Church as an altar boy was covered with two pink and orange graffiti murals, the result of neglect after a series of closures and downsizing ordered by the Archdiocese of Chicago, which sold the parish property in 2019. An alcove that once held a statue is now empty and spray-painted with the words 'Oh My God.' Nuzzo wondered if the religious sculpture went to the still-operational Christ Our Savior church in South Holland, which absorbed many former St. Mary's parishioners. Many others made the same trip in Leo's first hours as pope, wanting to feel a connection with the South Sider who had just appeared in papal regalia on the balcony of St. Peter's Basilica. They posed for pictures outside the building and walked gingerly around the crumbling interior, agog that the first American to lead the world's 1.4 billion Catholics could have roots there. And in doing so, they may have been the site's first unofficial pilgrims. The Chicago area does not lack for holy Catholic sites. The Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe in northwest suburban Des Plaines draws thousands of pilgrims for La Virgen's feast day every December. The Shrine of All Saints in Morton Grove bills itself as the second-largest collection of relics in North America. But becoming the hometown of the first American pope could bring crowds on a different order of magnitude to the south suburbs and the city's South Side. Many sites associated with past popes' lives and upbringings have become museums or holy destinations for the faithful, and papacy-themed tourism more broadly often flowers in popes' hometowns. Benedict XVI's birthplace in Germany and John Paul II's old family home in Poland are both now museums, and themed tours of the cities where they spent parts of their lives abound on the internet. The grand basilica where Pope Francis was baptized in Buenos Aires has become a popular stop for tour groups, as well. People who gathered outside the abandoned St. Mary of the Assumption on Thursday mused about what the future might hold for Pope Leo XIV's childhood church, given its new significance. 'If he was baptized here, it's a historic place,' said Oak Lawn resident Steve Ligda. 'I bet (the archdiocese) wishes they didn't close it now.' Aaron Hollander, a scholar of theology and culture based in New York, said it made sense for people to spontaneously come out to the church as they sought a sense of connection to the new pope. But the site's religious status in the long term still remains to be seen. 'It will depend in part on what Pope Leo does and what he becomes and how his relationship with the faithful changes over time,' he said. Hollander said it's likely there may be a push to formalize the site's status as a destination but cautioned that there was no way to predict the intensity of organizing or the official response from the archdiocese. Emily Crews, a scholar of religious life at the University of Chicago Divinity School, said it would be 'fascinating' to observe whether St. Mary's or Leo's childhood home, a few blocks away on the 200 block of East141st Place in Dolton, draw religious tourists or pilgrims given their newfound significance to the history of the church. A key factor will be whether the archdiocese would buy either the church or the home, she said. A spokesperson for the archdiocese said there were no plans to repurchase the old parish property and couldn't comment on the future of the pope's childhood home.. So the future of the church remains unclear. The archdiocese merged St. Mary of the Assumption with Queen of Apostles in Riverdale in 2011 to become the St. Mary, Queen of Apostles church. The archdiocese spokesperson said the new congregation was placed at the Riverdale church building because it was in better condition. That congregation merged with two others in 2019 to become Christ Our Savior, according to the archdiocese. Cook County tax records show the archdiocese sold the St. Mary of the Assumption property — which encompasses the church itself, the school, convent, rectory and annex — to a company called Eugene Benjamin Properties in 2019 for just under $250,000. Then the property was sold again in 2022 to the South Side-based JBlendz Holdings, records show. JBlendz Holdings bills itself online as a telecommunication infrastructure maintenance firm. One of the company's owners, Joe Hall, fielded questions from reporters Thursday afternoon on the cracked front walk as people trickled in and out, taking smartphone photos. Asked why the site has stood apparently untouched since it changed hands three years ago, Hall cited a series of weather-related setbacks. He said his ambition was to renovate the five buildings on the parcel for community development uses, including a food pantry, and to get it equipped with free Wi-Fi. Hall said he had planned to keep the church building itself as a space of worship. But he acknowledged that the news from Vatican City might scramble the rest. 'Whatever plan we thought we had, it's all been changed in the last few hours,' he said. That said, he added, he would not sell or lease the property 'unless it had anything to do with the pope, period.' Late on Thursday, Dolton Village Trustee Stanley Brown took in the church's facade from beneath his black cap. He'd passed by the building for years, he said. And he was chuffed to know that it suddenly had a place in the history of the Catholic Church, particularly after the village had weathered years of political turmoil. 'For all the things we've been going through, (God) sent us the pope here in Dolton,' he said. 'So that is a blessing.' It was early evening by the time Laura Mathews traipsed through the building in her neon crossing-guard vest and reflective sunglasses. Every few steps, she'd shout, 'I remember this!' Mathews, 71, remembered wearing the blue and white jumper uniform as an elementary student at St. Mary's, and trying to stay out of the way of one particular nun, Sister Cecilia. She said she'd never forget the thunderstorm the night of her first communion. She recalled glaring at the crucifix the first Easter after her mother died. As a young woman, she quit going to church and questioned her faith. Eventually, she said, she came back around. Nuzzo reminisced about the white dress and the hat with flowers she'd worn for her first communion. They both remembered the pope's parents, a school superintendent and a librarian, reading in front of the congregation, and picnics on the back lawn and carnivals in the parking lot. They remembered where the baby room had been and where the rosaries had been kept. Looking around for the first time in 14 years, they saw the stained glass had largely survived. The place was gutted. The air smelled like must. But looking up at the windows, the friends were amazed by how much — including the memories — remained. Chicago Tribune reporter A. D. Quig contributed.

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