Update on the latest religion news

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SUDAN DEATH SENTENCE

Facing death, Sudanese woman relied on her faith

MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) β€” The Sudanese woman who faced a death sentence for refusing to renounce Christianity says she was under intense pressure from Muslim clerics and her jailers to convert to Islam but kept her faith.

Meriam Ibrahim, who now lives in New Hampshire, was sentenced to death in Sudan for apostasy but was freed after an international outcry. Her father was Muslim, and her mother was Christian, but in Sudan children must follow their father’s religion.

Muslim women also are prohibited from marrying non-Muslims in Sudan. Ibrahim married Daniel Wani, a Christian from southern Sudan, in 2011.

In an interview aired Monday night on Fox News Channel’s “The Kelly File,” Ibrahim says she refused to recant her Christian faith even if it meant death because, in her words, “Faith means life. If you don’t have any faith, you are not alive.”

She also recalled giving birth to her daughter while in prison and shackled at the ankles.

Sound:

285-a-11-(Freed Sudanese Christian Meriam Ibrahim, speaking through an interpreter, in interview)-“in any situation”-Freed Sudanese Christian Meriam Ibrahim, speaking through an interpreter, says she trusted God throughout her imprisonment. COURTESY: Fox News Channel’s “The Kelly File” ((Mandatory on-air credit. No archive or use after 48 hours)) (15 Sep 2014)

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288-a-17-(Freed Sudanese Christian Meriam Ibrahim, speaking through an interpreter, in interview)-“stood by me”-Freed Sudanese Christian Meriam Ibrahim, speaking through an interpreter, says U.S. officials didn’t offer help initially. COURTESY: Fox News Channel’s “The Kelly File” ((Mandatory on-air credit. No archive or use after 48 hours. Note length of cut)) (15 Sep 2014)

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287-a-09-(Freed Sudanese Christian Meriam Ibrahim, speaking through an interpreter, in interview)-“and treated harshly”-Freed Sudanese Christian Meriam Ibrahim, speaking through an interpreter, says her case isn’t unique in Sudan. COURTESY: Fox News Channel’s “The Kelly File” ((Mandatory on-air credit. No archive or use after 48 hours)) (15 Sep 2014)

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286-a-08-(Freed Sudanese Christian Meriam Ibrahim, speaking through an interpreter, in interview)-“religion I choose”-Freed Sudanese Christian Meriam Ibrahim, speaking through an interpreter, says she should never have been imprisoned. COURTESY: Fox News Channel’s “The Kelly File” ((Mandatory on-air credit. No archive or use after 48 hours)) (15 Sep 2014)

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270-w-32-(Steve Coleman, AP religion editor, with freed Sudanese Christian Meriam Ibrahim, speaking through translator)–The Sudanese woman who faced a death sentence for refusing to renounce Christianity says she trusted God throughout the ordeal. AP Religion Editor Steve Coleman reports. (15 Sep 2014)

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271-a-11-(Freed Sudanese Christian Meriam Ibrahim, speaking through translator, in interview)-“what I believe”-Freed Sudanese Christian Meriam Ibrahim, recalls through a translator how she was pressured by Muslim clerics to renounce Christianity. COURTESY: Fox News Channel’s “The Kelly File” ((Mandatory on-air credit. No archive or use after 48 hours)) (15 Sep 2014)

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EBOLA-AMERICANS

Ebola patient in Nebraska bored in isolation room

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) β€” Nebraska doctors treating an American missionary battling Ebola say that as he improves, he’s getting bored in his isolation room.

Debbie Sacra (SAY’-krah) says the Nebraska Medical Center brought in a chess board, books and a Nerf basketball hoop to help entertain her husband, Dr. Rick Sacra. The 51-year-old has been hospitalized since Sept. 5 as he recovers from the deadly disease he contracted while working at a hospital in Liberia.

Debbie Sacra said Monday her husband is becoming mentally sharper every day but still tires easily.

Another American aid worker is being treated for Ebola at Emory University Hospital in Atlanta, and two other missionaries were treated for Ebola there previously. One of them, Dr. Kent Brantly, is to testify in Washington Tuesday at a congressional hearing on Ebola.

GOSPEL MUSIC GALA

Kennedy Center gala celebrates Gospel music

WASHINGTON (AP) β€” Gospel singers Kirk Franklin and Yolanda Adams have been honored in a Kennedy Center gala.

Fellow gospel singers Edwin Hawkins and Dottie Peoples were among the scheduled performers at Monday’s celebration of Gospel Music Heritage Month.

Texas Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee co-sponsored the 2008 resolution proclaiming each September as a time to recognize the American musical genre. In a House floor speech, Lee observed that “through war and peace, gospel music has been a comfort to many Americans.”

Her congressional co-sponsor, former Arkansas Senator Blanche Lincoln, also was honored Monday at the Kennedy Center.

Carl Davis, chairman of the Gospel Music Heritage Month Foundation, cited what he called “the unyielding power of the gospel through song.” In a statement, Davis said this year’s honorees have “impacted the genre of gospel music with historical relevance and meaning.”

Sound:

317-a-07-(U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas, in House floor speech)-“joy and praise”-Texas Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee says September is Gospel Music Heritage Month. (15 Sep 2014)

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316-a-04-(U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas, in House floor speech)-“to many Americans”-Texas Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee says Gospel music is a part of America’s heritage. (15 Sep 2014)

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MUSIC-CAT-STEVENS

Cat Stevens announces 5-city US concert tour

NEW YORK (AP) β€” New Rock and Roll Hall of Fame member Cat Stevens is taking the “Peace Train” back on the road.

Stevens announced Monday that he will make a six-city concert tour in North America this December, his first series of shows in the U.S. since 1976. His conversion to Islam followed, putting his music career on hold for a quarter century. Cat Stevens is using that stage name along with Yusuf, the name he took when he converted.

The 1970s pop star, who is now 66, has slowly broken back into secular music during the past decade and has made only a handful of appearances in the U.S.

Despite the political climate, with the U.S. fighting Islamic State militants in the Middle East, Stevens said he doesn’t expect his faith to be an issue when he goes on the road in this country. He says, “A lot of things that people believe about Islam are totally different from the religion that most of us recognize.”

IOWA CHURCH-TRACTORS

Logan church holds community tractor-themed event

LOGAN, Iowa (AP) β€” An Iowa church has hosted Drive Your Tractor to Church Day to attract locals who aren’t regular parishioners.

The event at Immanuel Lutheran Church in Logan featured tractor rides and children’s games.

Church trustee Justin Gochenour told the Omaha World-Herald that Sunday’s event helped attract children to the church, which he said “is something that a lot of parishes are struggling with right now.”

Kids ran around, riding toy tractors and throwing footballs, while the streets were lined with all types of tractors.

Immanuel Lutheran’s pastor, the Rev. Jerald Firby, said the event drew dozens of people who don’t typically attend services there.

BUS CRASH

31 students injured in southern Indiana bus crash

CENTRAL, Ind. (AP) β€” A spokesman for a northwest Indiana church says 31 female Hammond Baptist Schools students were injured when a bus rolled on its side on a road in the southern part of the state, but none of the injuries were life-threatening.

First Baptist Church of Hammond Administrative Pastor Eddie Lapina told The Times of Munster that a girl with a possible broken arm was brought by helicopter to Kosair Children’s Hospital in Louisville, Kentucky, and two more were taken there by ambulance. WLKY-TV reports all three were in fair condition.

The remaining 28 students were taken to Harrison County Hospital. WLKY reported they were in stable condition.

The crash occurred about 2:30 p.m. Monday in Central, about 25 miles southwest of Louisville. Lapina says the students were headed to a school retreat.

GIRL WITH UZI

Victim’s family praying for girl in range accident

PHOENIX (AP) β€” The family of an Arizona shooting range instructor who was accidentally shot and killed by a 9-year-old girl say they’re praying for her.

The Arizona Republic reports that lawyers for the family of 39-year-old Charles Vacca delivered a video message last week to the girl’s family.

An attorney for the girl’s parents says the family is devastated by the tragedy that occurred Aug. 25 on a brief excursion during a vacation. Vacca was shot at the Last Stop range in White Hills, Arizona, about 60 miles south of Las Vegas.

Prosecutors aren’t filing charges in the case. Arizona’s workplace safety agency is investigating the death.

One of the Vacca family’s attorneys says the family understands that the shooting has prompted a national discussion about gun safety.

MASSACHUSETTS GAMBLING-BISHOPS

Roman Catholic bishops support casino law repeal

BOSTON (AP) β€” Roman Catholic leaders in Massachusetts are urging voters to repeal the state’s casino law.

The repeal measure will be on November’s ballot.

Boston Cardinal Sean O’Malley, Worcester Bishop Robert McManus, Springfield Bishop Mitchell Rozanski and Rev. George Coleman, the Apostolic Administrator of Fall River, say the gambling industry threatens local businesses, “weakens the moral fabric of society” and “fundamentally alters communities.”

The bishops say the Massachusetts’ economy has improved markedly since the casino law passed in 2011. They note that other Northeast states have seen casino gambling revenues decline and that five casinos in Atlantic City, New Jersey could close by the end of the year.

The bishops are also concerned the facilities will depend largely on gambling addicts, many of whom are already among the poorest in the community.

VATICAN-ALBANIA

Vatican says no extra security for pope in Albania

VATICAN CITY (AP) β€” The Vatican says it’s not taking any extra security measures to protect Pope Francis during his upcoming trip to majority Muslim Albania despite reports of Islamic militants returning from the Mideast.

Vatican spokesman the Rev. Federico Lombardi said Monday that Francis would use the same open-topped vehicle he uses in St. Peter’s Square when he greets crowds in the Albanian capital Tirana on Sunday.

Francis has said he wanted to visit Albania to highlight the rebirth of Christianity that was wiped out during communist rule, and to showcase how Catholics, Orthodox and Muslims are working together to govern the country.

Lombardi said that while there is general concern about the Islamic State threat, “there are no specific threats or risk that would change the pope’s behavior or the way the trip is organized.”

VATICAN-DIRTY WAR

Pope meets with Argentine judge in Dirty War probe

VATICAN CITY (AP) β€” Pope Francis has met with an Argentine judge who played a key role in the recent convictions of two former military officers for one of the most notorious crimes of the country’s Dirty War.

La Rioja judge Daniel Ruben Herrera Piedrabuena ordered new expert investigations into the 1976 death of Bishop Enrique Angelelli, a left-leaning bishop killed in an automobile crash shortly after Argentina’s military seized power.

For decades, officials insisted the death was accidental. But Piedrabuena’s investigation determined he had been assassinated, and the La Rioja court agreed in July in sentencing two ex-military officers to life in prison.

The Holy See provided documentation to the court showing Angelelli had warned Rome of his problems with the military.

The Vatican provided no details of Francis’ meeting Monday with Piedrabuena.