m 8B RELIGIONAE^e Charlotte Thursday, September 28, 2006 Tutu in disagreement with chureh’s stand on gays THE ASSOCIATED PRESS JOHANNESBUBG, South Africa — Archbishop Desmond Tutu, in the first authorized biography of the Nobel peace laureate, said he was ashamed of his Andean Church’s conservative posi tion that rejected gay priests. In the book, “Rabble-rouser for Peace” by his former press secretary John Allen, Thtu also criticized the last apartheid president, F.W. de Klerk, for not accepting accoxmtability for apartheid atrocities. He said the failiJre caused him to regret having nominated de Klerk, alor^ with Nelson Mandela, for their 1993 Nobel Peace Prize. Excerpts from the book were scheduled to be appear in South Afiica on Friday and the biography was scheduled for release in time for Tutu’s 75th birthday on Oct. 7. The retired archbishop was critical of Archbishop of Can- terbiuy Rowan Williams for bowing on the gay priest issue to conservative ele ments, particularly Afiican bishops, in the 77-million member Anglican Church that includes Episcopalians in the United States. In a 1998 letter to Williams predecessor, Archbishop George Carey Tiitu wrote he was “ashamed to be Angli can.” It came after the Lam beth Conference of Bishops rejected the ordination of practicing homosexuals say ing their sexual relations were “incompatible with scripture.” Tutu also said he was deeply saddened at the furor caused by the appointment of openly gay V Gene Robinson as bishop of New Hampshire in 2003. ‘He found it little short of outrageous that church lead ers should be obsessed with issues of sexuality in the face of the challenges of AIDS and global poverty” wrote AUen. As archbishop, T\itu criti cized but could not change a policy in South Africa that said gay priests would be tol erated as long as they remained celibate. He did approve chiorch blessings for gay and lesbian relation ships, without calling them marriage- He also pushed for the ordination of women, and when it was approved quickly appointed The Rev Wilma Jakobsen as his chaplain. Tiitu’s criticism of de Klerk steins fi:x)m when Tutu was chairman of South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which offered perpetrators of apartheid crimes amnesty if they told the truth about their activi ties. During the hearings, TVitu sometimes wept along with the victims of human rights abuses. Allen wrote that the process left Tatu disappointed with some political leaders, partic ularly de Klerk, who he beheved had not accepted accoimtabUity for apariheid atrocities. De Klerk was not directly implicated in state-sponsored violence, AUen wrote, but had been aware of''majfiiem” as a result of activity by the secu rity forces. In an interview with the author, de Klerk acknowledged he failed to fol low up suspicions security forces were committing human rights abuses. Car dealership draws fire THE ASSOCIATED PRESS COLUMBUS, Ohio —A car dealership’s tor^ue-in-cheek radio advertisement declarir^ “a jihad on the automotive market,” will not be charged, the company said, despite drawing sharp criticism that the ad’s content is offen sive. Several stations rejected the spot fix)m Den nis Mitsubishi, which boasts that sales repre sentatives wearing ‘burqas” —head-to-toe tra ditional dress for Islamic women—will sell vehicles ihat can “comfortably seat 12 jihadists in the back.” The Columbus chapter of the Coimcil on American-Islamic Relations decayed the ad as disrespectful. ‘Using that as a promotional pitch when so many are dying finm the criminal activity of suicide bombers, that’s not funny” chapter president Asma Mobin-Uddin said. “I don’t think it’s appropriate when it causes real pain. It exploits or promotes misunderstanding in terms already misunderstood or misused.” In the ad, Keith Dennis of Dennis Mitsubishi talks about a ‘laimching a jihad on the auto motive market.” The ads wiU begin airing next week, dealer ship general manager Aaron Masterson said, although it was vmclear whether any radio sta tions had accepted the spot. Amessage was left seeking additional comment at Dennis Mit subishi on Saturday Ministry provides pom escape Continued from page 6B McDandel said New Dawn/New Day is not just a Grand Strand stand-alone ministry Throughout the country theie is a network of such ministries and individuals, who have come out of the industry, supporting each other in the efforts of offering help to those in need. Some include: New Friends/New Life in Tfexas; Beauty fiom Ashes Ministries Inc. in Florida; WeUspring of Living Water in Geoigia; and the Maiy Magdalene Project in California. New Dawn/New Day wants to continue to enhance its pro gram so that it can meet the needs of its participants and their children, McDandel said- “This ministry is for women who truly want to live life dif ferently” she said. ‘Tt has to be their choice to want to come in the program. No one can call for them.” Hired to cleanse properties Continued from page 5B A farmer in Louisa called her because he couldn’t get any crops to grow in a field. She said she saw a Civil War battle being replayed over aird over. “Always in a war, the first thing they want to know is. Who won?”’ Wall said she can hardly breathe when she goes to the 17th Street Farmei's’ Market in Shockoe Bottom, where slaves were once sold. “The enei^ there is oppressive.” Wall chaiges $150 to clear a house. She moves from room to room with a white candle, making the sign of the cixiss and thi’ee clockwise circles, and a bnjsh of smoking sage. Spirits don’t like the smeU of sage, she said. “It’s like when you clean your house of dust bunnies— only I clean the energy” she said. ‘T try to make it normal and not spooky” Pe^y Binford, a Richmond agent for 28 years, says she uses Wall’s clearing services if she feels something isn’t ri^t in a house. “Sometimes chents know, sometimes they don’t, depending on how they would take it,” she said. In one situation, Binford sold a propeity to a couple who spent two horn’s in an imcleared house dm’ing a home inspection. The woman got so agitated sitting in the house that she couldn’t go fhrough with the deal, Bin ford said. Binford called Wall for a clearing, then sold the house to someone else. A Richmond art and music promoter who didn’t want to be named said he called Wall to do a clearing after he and his wife moved into a house. He said he sensed a pres ence. His wife didn’t. Their cat clawed and meowed at a clos et door. Wall did the clearing. ‘Tt felt like a wdght had been lifted,” he said. And the cat stopped fixating on the door. Houses that were crime scenes can be heavy as well. Wall has not been to the south Richmond homes where musi cian Bi’yan Harvey, his wife and their two daughters were killed on Jan. 1 and whei-e thi’ee people in another family wei’e slain on Jan. 6. But she takes readings of the homes to sense their spiiits and to determine what it would take to get them to move on. Wes Atiyeh, president of the Richmond Association of Real- tore, said he doesn’t beheve houses are marred by unfor tunate incidents. “They can be overeome,” he said. Neither sellers nor agents in \Tiginia are required to dis close facts or occurrences, including crimes or suicides, that have no effect on the physical property The law says nothing about the spiritual side. Many would argue if there were such a thing- “People react one of two ways when they find out what I do,” Wall said. “They say ‘OK,’ and change the subject —or they want to know more.” Americans generally hesi tate to talk about spirits for fear of being labeled quacks. People from other cultures seem more open to the possi bility Paul Vu, who is Vietnamese, said people fi’om his culture would put death— whether natural or not—at the top of the list as a reason not to buy a house. “We do not take death light ly,” said Vu, a Richmond real estate agent. “People are scared by the spirit. You can’t touch it, see it or smell it, but something is there.” If the death occurred in the family and the house is passed on through genera tions, that is different, Vu said. “If it’s a family member, you have sympathy You’re not afraid of your own family” Informative. 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