Post by account_disabled on Mar 9, 2024 19:37:59 GMT -8
A good father knows how to wait, and knows how to forgive, from the bottom of his heart; "He certainly also knows how to correct firmly... The father who knows how to correct without humiliating is the same one who knows how to protect without saving efforts," the Pope said after dedicating the general audience to the figure of the father. «Once, at a meeting, I heard a father confess that sometimes he has to hit his children, but never in the face so as not to humiliate them. How nice. He has some dignity. "He has to punish, but fairly," he added. The comment, which went almost unnoticed, generated harsh criticism from authorities and organizations in Germany and the United Kingdom. «No hit to a child is worthy. Let it be clear. "All violence against children is unacceptable," decla the German Minister for the Family, Manuela Schwesig, to the newspaper Die Welt.
The German association Aide asked the pontiff to correct what it considers an error. "This Pope is particularly human and like every human being he can America Mobile Number List make mistakes That statement is completely out of place," he wrote. For Peter Saunders, founder of the English association against pedophilia and member of the Vatican commission for the protection of children, this is an inappropriate statement. "I was surprised that he made that statement, even if he sometimes screws up," Saunders acknowledged on the sidelines of the first meeting of the Vatican commission to which he belongs. Pope Francis has a very traditional conception of family and education, he defends the combination of gentleness and firmness and often criticizes parents who behave like dictators or friends. This is not the first inconvenient departure of the Argentine Pontiff. In January, when talking about the limits of freedom of expression with the journalists who accompanied him on the papal flight, he assu that anyone who insults his mother deserves a punch, unleashing a wave of controversies.
Seeing rhinos But why rhinos? “They are cute and with their big antlers, they look beautiful and I like to take care of them in the wild,” Carter explains. But before Alyssa's Save the Rhinos, the Johannesburg resident had never seen a rhino in the wild. Now, she has been to Kruger several times to meet the other Honorary Rangers, on a few occasions, and recently visited two sniffer dogs in training last summer. He takes pictures of every animal he sees in the park, but rhinos have a special place: “It's really nice because I know I'm doing something,” he says. Carter says he keeps track of every rhino he sees; and there have been up to “130 or so” so far. Carter is eager to talk to others about her experiences with rhinos, standing in front of 700 students at a school in December, and nearly 300 adults at a development conference that year. She says it's easy to talk to adults when you're a kid; as long as her dad is by her side. The elder Carter says he had not been involved in conservation before Alyssa started her campaign and that the whole family has been infected by the young activist's enthusiasm.
The German association Aide asked the pontiff to correct what it considers an error. "This Pope is particularly human and like every human being he can America Mobile Number List make mistakes That statement is completely out of place," he wrote. For Peter Saunders, founder of the English association against pedophilia and member of the Vatican commission for the protection of children, this is an inappropriate statement. "I was surprised that he made that statement, even if he sometimes screws up," Saunders acknowledged on the sidelines of the first meeting of the Vatican commission to which he belongs. Pope Francis has a very traditional conception of family and education, he defends the combination of gentleness and firmness and often criticizes parents who behave like dictators or friends. This is not the first inconvenient departure of the Argentine Pontiff. In January, when talking about the limits of freedom of expression with the journalists who accompanied him on the papal flight, he assu that anyone who insults his mother deserves a punch, unleashing a wave of controversies.
Seeing rhinos But why rhinos? “They are cute and with their big antlers, they look beautiful and I like to take care of them in the wild,” Carter explains. But before Alyssa's Save the Rhinos, the Johannesburg resident had never seen a rhino in the wild. Now, she has been to Kruger several times to meet the other Honorary Rangers, on a few occasions, and recently visited two sniffer dogs in training last summer. He takes pictures of every animal he sees in the park, but rhinos have a special place: “It's really nice because I know I'm doing something,” he says. Carter says he keeps track of every rhino he sees; and there have been up to “130 or so” so far. Carter is eager to talk to others about her experiences with rhinos, standing in front of 700 students at a school in December, and nearly 300 adults at a development conference that year. She says it's easy to talk to adults when you're a kid; as long as her dad is by her side. The elder Carter says he had not been involved in conservation before Alyssa started her campaign and that the whole family has been infected by the young activist's enthusiasm.