WNBA’s Brittney Griner Appeals Her Russian Prison Sentence

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: ZIZ Broadcasting Corporation

Moscow (AP) — Lawyers for American basketball star Brittney Griner have filed an appeal of her nine-year Russian prison sentence for drug possession, Russian news agencies reported Monday, amid talks between the U.S. and Russia that could lead to a high-profile prisoner swap.

Griner, an eight-time all-star center with the WNBA’s Phoenix Mercury and two-time Olympic gold medalist, was convicted Aug. 4 after police said they found vape canisters containing cannabis oil in her luggage at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport.

Griner admitted that she had the canisters in her luggage, but said she had inadvertently packed them in haste and that she had no criminal intent. Her defence team presented written statements that she had been prescribed cannabis to treat pain.

Her February arrest came at a time of heightened tensions between Moscow and Washington, just days before Russia sent troops into Ukraine. At the time, Griner, recognized as one of the greatest players in WNBA history, was returning to Russia, where she plays during the U.S. league’s offseason.

Lawyer Maria Blagovolina was quoted by Russian news agencies on Monday as saying the appeal was filed, as was expected, but the grounds for it weren’t immediately clear.

The nine-year sentence was close to the maximum of 10 years, and Blagovolina and co-counsel Alexander Boykov said after the conviction that the punishment was excessive. They said that in similar cases defendants have received an average sentence of about five years, with about a third of them granted parole.

Before her conviction, the U.S. State Department declared Griner to be “wrongfully detained” — a charge that Russia has sharply rejected.

Reflecting the growing pressure on the Biden administration to do more to bring Griner home, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken took the unusual step of revealing publicly in July that Washington had made a “substantial proposal” to get Griner home, along with Paul Whelan, an American serving a 16-year sentence in Russia for espionage.

Blinken didn’t elaborate, but The Associated Press and other news organizations have reported that Washington has offered to free Viktor Bout, a Russian arms dealer who is serving a 25-year sentence in the U.S. and once earned the nickname the “Merchant of Death.”

On Sunday, a senior Russian diplomat said talks about an exchange have been conducted.

“This quite sensitive issue of the swap of convicted Russian and U.S. citizens is being discussed through the channels defined by our presidents,” Alexander Darchiev, head of the Foreign Ministry’s North America department, told state news agency Tass. “These individuals are, indeed, being discussed. The Russian side has long been seeking the release of Viktor Bout. The details should be left to professionals.”

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Pay Pushes Venezuelan Teachers to Protest, Consider Quitting

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: ZIZ Broadcasting Corporation

Caracas, Venezuela (AP) — Public school teachers across Venezuela had planned to use their annual vacation bonus to buy uniforms for their children, waterproof leaky roofs, get new prescription glasses or fix the pair barely held together by adhesive tape.

Some expected to get $100, while others calculated a little more or less depending on their years of service and advanced degrees, though only a small number thought they would get around $200.

The government, however, paid them only a tiny fraction of that.

So, a few days into their long break, teachers have been marching by the thousands around the country, threatening to strike when school resumes or possibly even to abandon their profession.

“Right now, I don’t even have a pencil for my children to start classes in September,” said Florena Delgado, who teaches first and fifth grades at two schools in one of the lowest-income neighbourhoods of the capital, Caracas.

She also makes cake toppers, creates balloon decorations and sells clothes to supplement her government pay. Unless something changes, “I don’t plan to join classes, and well, let it be what God wants,” she says.

In response to the unrest, the government announced Friday through a lawmaker that it will pay the bonus in full this week. But Venezuela’s teachers are long accustomed to seeing televised economic promises that aren’t kept, so they are waiting until they get their money before changing course.

Elementary and high school educators in the crisis-wrecked country on average earn about $50 a month, ranking among the lowest paid in Latin America. The government pays them a vacation bonus in a single payment at the end of every school year in July.

The National Budget Office based this year’s bonus on the $1.52 monthly minimum wage of 2021 instead of the $30 rate that took effect in April. The government also paid teachers only 25% of the unexpectedly low bonus and did not set a date to disburse the rest.

The budget office defended the calculation, arguing that a new labour agreement has not been signed. But by Friday, National Assembly member Orlando Pérez, who is president of one of the country’s teachers’ unions, said the government will pay teachers their full bonus as required by Venezuela’s labour law, which sets them based on the latest salaries.

Outside the offices of the Ministry of Education, teachers and college professors, who also earn meager wages and feel short-changed over their vacation bonus, have demanded the dismissal of the agency’s leader. Some teachers said they didn’t even get the 25% payment.

Protesting teachers have been joined by other workers, including the traditional government loyalists at the state-owned oil company, Petróleos de Venezuela. Red T-shirts long associated with the governing United Socialist Party of Venezuela were in abundance at one protest, in which workers from the health, cement and electric sectors expressed support for the teachers’ demands.

President Nicolás Maduro has not commented on the teachers’ complaints, angering some of them.

“He is a worker; he was a worker. He should remember that he comes from the very bottom” of the social ladder, elementary school teacher Leinni Carreño said of Maduro, who once was a bus driver and union member.

Teachers and professors work two, three or even four jobs, but their multiple paychecks sometimes are not enough to cover the basic food basket, which last month cost $392. Many teach under borderline hazardous conditions as pests, mould, filth and mosquito-attracting standing water are ever-present at schools.

Physics, chemistry and biology labs are long gone, and thieves took advantage of unsupervised schools during the pandemic to strip the buildings of copper wires and steal computers and other equipment.

Sociology professor Erly Ruiz earns about $90 a month. So, he also delivers goods around Caracas on his bike, works at a facility that produces blackberry wine and rents sound equipment. If his side hustles go well, his total income can reach about $400. He had earmarked his expected vacation bonus for an electrical home repair.

His budget is so tight, that his friends gave him their leftovers from his birthday celebration last month.

“For a week straight, I was able to eat protein every day at least once a day,” Ruiz said after biking to deliver cat litter to a customer. “That week was the only week this entire year that I was able to eat protein regularly.”

Professors and teachers alike have abandoned the teaching ranks since the country’s economic and political crisis began last decade. The Venezuelan Federation of Teachers estimates 50% of the country’s 370,000 teachers have left classrooms since 2017. They are among the more than 6 million Venezuelans who have migrated to other countries.

Even those who are still teaching don’t always fulfill their duties due to transportation, health, pay and other challenges. Some live so far away from the schools they are assigned to that their commute by public transportation eats up their salary.

Call center supervisor Jonás Nuñez sympathizes with the education workers. He was an elementary school teacher for 14 years but quit in 2020.

“The economic situation was what led to everything changing because I have a daughter, I have a family. So (the salary) no longer covered the expenses,” Ruiz said. “I miss it because you learned a lot from the children who were with you.”

Teachers have threatened strikes in the past, but this time anger accumulated throughout the pandemic as they were forced to attempt to educate students with limited or no internet access, had to cope with a collapsed health care system and saw prices for basic goods soar amid Venezuela’s unrelenting runaway inflation.

Opposition leader Juan Guaidó, who is recognized by the U.S. and several other nations as Venezuela’s legitimate leader, has expressed support for the teachers and professors. But he and the opposition parties have little impact on Maduro, whose regime controls all government institutions.

Delgado, who works a shift at one school in the morning and another shift at a different school in the afternoon, wants to keep teaching to be a role model for her students, but the discontent over the vacation bonus and regular pay is growing.

“There are many children who really need someone to guide them, to be there for them, who can really help them,” Delgado said. “It’s hard when you walk into a classroom and see that there are children who go to school just because they give them food.

“At school, you see that there are children who don’t have notebooks, who don’t have pencils because their parents are in the same situation as the teachers looking for a living, and they work day and night.”

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Two Antiguan and Barbudan nationals recognized for their participation in the 2022 Harlingen Tall Ships Races

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room
L to R: Charlotte Hooijdonk, Her Excellency Karen-Mae Hill, J-Maiah Louisor, Daniel Holdsworth and T-Janica Thomas

Two Antiguan and Barbudan nationals were recognized for their participation in the 2022 Harlingen Tall Ships Races at a ceremony held at the Antigua and Barbuda High Commission on Friday, 29th July. J-Maiah Louisor and T-Janica Thomas, both 21 years old, joined three other young sailors from the United Kingdom and Australia aboard a 55-foot yacht to sail from Harlingen in the Netherlands to Antwerp in Belgium.

The Tall Ships Races 2022 brought together an international fleet of tall and small ships which visited several European ports as they sailed across the North Sea. A tall ship is a large, traditionally rigged sailing vessel which are among the biggest rigged ships in the world at over 25 feet in length. The young Antiguan sailors were part of a crew of nine people including two young police cadets from the Merseyside Police Cadets UK in the United Kingdom – Sophia Brumskill and John Gregson – and one trainee from Australia, Georgia Lennard, who sailed aboard a 55-foot yacht the Cruise-in-Company leg of the races.

The idea to have these young people participate in the Tall Ships event was the brainchild of sailing enthusiasts who wanted to contribute to the development of sailing in the country. Charlotte Hooijdonk, Billy Gernertt and Daniel Holdsworth worked collectively to bring the idea to fruition. Charlotte, together with her husband Billy, currently run the West Indies Sail Heritage Foundation in Antigua and Barbuda. It provides a sail training programme for local youth free of cost and encourages them towards maritime careers by assisting them to receive the necessary maritime qualifications. Daniel first came to Antigua in 2017 with support from the Merseyside Police with Team Rubicon UK to deliver aid to The Caribbean in the aftermath of hurricane Maria. Having been introduced to the Merseyside Adventure Sailing Trust by a colleague, he thought it would be a great opportunity to have some local Antiguan and Barbudan youth participate in the Tall Ship Races to expose them to potential careers in the maritime industry.

After a careful selection process, J-Maiah and T-Janica were the two young sailors selected. To fund their participation, Daniel and Charlotte approached Sail Training International – a trust with the mission to bring international youth together for sailing – for funding which was supplied by the Sultan of Oman’s bursary. In addition, they also raised funding from various donors to include the Dutchy of Lancaster Benevolent Fund, the Chinese Sailing Association, the Liverpool Commonwealth Association, the Merseyside Adventure Sailing Trust, the Antigua and Barbuda Tourism Authority UK and Europe and the Antigua and Barbuda High Commission in London. In total, over £10,000 was raised to support the travel and training expenses for their participation.

Despite having prior sailing experience, both J-maiah and T-Janica had never sailed on a vessel that large. Prior to departing for Harlingen, they participated in an intensive two-day training organized by the Merseyside Adventure Sailing Trust in Liverpool. The training exposed them to personal development and mentorship skills as well as using a personal logbook and sailing navigation. As part of the crew, they were required to participate on all aspects of the sail voyage to include steering the vessel, being part of the lookout, navigation, and even cooking meals for the other crew members. They sailed over 193 nautical miles across five days. They visited six harbours and crossed two seas and two rivers from Harlingen in The Netherlands to Antwerp in Belgium.

In an interview about his participation J-maiah said, “the sea was a bit flat from what I was accustomed to which is a bit rougher sea. But I am not really accustomed to a long voyage like this. It was a very good experience getting to navigate and just have fun in general.” He added that the project was very important because it helped to bring out certain values like teamwork and patience. It further helped with his self-confidence and comfortability around unfamiliar people. In recounting her experience T-Janica said, “I expected to be afraid a bit but I was not because everyone made sure that we were all comfortable; so it was pretty good honestly. I learned to work better as a team and not just rely on me doing it by myself.” Both said they would encourage other young people to join the Tall Ships Races because it was a fun and rewarding experience.

Charlotte and Daniel both highlighted the value of these programmes to the development of Antigua and Barbuda. Daniel said, “it is about the value of what it does for the development of the young person. It teaches them about communication and working as a team. It is very important to the Blue Economy of Antigua and Barbuda as you are surrounded by water. There are opportunities for pathways into employment for young people and that’s what led me to do this.” Charlotte added, “the problem with an island is visibility; so then this limits young people to thinking this is their world. So, by getting them off the island and showing them there is more out there they can start developing ideas about potential career paths and the necessary education to attain this.”

To recognize their extraordinary achievements, Her Excellency Karen-Mae Hill, hosted a reception in honour of all the young sailors at the Antiguan and Barbudan High Commission in London. Several dignitaries were in attendance to include Mr. Mark Blundell, the Lord Lieutenant of Merseyside who presented them with their Certificates of Achievement. The High Commissioner delivered a charge to the participants in which she congratulated them for their achievements and highlighted the immense pride that they have brought to their nation as a result.

She encouraged them to not limit themselves to this Tall Ships event but to continue to hone their talents and skill in the maritime sector as it is a lucrative career path. Further, she encouraged them to share their expertise and experiences with other young people who might be interested in careers in sailing. To that end, Her Excellency highlighted the importance of developing and fostering the young talent in various careers which are important to Antigua and Barbuda’s maritime sector as the country looks to develop its sustainable Blue Economy agenda.

There are plans to expand the Tall Ships programme to allow for more young people to train aboard these tall ships. There are also plans to have the Tall Ships visit Antigua and Barbuda soon. A visit is currently planned in December of this year by Seas Your Future – a youth development charity which works with young people to get them involved in sailing. They will be sailing a Tall Ship – the Pelican of London –  to Antigua and Barbuda as part of a Caribbean wide visit.

For further information on how you participate in these programmes or provide corporate sponsorship please contact Charlotte Hooijdonk at the following contact details: [email protected] or Whatsapp +1-268-7763484.

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Laventille man called outside then killed

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Stock photo

A Laventille man was murdered on Monday morning after his killers called him out of his home.

According to police, at about 6.30 am, Akil St John, 42, of Richardson Lane, Laventille, was at home when he was called outside. As he stepped out he was shot.

Neighbours who heard the gunshots and found his body took him to the Port of Spain General Hospital where he was declared dead.

Police said it was the second time St John had been called out his home and shot. A few years ago an attempt was made on his life. Police described the killing as gang-related

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Over 19kg ganja found during CANU operations

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana

The Customs Anti-Narcotics Unit on Saturday unearthed over 19 kilograms of cannabis during separate operations in Georgetown and Berbice.

In the first instance, three persons were arrested following the discovery of 14 kilograms of ganja at Hill Street Albouystown, Georgetown.

Ganja found during Albouystown operation

Based on reports received, CANU ranks conducted a search on one of the properties in the area when the ganja with a street value of $18 million was discovered stashed in several locations.

Those who were present at the time of the operation were arrested and are being questioned.

Meanwhile, over at Sheet Anchor, East Canje Berbice, a total of 5.4 kilograms of the illegal drug was found in a clump of bushes.

Cannabis found in the bushes in Berbice

CANU stated that a search was conducted in a yard with a wooden building and nothing was found but a later search around the area unearthed the illegal substance.

No arrests were made as investigations continue.

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Bomberos atienden incendio en supermercado de Cataño

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El Negociado del Cuerpo de Bomberos de Puerto Rico se encuentra trabajando en una situación de incendio en un supermercado del municipio de Cataño.

Según informó el Negociado en sus redes sociales, el siniestro ocurrió en el área del almacén del supermercado JF Montalvo en el barrio Amelia.

“Bomberos de Cataño, San Juan y DOE de Hato Rey atienden ahora fuego reportado en el área del almacén del supermercado JF Montalvo en el Bo. Amelia en Cataño”, publicó el Negociado en Twitter.

[PRELIMINAR]- Bomberos de Cataño, San Juan y DOE de Hato Rey atienden ahora fuego reportado en el área del almacén del supermercado JF Montalvo en el Bo. Amelia en Cataño.

— Negociado del Cuerpo de Bomberos (@Bomberos_de_PR) August 15, 2022

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Pendientes a RADIO ISLA para más información.

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Piden extender periodo de negociación de reestructuración de la deuda de la AEE

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El exsecretario del Departamento del Trabajo, Carlos Saavedra, confirmó en RADIO ISLA que los jueces del equipo de mediación que busca completar la reestructuración de la deuda de la Autoridad de Energía Eléctrica (AEE) le solicitaron a la jueza Laura Taylor Swain extender el periodo de negociación hasta el 9 de septiembre. 

“Hoy vencía el otro plazo que dio la jueza Swain. Ella había dicho ‘tienen hasta el 15 de agosto a menos que me pidan una última extensión hasta el 9 de septiembre’. Los jueces de mediación pidieron esa extensión hasta el 9 de septiembre”, detalló Saavedra.   

Según Carlos Saavedra, los jueces indicaron en la moción sometida ante la jueza Swain, “que ha habido progreso en las negociaciones y que este tiempo adicional puede ayudar para llegar a un acuerdo”. 

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The ‘King of Soca’ – The Biography – Is Here

Black Immigrant Daily News

BY NAN ET EDITOR

News Americas, NEW YORK, NY, Mon. Aug. 15, 2022: It’s been 40 years already since Trinidad and Tobago’s soca star, Machel Montano, has been making music. Come September 9th, the ‘King of Soca,’ a biography of Montano, will be unveiled in New York City by his mother, Elizabeth ‘Lady’ Montano.

As “the ultimate insider,” Lady Montano reveals the making of the soca icon in her debut publication as Machel Montano gears up to celebrate his 40th anniversary in the music industry.

A first-time author, businesswoman and king maker, ‘Lady’ Montano covers the evolution of Machel – the man and artist – over four decades in her very own EESM Publishers imprint. From her extraordinary vantage point, the mother of the Soca king details the characteristics and stories of the various eras of Machel’s artistry as she shares the highs and lows of her son’s journey against the back drop of the soca legend’s ever-evolving interior world shaping his outer expression.

The book is based on Lady’s 2018 MPhil dissertation titled “The making of Monk Monte: Creativity and Commodification in Trinidad and Tobago Popular Culture”. At first, Lady Montano said she was tempted to build on it for a PhD but decided against the academic route when she understood that her intention was to make it accessible to everyone.

First-time author, businesswoman and king maker, ‘Lady’ Montano covers the evolution of Machel – the man and artist – over four decades in her very own EESM Publishers imprint.

An educator by training, she views storytelling as a vital part of knowledge sharing, which she deems essential to growth and development. The King of Soca therefore embodies a comprehensive record of the 40-year history of the 47-year-old Machel which, according to his former ‘momager,’ is not well known, and much less so among T&T’s youth.

Forty years in any industry is no small feat, but it is a particularly remarkable milestone in the music business, and more so in the context of the Caribbean and Trinidad and Tobago, specifically. Quite apart from Lady Montano’s unquestionable attentiveness to legacy-building, there is, for her, a sense of urgency in sharing the first 40 years of Machel’s story now. She sees this 40th year marking “the end of an era, and the beginning of a new one; one that is still taking form.”

“Celebrating 40 years in music is unbelievable for me and to have a book chronicling this journey was something I didn’t imagine in my wildest dreams”, says Machel about the book’s 2022 release. In recognition of Lady’s unique place in this project he adds, “I am honored that it’s happening and truly excited for this story to be told by the one person who knows me best. My mother and I have been so closely connected on every twist and turn of this remarkable ride that I know her account will be quite vivid and be an inspiration to all. Thank you my ‘Lady,’ – the best mother, manager and friend.”

A very young Machel Montano performing at The FANN Club in Brooklyn, NY in 1987. (Hayden Roger Celestin image)

Even with the solid foundation of her 2018 thesis, it has taken Lady Montano two years to bring the work to fruition. Commenting on the process, she said: “I started writing the book itself in 2020, at the start of the pandemic when everything was shut down and I was in Toco – (a remote, sparsely populated area on Trinidad’s northeast coast.) I thought I would finish it quickly because it was all in my head and I simply had to adapt my master’s dissertation, however, once it ceased to be an academic project, the possibilities for what I could include were now suddenly endless.”

The Montano matriarch’s enduring desire to document her son’s story is manifested in her compulsive collection of Machel memorabilia, which in 2015, constituted a full exhibition at the historic Boissiere House in Port of Spain, Trinidad & Tobago’s capital city. She admits to her relentless pursuit to preserve evidence of all aspects of his life since what she describes as “his miracle birth” in 1974, and more so from 1982 when he officially entered the entertainment arena.

Her vision for the project was clear: “I was always able to see what the book would be like. I was disappointed when I could not include all the pictures, anecdotes, imagery and other special things I wanted in my dissertation. So, seeing the book actually taking shape really created a renewed vision of what it would be like. I’m really thankful to the various teams working with me to bring my words to life.”

Lady Montano believes this biography will resonate with anyone interested in knowing more about Machel. “I am very conscious of Machel’s continuous transformation and the extent to which he has opened my mind about inclusion,” she says. “So, while it is said that you must work with a set target audience, or a specific niche or population in mind for your product, I am satisfied that this work will deliver an authentic, revelatory, impactful account of my son’s life in music to anyone open to receiving it.”

The initial launch of the King of Soca biography took place in Trinidad on July 26th, 2022 while the New York City launch will be held in Brooklyn on September 9th as part of a number of initiatives planned to commemorate Machel Montano’s 40th year in music.

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COMMENTAAR: Onvolwassenheid

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

VRIJ RECENTE ONTWIKKELINGEN bij de Surinaamse Voetbalbond (SVB) laten zien dat er bij sommige clubs maar wat wordt aangemodderd. Wat

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A Lourdes, des milliers de pèlerins de tous âges célèbrent l’Assomption

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Une messe de l’Assomption tenue ce lundi et une procession aux flambeaux dédiée à la Vierge Marie ont rassemblé des milliers de pèlerins de tous âges et origines au sanctuaire catholique de Lourdes, où 1,6 million de fidèles sont attendus cette année.

“Je suis venue à la rencontre de la Vierge Marie, je pense que j’ai été convoquée par elle”, explique peu avant le début de la messe Nina-Evelyne. Emue, cette Ivoirienne de 50 ans raconte avoir profité de ses vacances en France pour faire son premier pèlerinage à Lourdes, après s’être rendue plusieurs fois au sanctuaire de Notre-Dame de la Délivrance, à Issia, en Côte d’Ivoire.

Monique N’Gotta, 47 ans, vient aussi de Côte d’Ivoire, comme une centaine d’autres pèlerins ivoiriens présents: “J’ai entendu Sainte Bernadette m’appeler et je suis venue suivre ses pas”, dit-elle, faisant allusion à Bernadette Soubirous devant laquelle, selon la tradition catholique, est apparue la Vierge Marie en 1858.

Des centaines de malades en fauteuil roulant faisaient partie des 15.000 pèlerins, d’après un comptage de la direction du sanctuaire, qui ont participé à la messe tenue autour d’un grand chapiteau.

Dimanche, peu après la tombée du jour, ils avaient été des milliers aussi à marcher à la lueur de flambeaux, derrière une statue blanche de la Vierge Marie, récitant la prière mariale “je vous salue Marie”.

Venues du Portugal, Edite Antunes, 67 ans, et Maria Silva, 58 ans, ont dit leur “émotion” d’être là pour la première fois, d’autant qu’elles n’ont pas pu se rendre au sanctuaire portugais de Fatima depuis le début des restrictions sanitaires dues au Covid.

Sanctuaire “convalescent”

Ces restrictions sanitaires ont beaucoup réduit depuis 2020 le nombre de pèlerins venant à Lourdes. Après être passé de quelque 3,5 millions de pèlerins par an avant la pandémie, ce chiffre est tombé à 800.000 en 2020, puis à 1,6 million en 2021. Ils devraient encore être autour de 1,6 million cette année, a déclaré à l’AFP le directeur de la communication du sanctuaire, David Torchala.

Le sanctuaire, dont le budget de quelque 30 millions d’euros par an n’est financé que par des dons des fidèles, doit encore mettre jusqu’à trois quarts de ses 320 salariés au chômage partiel entre septembre et juin. Pour M. Torchala, le sanctuaire, l’un des premiers lieux de pèlerinage catholiques au monde, est encore “convalescent”.

Parmi les personnes présentes dimanche et lundi se trouvaient quelque 4.000 participants au pèlerinage national, le plus important pour les catholiques français, organisé chaque année autour du 15 août.

Depuis sa création en 1873, le pèlerinage national de l’assomption célèbre “la montée au ciel” au terme de sa vie terrestre de Marie, la mère du Christ, une croyance qui existait déjà depuis des siècles quand le pape Pie XII a érigé l’Assomption en dogme en 1950.

Selon la théologie catholique, Marie, préservée de tout péché dès sa conception afin de mettre au monde le fils de Dieu, ne pouvait pas connaître la corruption due au péché après sa mort.

Eau bénite

Dimanche, après la procession, de nombreux fidèles ont fait la queue devant les robinets d’eau considérée comme “bénite” par les chrétiens pour en emporter chez eux.

Alors que la sécheresse rend difficile l’approvisionnement en eau potable dans certaines communes françaises, à Lourdes, cette “eau bénite” ne manquera pas.

Le sanctuaire dispose en effet d’un système de stockage de l’eau de la source de la grotte de Massabielle où, selon la tradition catholique, la Vierge Marie est apparue à Bernadette Soubirous. Pendant la basse saison, ce système permet de stocker suffisamment d’eau pour les nombreux pèlerins attendus l’été, explique à l’AFP le directeur technique du sanctuaire, Sébastien Maysounave.

L’eau coule donc comme d’habitude cet été des 15 robinets et reste présente dans les 18 fontaines du sanctuaire. En revanche, les vasques, aussi appelées “piscines”, restent vides pour limiter les risques de contagion par le virus du Covid. Les fidèles sont invités à refaire “le geste de l’eau” qu’aurait fait Bernadette à la demande de la Vierge mais sans eau.

Une messe de l’Assomption tenue ce lundi et une procession aux flambeaux dédiée à la Vierge Marie ont rassemblé des milliers de pèlerins.

– Photo AFP

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