Saturday, March 17, 2012

Tour South Africa

ANC VIOLENCE

http://www.youtube.com/verify_age?next_url=/watch%3Fv%3DSf39waktLVQ%26feature%3Dplayer_embedded

geronkyzaus.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Tour South Africa

WHY WAS DUTCH missionary RIET VUYK MURDERED?
2012-03-13





Dutch woman Riet Vuyk was a 66-year-old Dutch protestant widow who set up the Mangwazane mission in Ubombo South Africa to help Aids-orphans through the Jan Vuyk Foundation in memory of her late husband. Mrs Riet Vuyk last week was bashed to death with a hammer and thrown down a cliff.
She was there for a very good reason: to help the children. This region has the highest HIV-infection rate in SA and featured in the BBC documentary Children of Nkandla.



http://censorbugbear-reports.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2012-03-13T08:37:00%2B01:00

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Tour South Africa


The MURDER and CANNIBALISING of Dr Elsie Quinlan 1952




In 1952 Dr Elsie Quinlan and her sister in CHRIST found themselves in a mass violent Black protest which the police were trying to diffuse. In those days, additionally in contemporary times, blacks show a bent towards violence when they can’t get their way and will bring down the house over just about anything you can imagine. However on that fateful day Dr Quinlan and a nun were going to die in the most sickening manner as Mike Smith points out in his write-up on this story:

“At that stage Dr. Elsie Quinlan, also known as Sister Mary Aidan, a 37-year-old Irish Dominican nun from Cork in Ireland, and a physician set off in her tiny black English car, to take baskets of food to her black patients in the rowdy South African city of East London. At that stage she had been in South Africa for 14 years already, working amongst blacks and trying to curb the enormous black infant death rate in the Eastern Cape where almost every second black Baby died”.

Soon she found herself in the township were blacks were rioting while policemen were attempting to control the volatile situation. Dr Elsie Quinlan’s prime objective was to carry out her Christian Ministry but found herself amongst a sea of ill disciplined Black people who had no interest in the Christian Mission. Smith Writes:
“Upon seeing Dr. Quinlan, a young black woman called out, “Here is a white woman, let’s kill her”.

Shouting obscenities, they stopped her car smashed her windscreen in with a knobkerrie and struck at the driver. The Roman Catholic nun folded her hands in prayer. She was pelted with bricks, beaten with sticks, stabbed with a kitchen knife and then set alight.

What happened next is just too horrific for words.

The crowd opened up for a young woman brandishing a breadknife. Someone asked, “How can you finish a lady who helped us so much?”

The knife was passed to a youth who cut flesh from the charred body.

“I am eating the meat, because I want to get tough, said a young woman. Another began to eat the flesh for fear of being called “a spy”.

While a young man was sharpening a knife against a sickle, a newcomer to the crowd was told, “We are eating the body of a nun.”

One woman took some “meat” to show her child what human flesh looked like; others took the flesh home where they ground it into a fine powder to make medicine (known as Muti).

By nightfall nine people have been killed and several church buildings of the Roman Catholic and the Anglican churches including training colleges built for blacks were burnt down.”

So much for Africa and the ANC who used trash like this to bring their communist utopia to South Africa. Did you know that since coming to power in 1994 over three hundred thousand people have been murdered in a communist bloodbath under the watchful eye of the ANC?

Now remember some people will say ”well that was then”, as if her life and the way she died meant nothing! But the same kind of behaviours are being carried out against minorities even though the ANC has been in power for nearly twenty years. Twenty years seems to be a magical mark for rulers in Southern Africa (eg. Mugabwe) where these pontificating rulers subject minorities human rights violations.

Remember everyone in the International community expects the same level of morality that the ANC demanded from everyone else. hence the war in Bosnia in recent times. Still no help by the international community here because they KNOW this is the way blacks behave in Arica. In any event I hope the ANC will produce a monument in 2012 that is fitting to her work and memory. Rest in peace Dr Elsie Quinlan.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Tour South Africa


Entire South African Family Individually Victims of Crime

Monday, February 6, 2012

Tour South Africa

Questions over Tutu billboard in abortion clinic
By Andre Viljoen and Piperjames on December 14, 2011 5:09 pm in South Africa, Western-Cape


A billboard in Marie Stopes Clinic in Cape Town, in which Archbishop Desmond Tutu endorses the clinic's services

A pro-life campaigner who prays outside Mary Stopes Clinic in central Cape Town at the start of every working day says he was shocked one morning when he spotted Archbishop Desmond Tutu’s face and personal endorsement message on a billboard in the clinic.

Peter Thorp, who has spent more than 1 200 hours praying outside the abortion clinic said he felt like he had been hit by a train when a door at the front of the clinic opened on October 26 and he saw the billboard. He said he leaned inside and took a photograph. On the next day his wife, Terry, sent an email to Tutu asking him to clarify his endorsement of the clinic and why he allowed Mary Stopes to “use your standing with God” to justify the “marketing of death”.

Internal campaign
Marie Stopes head of communications and marketing Leanne Visser said she was aware of Thorp’s concern but could not understand it as Tutu had publicly stated that his position on abortion was pro-choice. She said the billboard had been used in a once-off internal campaign at the clinic’s 5 year strategic planning meeting. The poster had been displayed in a reception foyer in a staff-only area which could only be entered by punching a security keypad.

Asked whether Tutu had been paid for the Marie Stopes endorsement, Visser said: “He does accept donations.” But she said that due to marketing changes in their organisation she did not have records, so referred me to Archbishop Desmond Tutu Foundation spokesman Roger Friedman. Gateway News called Friedman’s office and left a request for a call back. Tutu, 80, is reportedly recovering well at home after minor surgery on Friday. He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984 for his struggle to bring peace, justice and equality to South Africa, and is the former Archbishop of Cape Town and a popular and respected international figure. Prior to his operation he was scheduled to be honoured with a continental award from the University of Cape Town on Monday (December 12). Tutu is also the author of a recently released global, children’s storybook bible, which according to him celebrates children all over the world.

The billboard that offended Thorp carries a photo of Tutu under the headline “Choice, Not Chance” which is Marie Stopes’ marketing slogan. The message on the billboard reads: “Marie Stopes South Africa is doing invaluable work. Through their programmes they are raising awareness and understanding of sexual and reproductive health. They are empowering people and by providing information and access to sustainable high quality services that are giving people the opportunity to make informed decisions about their future and a choice. –Signed Archbishop Desmond Tutu”

Thorp said that during his morning prayer vigil on October 28 the door at the front of the clinic opened once again and he took another picture of the billboard, showing more of the foyer.



After receiving no reply to her first email, Terry Thorp sent a second email to Tutu, and a copy to the office of the Archbishop of Cape Town. In the second letter she quoted a statement by former Pope John Paul 11 in which he said abortion was a moral evil that violated God’s command “Do not kill”. She said the Archbishop’s office acknowledged receipt of the email and said they would investigate. There was no response from Tutu.

In her first letter to Tutu, Terry Thorp said her husband had been praying outside Marie Stope Clinic in Bree Street, Cape Town at the start of every working day since June 2010 when God led him to take this action after the clinic “manipulatively” obtained an official order preventing a pro-life prayer group from praying outside the clinic for 20 to 25 minutes on the last Saturday of the month for 11 months of the year. The group of 30 people now held their monthly prayer vigil at Van Riebeeck Square, some distance from the clinic.

Abortion on demand
Thorp says he will continue to pray for Tutu and for former President Nelson Mandela who signed the Termination of Pregnancy Act into law in 1997. The legislation, which was introduced despite overwhelming public disapproval, permits abortion on demand for any woman (including teenagers without their parents’ consent) up to the 12th week of pregnancy and from the 13th to 20th week if a doctor believes it necessary to ensure the health of the woman, or if “the continued pregnancy would significantly affect the social or economic circumstances of the woman”.

The ANC government motivated the legalising of abortion on demand as an antidote to dangerous backyard abortions. But Christian critics, who argue that life begins at conception, view abortion as tantamount to murder and cite much evidence that women who undergo abortions experience far-reaching physical and emotional effects.
Meanwhile in a press statement released this week Africa Christian Action (ACA) calls on churches to allow time on Sunday, January 29 (Sanctity Life Sunday) to “observe a solemn and serious time of repentance and prayer for the national sin of abortion” ahead of the 15th anniversary (on February 1) of the legalisation of abortion on demand in South Africa.

Since February 1, 1997 more than one million babies will have been legally killed in South Africa by abortion, says ACA.

To assist pastors in informing and inspiring their congregations to prayer and action, ACA is offering a Pro-life Pack that includes pro-life sermons, prayers of repentance, and Bible Studies on CDs that are available at R35 each. ACA also has pro-life books, especially Make a Difference: A Christian Action Handbook for Southern Africa, DVDs, bumper stickers, T-shirts, Precious Feet lapel pins and crisis pregnancy outreach posters available.

Many of these materials, including pro-life leaflets, can be downloaded from the Christian Action website.

http://gatewaynews.co.za/2011/12/14/questions-over-tutu-billboard-in-abortion-clinic/