Saturday, April 9, 2011

New York Times: Voodoo, an Anchor, Rises Again

Hello Friends and Family,

I read this website of New York Times following above the headline.  I remembered about year of '90s, I visited to the Deaf Liberty Baptist Church in Overland Park, Kansas, We were in a crowd of small audience and listened to our deaf Pastor, Rev. David Hanson's sermon.  I saw his ASL (American Sign Language) expression and word, "Voodoo" when I started to laugh loudly over him as same as his hearing young daughter heard my voice.  I tried to believe in fact of evil stuff until I realized with deaf mid-aged Latina lady's non-fiction message after I listened to Rev. Hanson's true message saying "Voodoo related to evil things in verse of the Bible." 

She explained me about what does the "Voodoo's action start...for example, someone steal other person's hair, piece of dress and photo before send them to the voodoo ceremony before some High Priests spoke and prayed to the alter before the evil spirits start to fly, attack and kill this person in somewhere in New York City."

I questioned to her, "Can FBI and NYPD Agents find and capture the evidence of voodoo?".  She told me, "That was very hard and difficult for FBI and NYPD to find evidence."   Quietly, I realized her well. 

Here is a true article from the New York City Times....

A woman possessed by Freda, the spirit of love, at a voodoo marriage ceremony
IT was past 3 a.m. in a dim basement in Flatbush, Brooklyn, and Jack Laroche, a Haitian-American computer engineer, nervously awaited his bride: a voodoo spirit named Ezili Freda who believers say has the power to lavish love and wealth and render wayward spouses impotent.


As four drummers pounded rhythmically, voodoo priestesses in bright-colored dresses danced in ecstatic circles, dousing the floor with rum and chanting, “Ayibobo!” — the voodoo “amen.” The bride’s dramatic entrance was signaled when a priestess in a shimmering pink silk dress started trembling violently, her eyes rolling toward the back of her head before she fainted. When she came to, apparently possessed by Ezili Freda, she took Mr. Laroche’s hand and nibbled on his ear coquettishly before the happy couple exchanged vows in French.

Long misunderstood and maligned in Western popular culture, voodoo has become a spiritual anchor in New York City’s vast Haitian community and in Haitian enclaves across the country as practitioners look for comfort after the devastating earthquake in the impoverished Caribbean nation last year.

In New York, where there are roughly 300,000 people who were born in Haiti or are of Haitian descent — the largest concentration in the United States — richly painted basement voodoo temples are sprinkled around Harlem and in parts of Brooklyn and Queens. Mambos, or voodoo priestesses, say they can barely keep up with “demann,” or prayer requests; spiritual love recipes to lure recalcitrant lovers are the most popular. Voodoo prayer circles in which practitioners meet to commiserate have also proliferated, with a notable intensity in the months since the earthquake.

But the world of voodoo has fallen under an unwelcome spotlight in recent weeks as a result of two episodes in which the authorities say voodoo played a central role — a fatal five-alarm fire in Brooklyn and the coming trial in Queens of a woman accused of severely burning her daughter.

The fire, in a building in Flatbush in February, was ignited by candles surrounding a bed during a ceremony in the apartment of a voodoo priest who the authorities said was hired by a woman to chase away evil spirits. The fire killed a 64-year-old woman in another apartment and left dozens of tenants homeless.

In Queens, a Haitian immigrant, Marie Lauradin, 29, is to go on trial this summer because prosecutors say she performed a voodoo exorcism ritual two years ago during which she lighted a flammable liquid in the form of a circle on a floor and placed her 6-year-old daughter, Frantzcia, within it, engulfing her in flames. Ms. Lauradin is charged with assault and endangering the welfare of a child.

The child’s grandmother Sylvenie Thessier, 72, whom prosecutors accused of doing nothing while her granddaughter was burned, was sentenced last week to one to three years in prison after pleading guilty to reckless endangerment.

The episodes have shaken the tight-knit and largely secretive voodoo community in New York, and practitioners say they were aberrant acts perpetrated by ignorant people who were abusing the religion.

Dowoti Desir, a Haitian-American voodoo scholar who has a temple in her home in Harlem, said the episodes were contributing to the demonization of voodoo and forcing people to practice it underground.

“Voodoo practitioners are in the closet for fear of being hounded or suffering reprisals,” she said. “The truth is that voodoo has been a source of empowerment for generations of Haitians.” (Many practitioners and scholars prefer alternate renderings of the word “voodoo,” like “voudou” or “vodun,” which they say more accurately reflect its origins.)

Some people are turning to voodoo in response to financial hardships caused by the recession. And among younger Haitian-Americans, voodoo is a means to reconnect with their roots.

Mr. Laroche, 35, nattily dressed for his marriage ceremony, said he had decided to exchange vows with his spirit bride in search of cultural affirmation, career advancement and protection from affliction, financial or otherwise. “There is a misconception that if you practice voodoo you can turn your friends into goats,” Mr. Laroche said. “But voodoo is about getting back in touch with the past.”

In voodoo, a healing-based religion that was brought to Haiti by slaves from Western and Central Africa, followers commune with one God — Gran Met — by worshiping potent and sometimes temperamental lwas, or spirits, believed to hold sway over love, morality, reproduction and death.

According to scholars, up to half of all Haitians practice some form of voodoo, often in conjunction with Catholicism, which intermingled with the belief systems of enslaved West Africans when Haiti was a French colony.

Yet because the religion is often practiced furtively in basement temples, and because of its emphasis on spirits, spells and animal sacrifices, it has been stigmatized as primitive.

But scholars stress that voodoo has played a central role in Haitian history, sustaining people who have endured oppressive governments, grinding poverty and natural calamities.

Ms. Desir, a former professor in the Africana studies department at Brooklyn College, says voodoo has been vilified by Western culture going back to 1791, when a voodoo ceremony helped inspire slaves to rebel against their French colonial oppressors, sparking the Haitian Revolution.

Voodoo’s reputation inside and outside Haiti also suffered during the regime of François Duvalier, known as Papa Doc, who ruled Haiti from 1957 to 1971 and whose ruthless security force, the Tonton Macoutes, misused the religion as a means of repression. Mr. Duvalier even modeled himself after the Baron Samedi, the voodoo spirit of death, affecting a low nasal voice and wearing dark sunglasses to hide his eyes and instill fear and devotion.

 After last year’s earthquake, some evangelical preachers, including Pat Robertson in the United States, said the catastrophe was related to Haiti’s “pact with the devil.”

There is no evidence that voodoo ceremonies have contributed in any notable way to fire trends in New York, according to the Fire Department. But Jim Long, a department spokesman, said it was worrisome when alcoholic substances were used for purposes like lighting fires. In many ceremonies, practitioners use rum or a flammable, lemon-scented perfume that can be bought for about $10.

Much as clergy members in other religions accept payments to perform rituals like marriages and baptisms, voodoo priests and priestesses typically charge for their services, in part to help pay for the expensive tastes of spirits like Freda, who favors offerings like pink Champagne, believers say. Prices can range from $300 for a recipe to infatuate a wary lover to $5,000 for a full-fledged exorcism in which evil spirits are transferred from humans to other animals, like pigs.

Mr. Laroche said he paid $10,000 for his marriage ceremony, a price he said was more than justified by the benefits the good will of the spirits would bring.

Ms. Desir said that aspiring voodoo priestesses and priests typically apprenticed with an experienced mentor and that it could take up to five years to master the botany, healing and drumming rituals of voodoo. In the absence of a governing body to regulate the religion, she said, profiteering by an unscrupulous few has made it vulnerable to fraud.

Edeline St. Armand, a mambo who built a voodoo temple in her basement in Canarsie, Brooklyn, said that when she arrived in the neighborhood more than 20 years ago, an Italian family living next door moved away after a few days. “They were afraid and thought that Haitians are witches,” Ms. St. Armand said.

Ms. St. Armand said voodoo rituals at her temple, Société La Belle Venus II, were attracting hundreds of people from across the city, including Wall Street bankers seeking spells to guard against falling share prices and homemakers aggrieved about wayward husbands. She said that because the religion was focused on curing people physically and spiritually, some misguided people were turning to voodoo with the wrong intentions.

“I would never use voodoo to do harm or to kill a merger-and-acquisition deal,” Ms. St. Armand said. “I try and only use it to do good.” She said she had recently helped a repentant convict seeking to overturn his drug-possession conviction, but immediately threw out someone who asked her for a spell to allow him to have unprotected sex.

For many practitioners, voodoo is a matter of cultural identity. Ms. Desir, 50, recalled that her Catholic mother had been aghast when, as a rebellious young adult living in Queens and studying anthropology at Barnard College, she also decided to study to become a mambo. “I personally don’t hide the fact that I am a voodoo priestess; it is a crown that I wear proudly,” Ms. Desir said. “My role is not to create love potions but to help reconnect with African culture.”

For Mr. Laroche, who came to New York when he was 5, voodoo is a tie to his family’s home in Port-au-Prince. He sees no contradiction between wielding an iPhone and marrying a voodoo bride. During the marriage ceremony, Mr. Laroche said he planned to celebrate his nuptials with his girlfriend, who he said had little reason to be jealous. She had already married Ogou, a virile, cigar-smoking spirit who is said to provide strength and protection.

Closing time,  I want to share with you this New International Version Bible is showing...

Deuteronomy 18:10

   

President Obama's Statement on the Bipartisan Agreement on the Budget | The White House

President Obama's Statement on the Bipartisan Agreement on the Budget The White House Good Morning, America! I am not worried about US Government should shut down at Midnight but, Members of Congress finally deal to $38 Billion Budget Cut and avert to Shutdown at 11:20 p.m.. last Friday night, April 8th. Office of Managment and Budget issued a memo to spread the Agencies, Federal Employees keep continue to employ during business day time. God bless America!

Friday, April 8, 2011

JUICE

Hello Friends and Family,  I enjoyed watching my personal DVD calling "JUICE", the classic movie from 1990's.  I bought the DVD from Pawn Shop only $2 last Wednesday, April 6, 2011.  I don't know about a fiction story with "JUICE" yet until I watched it tonight.


Q. Raheem. Bishop. Steel. They're four Harlem friends
who spend their days hanging out and looking
for a way to get the power and respect they call Juice.
Q hopes to earn it through an armed robbery.
And he wants his crew to be with him.

How far will you go to get it?


Ernest R. Dickerson, the acclaimed cinematographer whose collaborations with Spike Lee include Do The Right Thing and Malcolm X, makes his directiorial debut with this powerful morality take steeped in '90s urban lifestyle.

Features the cutting-edge music of Eric B. & Rakim, Naughty by Nature, Big Daddy Kane, Salt N' Pepa and others.  Juice has the juice. It filmed in New York City during '90s.

 


Sunday, March 27, 2011

Dame Elizabeth Taylor Vs. Queen Elizabeth II

Hello Friends and Family,  I have idea about my interesting title: Dame Elizabeth Vs. Queen Elizabeth II  before I begin to write on my current blog to you all today.

Queen Elizabeth II                    Vs.               Dame Elizabeth Taylor

b.  April 21, 1926                                          b.  February 27, 1932
     in London, UK                                              in London, UK
     with her Royal Parents:                                 with her American
     King George VI and                                      Parents orginally
     Queen Mother's Residence.                          born from
                                                                           Arkansas City, KS.
Current Age: 85
Alive


Final Age: 79
Deceased on March 23, 2011

Summary of Early Royal Life of Queen Elizabeth II:

Elizabeth was the first child of Prince Albert, Duke of York (later King George VI), and his wife, Elizabeth. Her father was the second son of King George V and Queen Mary, and her mother was the youngest daughter of Scottish aristocrat Claude Bowes-Lyon, 14th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne. She was born by Caesarean section at 2.40 am (GMT) on 21 April 1926 at her maternal grandfather's London house: 17 Bruton Street, Mayfair; and was baptized in the private chapel of Buckingham Palace by the Archbishop of York, Cosmo Lang, on 29 May. (She currently is Anglican and belong into the Church of England.) She was named Elizabeth after her mother, Alexandra after George V's mother, and Mary after her grandmother. Her close family called her "Lilibet". George V cherished his granddaughter, and during his serious illness in 1929 her regular visits raised his spirits and were credited with aiding his recovery.
Elizabeth as a thoughtful-looking toddler with curly, fair hair
Princess Elizabeth aged 3, 1929
.
 
Elizabeth's only sibling was Princess Margaret, born in 1930. The two princesses were educated at home under the supervision of their mother and their governess, Marion Crawford, who was casually known as "Crawfie". To the dismay of the royal family, Crawford later published a biography of Elizabeth and Margaret's childhood years entitled The Little Princesses. The book describes Elizabeth's love of horses and dogs, her orderliness, and her attitude of responsibility. Such observations were echoed by others: Winston Churchill described Elizabeth when she was two as "a character. She has an air of authority and reflectiveness astonishing in an infant." Her cousin Margaret Rhodes described her as "a jolly little girl, but fundamentally sensible and well-behaved".

Summary of Early American Life of Elizabeth Taylor:

Elizabeth Rosemond Taylor was born at Heathwood, her parents' home at 8 Wildwood Road in Hampstead Garden Suburb, a northwestern suburb of London; the second child of Francis Lenn Taylor (1897–1968) and Sara Viola Warmbrodt (1895–1994), who were Americans residing in England. Taylor's older brother, Howard Taylor, was born in 1929.  Her parents were originally from Arkansas City, Kansas. Francis Taylor was an art dealer, and Sara was a former actress whose stage name was "Sara Sothern." Sothern retired from the stage when she and Francis married in 1926 in New York City. Taylor's two first names are in honor of her paternal grandmother, Elizabeth Mary (Rosemond) Taylor.

At the age of three, Taylor began taking ballet lessons. Shortly before the beginning of World War II, her parents decided to return to the United States to avoid hostilities. Her mother took the children first, arriving in New York in April 1939, while her father remained in London to wrap up matters in his art business, arriving in November. They settled in Los Angeles, California, where her father established a new art gallery, which included many paintings he shipped from England. The gallery would soon attract numerous Hollywood celebrities who appreciated its modern European paintings. According to Walker, the gallery "opened many doors for the Taylors, leading them directly into the society of money and prestige" within Hollywood's movie colony.


Elizabeth Taylor aged 6, 1938.

As a Christian Scientist and lay preacher, his links with the family were also spiritual. He also became Elizabeth's godfather. As a young child, suffering from a severe infection that kept her in bed for weeks, she "begged" for his company: "Mother, please call Victor and ask him to come and sit with me."

One of their closest friends in England, Colonel Victor Cazalet, was an important influence on the family. As a rich and well-connected bachelor, a Member of Parliament and close friend of Winston Churchill, he was both a passionate lover of art and theater, and encouraged the Taylor family to think of England as their permanent home.
Victor sat on the bed and held Elizabeth in his arms and talked to her about God. Her great dark eyes searched his face, drinking in every word, believing and understanding.
Biographer Alexander Walker suggests that Elizabeth's conversion to Judaism at the age of 27 and her life-long support for Israel, may have been influenced by sympathetic views she heard at home. Walker notes that Cazalet was an active campaigner for a Jewish homeland, and her mother also worked actively in various charities, which included sponsoring fundraisers for Zionism. Her mother recalls the influence that Cazalet had on Elizabeth.

In 2000, The Queen Elizabeth II decided to invite Actress Elizabeth Taylor to join in the Investiture inside the Buckingham Palace.  Ms. Taylor was very delighted and excited after she got the Royal Invitation Letter from the Buckingham Palace.  She and her family flew to London, UK from Los Angeles, CA.   She sit on her wheelchair before Queen Elizabeth II granted on Mrs. Taylor's Request for her Wheelchair to go and take in the Queen's Private 
Elvaltor to the Grand Ballroom where the audience located the Investiture.

Mrs. Taylor and her wheelchair sit and waited for the arrival of
Queen Elizabeth II to the stage.  Queen politely walked there when Guests and Mrs. Taylor stood up and honored her as same as the music band performed well.  The Investiure in Charge presented the medal to Queen when he called Mrs. Taylor to walk and face with Queen.   Finally, Queen politely installed the medal on Mrs. Taylor's left chest on her fancy dress while she asked Mrs. Taylor about Elizabeth Taylor's childhood shortly.  Mrs. Taylor told Queen shortly before Queen thanked her when Mrs. Taylor walked back and bowed her head to Queen.
    
Mrs. Taylor became Dame Elizabeth Taylor after her medal was on advanced level of award.

Are Queen Elizabeth II and Dame Elizabeth Taylor being Christians?

Queen Elizabeth II is Christian as Anglican and knows Dame Elizabeth Taylor is not Christian but Jewish.  Queen was being cautious to her.  

On March 23, 2011,  Queen was informed about Dame Elizabeth Taylor passed away by her Private Secretary. 

Since June 2, 1953,  The Archbishop put a jewel crown on Princess Elizabeth's head while she sit on the ancient traditional throne inside the Westminister Abbey where the world witnessed on the coronation.  The Archbishop finally declared "God save the Queen".  Princess Elizabeth aged 24 and became Queen Elizabeth II and keep faith in her Christian and God.  

 

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Part II - Christmas Break 1974

Christmas Break started on December 1974.   Mr. Adams sent me and bunch of boys to our Trailways Bus to our hometowns.  I enjoyed riding in my bus.  We arrived from Olathe, Emporia, Newton to Wichita before our bus finally entered in the Wichita Bus Station.

Inside the Station, I saw Grandparents Hisel came out of the window doors while I saw Grandparents standing though the bus window, I walked out of it and hug with them.  We walked together and got in their Hornet American car and drove on Broadway, Douglas and Athenian Street to their home after left Downtown.

I was happy to see my nice room again inside their home.  My Parents were still working.  I played around and watched TV while Grandpa sit and read the Eagles Newspaper and Grandma was cooking our wonderful dinner.

Grandma asked Grandpa and me to come and sit in our table when we prayed for our dinner time.   We enjoyed eating our delicious meals.

I wait for my Parents to come here while I watched TV and their beautiful 1974 Christmas tree with a traditional colorful blubs in the living room and Grandparents cleaned the dishes in the kitchen.   Finally, Parents arrived here when they hug and kissed me.  Grandparents and parents sit together in our living room for short time before Parents and I got out of Grandparents' house and drove away.



























What do you think those 3 photos?  The 1974 Cost of Living showed  United States Stamp 10 cents. The 1974 Christmas Card showed Mickey and his dog. 

 

Valley Rail started in Phoenix, AZ

Hello Friends and Family,  I remembered about the Beginning of Valley Rail time.  I witnessed on Mayor Phil Gordan introduced the new project of Valley Rail to people in Downown Phoenix before the construction started to build the rail in there.  I lived in my (former historical hotel's name) Westward Ho became Apartment Complex on Section 8 and was unemployed since November 2001.

I decided to put my slideshow this blog for you all.


I took some photos from the Mill Avenue District closest to the campus of Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ.  




Monday, March 21, 2011

US President Obama's Speech: Human Rights in Rio de Janerio, Brazil

On Sunday afternoon March 20th, 2011,  President Obama enjoyed greeting to the ordinary people on the street before he delivered his speech to audience in the Teatro Municipal in Rio de Janerio, Brazil.

I put few passages on my blog after I read his speech.

Over the last decade, the progress made by the Brazilian people has inspired the world.  More than half of this nation is now considered middle class.  Millions have been lifted from poverty.  For the first time, hope is returning to places where fear had long prevailed.  I saw this today when I visited Cidade de Deus -– the City of God. (Applause.)(This photo is from the City of God.)

It isn’t just the new security efforts and social programs  -- and I want to congratulate the mayor and the governor for the excellent work that they’re doing.  (Applause.)  But it’s also a change in attitudes.  As one young resident said, “People have to look at favelas not with pity, but as a source of presidents and lawyers and doctors, artists, [and] people with solutions.”  (Applause.)

With each passing day, Brazil is a country with more solutions.  In the global community, you’ve gone from relying on the help of other nations, to now helping fight poverty and disease wherever they exist.  You play an important role in the global institutions that protect our common security and promote our common prosperity.  And you will welcome the world to your shores when the World Cup and the Olympic games come to Rio de Janeiro. (Applause.)

For so long, Brazil was a nation brimming with potential but held back by politics, both at home and abroad.  For so long, you were called a country of the future, told to wait for a better day that was always just around the corner.

Meus amigos, that day has finally come.  And this is a country of the future no more.  The people of Brazil should know that the future has arrived.  It is here now.  And it’s time to seize it.  (Applause.)

Now, our countries have not always agreed on everything.  And just like many nations, we’re going to have our differences of opinion going forward.  But I’m here to tell you that the American people don’t just recognize Brazil’s success -– we root for Brazil’s success.  As you confront the many challenges you still face at home as well as abroad, let us stand together -– not as senior and junior partners, but as equal partners, joined in a spirit of mutual interest and mutual respect, committed to the progress that I know that we can make together.  (Applause.) I'm confident we can do it.  (Applause.)

In a global economy, the United States and Brazil should expand trade, expand investment, so that we create new jobs and new opportunities in both of our nations.  And that's why we're working to break down barriers to doing business.  That's why we're building closer relationships between our workers and our entrepreneurs.   

Together we can also promote energy security and protect our beautiful planet.  As two nations that are committed to greener economies, we know that the ultimate solution to our energy challenges lies in clean and renewable power.  And that’s why half the vehicles in this country can run on biofuels, and most of your electricity comes from hydropower.  That’s also why, in the United States, we’ve jumpstarted a new clean energy industry.

And that’s why the United States and Brazil are creating new energy partnerships -- to share technologies, create new jobs, and leave our children a world that is cleaner and safer than we found it.  (Applause.)

Together, our two nations can also help defend our citizens’ security.  We’re working together to stop narco-trafficking that has destroyed too many lives in this hemisphere.  We seek the goal of a world without nuclear weapons.  We’re working together to enhance nuclear security across our hemisphere.  From Africa to Haiti, we are working side by side to combat the hunger, disease, and corruption that can rot a society and rob human beings of dignity and opportunity.  (Applause.) 

And as two countries that have been greatly enriched by our African heritage, it’s absolutely vital that we are working with the continent of Africa to help lift it up.  That is something that we should be committed to doing together.  (Applause.)

In these and other efforts to promote peace and prosperity throughout the world, the United States and Brazil are partners not just because we share history, not just because we’re in the same hemisphere; not just because we share ties of commerce and culture, but also because we share certain enduring values and ideals.

We both believe in the power and promise of democracy.  We believe that no other form of government is more effective at promoting growth and prosperity that reaches every human being -- not just some but all.  And those who argue otherwise, those who argue that democracy stands in the way of economic progress, they must contend with the example of Brazil.

The millions in this country who have climbed from poverty into the middle class, they could not do so in a closed economy controlled by the state.  You’re prospering as a free people with open markets and a government that answers to its citizens.  You’re proving that the goal of social justice and social inclusion can be best achieved through freedom -– that democracy is the greatest partner of human progress.  (Applause.)

But we also know that there’s certain aspirations shared by every human being:  We all seek to be free.  We all seek to be heard.  We all yearn to live without fear or discrimination.  We all yearn to choose how we are governed.  And we all want to shape our own destiny.  These are not American ideals or Brazilian ideals.  These are not Western ideals.  These are universal rights, and we must support them everywhere.  (Applause.)

No one can say for certain how this change will end, but I do know that change is not something that we should fear.  When young people insist that the currents of history are on the move, the burdens of the past can be washed away.  When men and women peacefully claim their human rights, our own common humanity is enhanced.  Wherever the light of freedom is lit, the world becomes a brighter place.

That is the example of Brazil.  That is the example of Brazil.  (Applause.)  Brazil -– a country that shows that a dictatorship can become a thriving democracy.  Brazil -– a country that shows democracy delivers both freedom and opportunity to its people.  Brazil -- a country that shows how a call for change that starts in the streets can transform a city, transform a country, transform a world.

Decades ago, it was directly outside of this theater, in Cinelandia Square, where the call for change was heard in Brazil. Students and artists and political leaders of all stripes would gather with banners that said, “Down with the dictatorship.  The people in power.” 

Their democratic aspirations would not be fulfilled until years later, but one of the young Brazilians in that generation’s movement would go on to forever change the history of this country.
A child of an immigrant, her participation in the movement led to her arrest and her imprisonment, her torture at the hands of her own government.  And so she knows what it’s like to live without the most basic human rights that so many are fighting for today.  But she also knows what it is to persevere.  She knows what it is to overcome -- because today that woman is your nation’s president, Dilma Rousseff.  (Applause.)

Our two nations face many challenges.  On the road ahead, we will certainly encounter many obstacles.  But in the end, it is our history that gives us hope for a better tomorrow.  It is the knowledge that the men and women who came before us have triumphed over greater trials than these -– that we live in places where ordinary people have done extraordinary things.

It’s that sense of possibility, that sense of optimism that first drew pioneers to this New World.  It’s what binds our nations together as partners in this new century.  It’s why we believe, in the words of Paul Coelho, one of your most famous writers, “With the strength of our love and our will, we can change our destiny, as well as the destiny of many others.”

Muito obrigado.  Thank you.  And may God bless our two nations.  Thank you very much.  (Applause.)