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Bush in Ha noi
Date: Sat, 18 Nov 2006 14:07:38 +0700 Bush is coming to my street tomorrow. He's attending a service at T.T.Nhu Chuck Searcy <chucksearcy@yahoo.com> Nhu, My house is only three blocks from my office so I'm in a pedestrian "safe zone" and can walk around the area. However, it took Van Anh, who lives out at Ciputra, two hours to get to the office yesterday because of security blockades. And she said everyone was warned not to look out their second floor windows or they would be shot. (She was joking, of course. Right? Tell me she was joking.) I assume you won't be attending the Sunday morning service? Chuck Peter Hansen <phansen@ourladys.org.au> Cua Bac is the Church of the English-speaking Catholic Community in Hanoi. To the best of my knowledge, it’s the only place where an English-language Mass is celebrated regularly in Hanoi. It’s also Hanoi’s shrine to the 117 martyrs, whose canonization caused such a fuss in 1988. The choir at Cua Bac is made up of local Catholics; the normal celebrant is a lecturer at nearby St. Joseph’s Seminary. Unlike the equivalent community in TPHCM, which meets at Vuon Xoai in District 3, there is little opportunity for pastoral care or community building amongst the expatriate community. Shame, because it’s a very pleasant place to go to church. Nguyen Bieu is indeed a lively street, whilst Phan Dinh Phung gets my vote for Hanoi’s (Vietnam’s?) most beautiful.
Incidentally, one of Hanoi’s Protestant Churches is not far away, just the other side of the old walls. I wonder why a Protestant President wouldn’t go there to say his prayers?
Peter Hansen Tuan Hoang <thoang1@nd.edu> To Peter's question, I read in the Washington Post that Bush will attend a joint Catholic-Protestant service. Nguyen Nguyet <minhnguyet80@yahoo.com> I can add that each family in these streets will receive 1 million VND (~70USD) per day for 3 days because of his visit.
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