The spirit of Christmas
by digby
Some good Christians doing Christian work:
A non-stop church service in the Netherlands — aimed at stopping an Armenian family from being deported — has become so popular it has issued tickets for the Christmas period to control numbers.
The service has been going around the clock since October 26 — more than 1,400 hours.
Under Dutch law, police officers are not permitted to enter a church while a religious service is taking place. So, church leaders hatched the idea of meeting non-stop to prevent the Tamrazyan’s from being removed from the country.
Since then, hundreds of pastors and volunteers have taken part in the service.
Hayarpi Tamrazyan (C) from Armenia attends a service in the Bethel church as it holds round-the-clock religious services to prevent
Axel Wicke from the Bethel church and community center in The Hague told CNN the service has become something of a “pilgrimage” for people across the Netherlands.
“We have had to account for so many people who want to visit during Christmas,” Wicke said, adding that two of the services are being streamed on Christmas eve and Christmas Day.
The Tamrazyans have lived in the Netherlands for almost nine years, but their claim for political asylum was rejected. The Dutch Minister for Migration, Mark Harbers, has so far refused to use his discretionary powers to intervene and allow them to stay. His office declined to specifically discuss the case when contacted by CNN.
The five members of the Tamrazyan family, who have been living in the Netherlands for nine years, took refuge in the church on October 25, 2018 after Dutch authorities turned down their request for asylum.
The five members of the Tamrazyan family, who have been living in the Netherlands for nine years, took refuge in the church on October 25, 2018 after Dutch authorities turned down their request for asylum.
“Just before Christmas, when we celebrate Gods humanity-loving and peaceful deeds, we feel strengthened not to forsake our responsibility for the Tamrazyan family,” Rev. Theo Hettema, chair of the Protestant Church The Hague, said in a statement.
He says the church provided an “extensive file with new information” to the Minister to help convince him of the family’s case.
21-year-old Hayarpi — the oldest daughter in the family of five — said on Twitter she has been encouraged by the full attendance at the church.Speaking to Reuters earlier this month, she said: “I really don’t know what the outcome will be, but we hope we can stay here (in the Netherlands), because this is our home, this is where we belong. And my brother, my sister and I, we grew up in the Netherlands and we have been living here for almost nine years.”
This Christmas season, though, the family will spend time together holed up in a church that has offered them sanctuary, hoping and praying for a Christmas miracle.
That yearning sounds familiar doesn’t it? It seems to be a common refrain these days. People who have lived in a country for many years are being told they must leave the only home they know. Good people step up to help, thank God. But it’s not enough. There has to be a change in the policy.
I wouldn’t expect anything from this guy:
Trump, after railing on Comey, says: "It’s a disgrace what’s happening in this country. But other than that, I wish everybody a merry Christmas." pic.twitter.com/9OdrmHU5Es— Manu Raju (@mkraju) December 25, 2018
cheers — digby
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