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| Faith and Fellowship Found at Michigan’s Chaldean Church Festivals |
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Michigan, USA – Chaldeans don’t always have much time to spare. Long hours at work, family and cultural responsibilities, and trying to make ends meet leaves many Chaldeans hungry for safe and entertaining events for the entire family.
The Chaldean churches have had a long tradition in hosting family gatherings. The opportunity brings respectful families together in faith and fellowship and helps raise funds to keep the church ministry strong.
The events are always a community affair organized and managed by church volunteers and supported by community donors. Although increasing competition of commercial festivals and state fairs targeting Chaldeans are on the rise, Chaldean church hosted events remain the number one place for Chaldean families.
[To view the photos and video of the 2008 St. Joseph Chaldean Catholic Church Festival please log-in]
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| Filed in: Community & Culture, Chaldean Churches By Sam Yousif |
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| Chaldean 2nd Annual Music Festival Call for Volunteers |
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Your church and community needs help. This is a community call for volunteers for the 2nd Annual Mother of God Church Chaldean Music Festival. The festival will be held on Saturday, August 23 & Sunday, August 24 at St. George Camp Chaldean located on 1391 Kellogg Road, Brighton, MI 48114.
The two day carnival event will feature carnival games, 9 live bands, food, vendor and information booths, contests, and more. Volunteers that are 18 years of age and older are needed to make this event a success. Community volunteers will receive room accommodations, breakfast, lunch, dinner, and volunteer shirts.
We need help with assisting crowds, controlling the rides, working the carnival tents, parking, security, serving food, donating items to the prize and give-away table, and keeping the area clean.
To answer the call for help please contact Steve Sitto at cmf@chaldean.org / (248) 762-4424 or Raad Kashat at MotherofGodChurch@yahoo.com.
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| Filed in: Community & Culture, Chaldean Churches By Mother of God Church |
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| A Garden Called “Heart” |
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After a long bitter winter, spring finally begins to peek into Michigan. In anticipation of the warmer temperature, I drew up my 24-point list of things to do, many of which involve outside activities; garage clean up, light home renovations, etc. I am positive that many of us who are avid gardeners have probably started exercising their favorite hobby.
Indeed, when I stood in the middle of my garden, I could count many things that needed attention. Things such as trimming trees, picking up dead leaves, spraying fertilizer, and the most important of all, grass cutting. That same day I was listening to my favorite radio station, the Catholic Radio, and the commentator was comparing our spirits to a garden. That comment left a deep impression in me, and I started thinking to myself: If we spend so much time, money and energy cleaning up and beautifying our gardens every year, do we lend the same attention and spend the same amount of time and energy cleaning up our hearts and strengthening our faith and spirits?
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| Filed in: Religion & Spirituality, Opinion and Editorials By Yousif Elias |
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| Chaldean Authors Discuss The Root of Rivalry Among Women |
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"Sometimes healthy competition for what we want turns into a problematic desire to have something merely because a rival already has it. This is not just based on what we want, but also on what we don’t want our perceived rival to have,” writes author, Susan, Barash in her book “Tripping the Prom Queen: The truth about Women and Rivalry.”
Seventy percent of the five hundred women interviewed said they were familiar with the concept Barash writes about. Barash is a professor of gender studies at Marymount Manhattan College in New York and became fascinated by women's relationship. Can sisters, mothers and best friends be jealous and supportive at the same time? In fact she found that rivalry and envy often pervades female relationships.
The women were interviewed on female competition. The study revealed that many women are competitively mean. In her book, Barash outlines why women compete with each other differently than men do with other men and why women often want to sabotage powerful female rivals.
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| Filed in: Health & Fitness, Living & Lifestyle, Religion & Spirituality By Huda Metti |
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| Sydney Chaldeans at World Youth Day 2008 Share their Joy and Sorrow |
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Sydney, AUSTRALIA – Australian Chaldeans in Sydney have been wildly celebrating World Youth Day. The excitement, exhilaration, and energy has been intoxicating says Joshua Shami, a Chaldean pilgrim from Europe. Chaldean youth from around the world have gathered in Sydney in celebration of World Youth Day.
“We continue to pray for our Chaldean brothers and sisters stuck in Iraq,” says Shami. For many Chaldeans in Austrialia, the joy of welcoming Pope Benedict XVI to the World Youth Day celebration was dampened by the absence of a Chaldean Catholic delegation from Iraq. “For months people have been working on getting the Iraqi Delegation to Sydney, but it is one thing after another stopping them.”
[To View Photos of WYD-Sydney Group Please Log-In]
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| Filed in: Religion & Spirituality, Community & Culture, Chaldean Churches By Rita Abro |
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| Chaldean Students Gather in Adoration |
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Michigan, USA - A handful of Chaldean-American Wayne State University (WSU) students were recently able to do something that not a handful of Catholic churches could do: attain approval of 24-hour Adoration sessions, something many churches overall, have not yet had.
Rasha Kashat, 20, a pre-medical student at WSU, is one of the students that made efforts to allow one 24-hour Adoration session to be held at St. Thomas Chaldean Catholic Church per week.
Kashat said that "Adoration" is a meaningful gathering of individuals at the church to encourage religious practices, as well as have a great time while committing to such practices.
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| Filed in: Career & Education, Religion & Spirituality, Chaldean Churches By Paul Isso |
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| Only 27 out of 140 Chaldean Iraqis Receive Visas for WYD |
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Catholic News Agency reports that the Australian Embassy in Amman, Jordan has issued 27 visas which will allow some young Iraqis to participate in World Youth Day. Initially 170 Chaldeans applied for Visas to participate in the largest gathering of world youth Christians in history. True to their faith, the Chaldeans still expressed their gratitude and appreciation to the Australian government for allowing 27 delegates.
“I would like to thank the Australian government for everything they have been able to do and also the Australian embassy to the Holy See which has contributed to this positive ending,” Father Philip Najim, Chaldean Prosecutor to the Holy See, said. “Many in Iraq were waiting for this. It is a symbolic number of visas but our youngsters will be in Sydney too and that’s what counts.”
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| Filed in: Religion & Spirituality, World News & Odds 'N' Ends, Chaldean Churches By Rita Abro |
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| Australia Denies Visas to Iraqi Chaldean WYD Pilgrims |
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The Catholic News Agency reports that the Australian government has denied visas to dozens of Chaldean World Youth Day pilgrims from Iraq. Australian officials say they are concerned that participants will not return home and instead will seek asylum in Australia. One Chaldean Catholic priest called the decision “a slap at young people who wanted to go to witness to the faith and the joy of the church’s living in Iraq despite sufferings.”
Initially the Australian government denied visas for nearly 170 pilgrims, allowing only ten visas to aspiring World Youth Day participants, the SIR News Agency says. According to the website Baghdadhope, there are now only about 30 total visas available that will be granted “in extremis.”
Father Rayan P. Atto, parish priest of Mar Qardagh Church in Erbil, told SIR News Agency that the concerns about asylum seekers were unfounded, arguing that, “for young Christian Iraqis, taking part in the WYD in Sydney was not a way to leave their country.”
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| Filed in: Religion & Spirituality, Community & Culture, Government & Society, Chaldean Churches By Rita Abro |
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| The Attributes of a Chaldean Apostle 3 of 7 –Patience and Perseverance |
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This article is the third in a seven series discussion on the attributes of a Chaldean apostle. A Chaldean apostle is patient and perseverant. They are willing to accept in their mind and heart that they will be required to wait and endure for His sake. By having such faith the Chaldean apostle’s behavior will naturally change and begin to better reflect the Kingdom of God. Therefore, this series will examine the attributes of behavior that demonstrate the grace of our Lord and our choice to be a follower of Christ.
The term "patience" has several meanings in the dictionary. It can mean the bearing of pain or trials calmly and without complaint; not being hasty or impetuous; or being steadfast despite opposition or adversity and showing forbearance under provocation or strain.
Most think of patience as something benign, like not being hasty or impetuous. However, unlike the popular definition of patience, the Holy Bible teaches us that pain, trials, adversity, and strain are also involved (James 1:2-4, 1 Peter 2:20, Romans 5:3-4, 12:12). In the Bible, perseverance is often mentioned in the same verse as patience (Matthew 24:13, Romans 5:3-4, Galatians 6:9, Hebrews 10:23, 10:36, James 1:2-4). Why do these two traits go hand in hand? What is the difference between them?
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| Filed in: Religion & Spirituality, Opinion and Editorials By Frank Dado |
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Mar Addai Chaldean Catholic Church 24010 Coolidge Hwy. Oak Park, MI 48237 Tel: (248) 547-4648 Fax: (248) 399-9089
Congregation Organizer: Rev. Michael J. Bazzi
Church Founding Pastor: Rev. Stephen Kallabat
Current Pastor: Rev. Stephan Kallabat
Parochial Vicar: Rev. Fadi Habib Khalaf
Parochial Vicar: Rev. Sulemina Denha
Rev. Stephen Kallabat

Fr. Stephan Kallabat was born in Telkaif, Iraq. After completing seven years of scholarly work for the priesthood in Mosul, Iraq Fr. Kallabat was accepted at the prestigious university in Rome. There he spent six additional years of scholarly work in the areas of philosophy and theology and an additional four years in scriptural studies.
Ordained a priest in 1966 by Pope Paul VI he returned to Iraq to serve the Holy Family parish until his departure to Michigan, U.S. in 1979 to serve the growing population of Chaldeans. Fr. Kallabat was appointed assistant pastor, then pastor of Mar Addai Parish in Oak Park, Michigan.
Hitting the ground running, Fr. Kallabat is credited with raising the necessary funds to provide Chaldeans in the local area a church and community center of their own. Fr. Kallabat continues to serve the parish and Chaldean community as their pastor.
Rev. Fadi Habib Khalaf

Fr. Fadi Habib Khalaf was born in Baghdad May 10, 1974. Fr. Khalaf graduated from Baghdad University in 1997 and soon after joined the Chaldean seminary in Baghdad. While there Fr. Khalaf earned a scholarship to attend the Urbanian Pontifical University in Rome. There he earned another bachelor’s degree in theology and was ordained deacon in Rome on May 8, 2004.
Fr. Khalaf then returned to Baghdad where he was officially ordained as a priest. Afterward Fr. Khalaf returned to Rome to further his studies. In 2006 Fr. Khalaf was appointed to serve Chaldeans in the United States.
In the summer of 2006 he arrived to the Chaldean diocese of St. Thomas the Apostle and was cardinated into the Diocese and elected to serve at Mar Addai parish on March 15, 2007 as the Parochial Vicar.
Rev. Suleiman Denha

Rev. Suleiman Denha was born in Telkaif, Iraq. He began his priestly studies in 1951 in Mosul, Iraq and was ordained in 1959. Fr. Denha taught in Telkaif until 1961, when he was appointed pastor in Basra, Iraq in 1966.
After immigrating to the Unite States in 1979, he was appointed to serve the Chaldean community in Virginia. A year later, Fr. Denha was recruited to assist the much larger population of Chaldeans in Detroit.
Upon his arrival Fr. Denha assisted Fr. Yasso at Sacred Heart Church. In 1982 he was asked to temporally assist St. Joseph Church in Troy, returning a year later Sacred Heart.
In 1991, he was appointed to Mar Addai Church in Oak Park, Michigan as the Parochial Vicar, where he still serves the community today.
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