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If you could have free, unlimited service for five years from an extremely good cook, chauffeur, housekeeper, masseuse, or personal secretary, which would you choose?
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| Community Events & Annoucements
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Announce your event, activity, or meeting by e-mailing info@chaldean.org

CHALDEAN COMMUNITY POSTINGS
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To find out a girl's faults, praise her to her girlfriends.
- Chaldean Mother's Spouse Revealing Tip #1
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| www.CHALDEAN.org Factoids
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Word of the Day
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| Definition: |
Involving intelligence rather than emotions or instinct. |
| Synonyms: |
intellectual |
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| FOR SALE - Michigan Businesses
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| Latest News & Information
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| New Chaldean Priest Ordained in Michigan |
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By Neda Ayar :: 26216 Views :: Religion & Spirituality, Community & Culture, Chaldean Churches
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Michigan, USA – The Chaldean community welcomes their newest Catholic priest, Fr. Rudy Zoma, 28, of the Chaldean Eparchy of St. Thomas the Apostle. On Saturday, July 4th, Chaldeans from all over joined the ordination Mass of the new priest. Guests, seminarians, and visiting clergy from across the globe participated in the celebration.
Fr. Rudy is the third American Chaldean priest with five other American born seminarians to soon graduate and join the prestigious rank of priestly vocation among Chaldeans.
“Fr. Rudy is an incredible person,” says Britney Allos. “He really is involved with the younger generation and is a great speaker. He can be serious and he can be funny.” Fr. Rudy Zoma helped establish an English youth bible study at Mother of God Parish and was instrumental in helping the Chaldean parish soccer team repeatedly win the indoor Catholic College classic championship over Ave Maria, St. Mary MTS, and the other college teams. “The amount of guests who arrived to his ordination celebration is a testament to his leadership and community support,” said Anthony Sako, parishioner of Mother of God parish.
[Photos at the end of the article]
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| Chaldean Church in California Attacked by Vandals |
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By Rita Abro :: 15236 Views :: Chaldean Churches
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CALIFORNIA, USA — Chaldeans fled to the United States to escape Christian persecution by fanatics and anti-Christian zealots. However, Chaldeans in Turlock, California awoke this past weekend to a frightening occurrence of vandalism and Christian hatred.
Surveillance camera recorded three men destroying and then stealing a statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary in front of the Our Lady of Turlock fountain outside St. Thomas Assyrian-Chaldean Catholic Church.
Parishioner David Yonan, 49, reported the vandalism when he arrived for Sunday morning prayers at 7 a.m. and noticed the statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary missing. According to the video’s time stamp the crime occurred Saturday at 11 p.m. in the evening.
"It was devastating," Yonan told reporters. "All the ladies were sitting there crying. It looked like a funeral."
The surveillance video shows a man climbing the steps of the fountain, then throwing the $3,000, Italian-made statue to the ground. Another man comes and takes the damaged statue. All that was left were porcelain shards that once made up the back of the statue's head, Yonan said.
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| Armed Robbery Spikes in U.S. and U.K. Causing Concerns Among Chaldeans |
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By Paul Gori :: 9066 Views :: Business & Finance
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The U.S. and the U.K. may be mired in what was once thought of as a Third World style of financial crisis, but what was once considered the Third World is not. Local, state, and national governments in both America and Europe are seeing a significant spike in crime and fraud.
“Giving home loans to every person that walked into a mortgage or bank loan office is the root of all the problems,” says Mary Hessu, a banker with Community Bank in Michigan. “America was supposed to be about equal opportunity and earning your way. Giving undeserving people loans for some social engineering experiment has rocked the world.”
Hessu says the consequences of America’s politicians poor decisions is unemployment and crime. “Crime is skyrocketing and Chaldeans who happen to own businesses are the victims. Stores are being burglarized, check cashing fraud, and identity theft is hurting out community.”
All experts agree that the very best way for Chaldeans to prevent an armed robbery is to send a message that your business is not an easy target and not worth the effort. In this article, www.CHALDEAN.org covers the most helpful tips in preventing armed robbery for Chaldean small business owners.
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| Chaldean Dearborn Michigan Resident Freedom Stripped |
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By Sam Yousif :: 18648 Views :: Law & Order, Government & Society
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Michigan, USA – Chaldeans are outraged at the city of Dearborn and the Dearborn police department. “The police and city officials are cowards,” said a disgusted Yousif Salem. “They are afraid to defend the rights of this great country and their weakness shames every real American. I am an American citizen and my rights were stripped away because they are afraid. The Dearborn police and city are cowards. Arabs in Iraq and Iran are risking their lives for freedom and in Dearborn Michigan, American born wimps run and hide like cowards.”
Salem’s outrage comes on the heel of a court ruling prohibiting his friends from passing out Christian literature at the Dearborn Arab International festival. The 14th annual Dearborn Arab International Festival is expected to draw tens of thousands of visitors Friday through Sunday to the city that has the Detroit area's greatest concentration of Arab-Americans.
“We are upset with festival organizers. They have now tainted this once beautiful cultural festival as being un-American,” says Salem. “They are hurting Islamic Arabs as well as Christian Arabs by having the group thrown out. This is not good for Arab and American relations. There is only so much more Americans will take from these radicals in their own country.”
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| Twin Chaldean Bishops Dedicated Church Spur Twin Mass Celebrations |
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By Frank Dado :: 22329 Views :: Religion & Spirituality, World News & Odds 'N' Ends, Chaldean Churches
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Thiruvananthapuram, INDIA – The impact of Chaldeans on the world are numerous and diverse. Following the lead of St. Thomas, Chaldeans travelled the world sharing the miraculous conversion of the human of the psyche and soul.
Evidence of their impact is being praised in a small church, whose history dates back to 826 AD. The church originally named after Sapor and Prot, twin Chaldean bishops traveling from Syria, who helped Christians establish themselves on the Kerala coast of India in the ninth Century.
What is unique about this small Catholic parish is that it is dedicated to the twin brothers and has been attracting scores of twins, including Hindus, for its annual feast. St. Thomas, a twin himself, helped share the blessings of Christianity throughout the Middle East and Asia, while his brethren St. Peter journeyed to Rome.
This year's June 19 feast day Mass at the Church in Kerala, southern India, was no different. It was attended by 151 twins and two sets of triplets. The parish church is in Kothanallur village and comes under the Palai diocese.
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| Australian Priest Begins Campaign to Help Chaldeans |
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By Amer Hedow :: 22116 Views :: Religion & Spirituality, World News & Odds 'N' Ends, Chaldean Churches
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Brisbane, AUSTRALIA – In the capital city of Australia, Brisbane priest Fr. Gerry Hefferan has begun a campaign to help the struggling Chaldeans of war-torn Iraq. Fr. Hefferan recently returned from Kurdistan and has organized a daily prayer roster with parishes from five major dioceses to pray for Chaldeans. The effort has been welcomed by Australian Catholics as parishioners have already filled the roster until November 2009.
The prayer roster is not the only effort Fr. Hefferan is undertaken on behalf of Chaldeans. The Grovely-based priest is also encouraging Catholics to share expertise in education and health with staff at St Peter’s Chaldean Seminary in Iraq which has been relocated from Baghdad to Erbil in the Kurdistan north.
“This is because education and health are two major areas where the Muslim communities recognize Christian expertise,” Fr Hefferan said. “So this is one way to help bring peace to the area – it can help the Christians live more harmoniously with their Muslim neighbors.”
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| Chaldean Symphony at the GSO - Middle East Meets West |
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By Rita Abro :: 24000 Views :: Sports, Art, and Entertainment, Community & Culture, Chaldean Churches
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California, USA –The Grossmont Symphony Orchestra (GSO) have been invited to play along with world class Chaldean musicians in the presentation of “Middle East Meets West.” The GSO, under the musical direction of Dr. Randall Tweed, is a seventy-five member orchestral ensemble comprised of music and non-music majors, and talented musicians from the community.
The orchestra, whose musical performance home is El Cajon's own "East County Performing Arts Center" (ECPAC), performs a large variety of concerts from serious classical "arts" performances to lighter "pops" entertainment. Local and nationally reputed performing artists are frequent soloists with the GSO.
The St. Peter Chaldean Catholic Church in El Cajon helped organize the appearance of special guest artist and world class violinisht Luay Yousif. Yousif, born in Baghadad in 1979, has performed with the Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. He has lived in the U.S. since 2007.
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| Iraqi Footballer Sports Hero Laid to Rest |
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By Ray Yono :: 7910 Views :: Sports, Art, and Entertainment
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Baghdad, IRAQ – Christan and Muslim Iraqis mourn the passing of one of their countryman’s sports heroes. Emmanuel Baba Dawud, better known as Ammo Baba (Uncle Father). He was known as the Arab world’s Pele, the “Sheikh of Iraqi coaches”, and a winged angel. He scored the first ever international goal for Iraq against Morocco at the second Pan-Arab Games in Beirut in 1957 and coached the Iraqi national football team to various victories.
Ammo Baba led Iraq to three titles in the Arabian Gulf football tournaments and the gold medal in the 1982 Asian Games in India. He was revered as a hero in his homeland.
Ammo Baba was born in Hinaidi, Baghdad during a time when Muslim and Christian relations were civil. Dawud was a reluctant pupil at the base’s school. “I used to run out of school,” he recalled. “I was very lazy in my lessons, but I was very good at sports.”
So good that, for a time, he held the record as one of Iraq’s fastest 400-metre runners.
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| Is Defending Marriage About Defending Religious Freedoms? |
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By Sam Yousif :: 17857 Views :: Religion & Spirituality, Government & Society
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California, USA – Perhaps the older Chaldeans have trouble grasping the threats we face, but the first and second generation Chaldeans know it all too well, says Ann Bodagh. The Californian community activist says that America’s immune system is under attack. “American values are our country’s immune system. Values that teach us that lying, stealing, killing, and adultery are wrong are being torn apart. Now it is okay to routinely lie, steal worker’s pensions, kill the unborn or elderly, or sleep with anyone. These sorts of behavior are bankrupting America, financially, morally, and socially.”
Bodagh says you can see the social virus make its way to our countries value centers. “They have already taken over our public schools and now they want to close churches and silence religious teachers. America is becoming a socialist communist nation if we don’t fight back. All the Chaldeans that fled from countries that would not let you speak out when the government is doing something wrong better wise up. Otherwise you might as well by another plane ticket and choose your next country to run to.”
Bodagh says California is fighting back. The citizens of the golden state recently voted to cut spending and become more fiscally conservative. Citizens also voted to amend the state constitution to protect marriage between a man and a woman. “California has long been considered the land of fruits and nuts sees the writing on the wall. We are trying to clean-up the moral pollution. Unfortunately, the pollution is also growing in other states.”
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| Chaldean Teacher Namir Gourguis Freed |
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By Amer Hedow :: 12209 Views :: Government & Society, World News & Odds 'N' Ends
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Kirkuk, IRAQ – The disputed lands of Kirkuk continue to foster hostilities as the three major factions of Iraq pound Christian minorities in order to seize property and lay claim to the oil rich lands. Although Iraq is the native home to the Chaldean Catholic Church, one of the oldest Christian churches in the world, hundreds of thousands of Christians have been forced to flee since the US-led invasion of March 2003. “Our people are easy targets. Iraqi Christians are the Tibetans of the Middle East. We are peaceful,” says John Anwya. “These cowards attack Iraq’s native people.”
In northern Iraq a Christian missionary and teacher Namir Nadhim Gourguis, has been freed after just over a week in captivity, according to the Catholic missionary news agency Asia news.
Gourguis was well known in the community and loved. Mediation by tribal chiefs and local imams led to Gourguis' release just over a week after he was abducted by a gunmen last Thursday at an elementary school near the northern oil city of Kirkuk.
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| Chaldeans Worry Over UN Altercation of Iraq Refugee Guidelines |
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By Huda Metti :: 11952 Views :: Government & Society, World News & Odds 'N' Ends
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California, USA – United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) this week revised its guidelines about Iraqi refugees, scaling down the categories of Iraqis that it says should be granted asylum in all cases. Central Iraq remains unstable, and refugees from those provinces should be granted asylum, the UNHCR said. Those provinces include Baghdad, Diyala and Ninevah.
Andrew Harper, who leads the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees operation in Iraq, says Chaldeans and other ethnic and religious minorities in Iraq should receive asylum from Western countries.
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| Chaldeans Want to Know Where the Scholarships Are? |
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By CE&CC :: 15935 Views :: Career & Education, Chaldean Education & Career Center
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As the cost of a college education rises, Chaldean students are finding ways to foot the bill. Chaldean Students have won scholarships to pay their way through school. What's their secret?
They know where to find scholarships, when to look for them and how to write for them. There's no guarantee you'll win a scholarship, but there are ways to skew the odds in your favor.
Where's the Money: Anywhere and Everywhere
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| Returning Back to the Babylonian Roots of Saving |
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By Crystal Dallo :: 9110 Views :: Business & Finance
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Michigan, USA - Even before it was fashionable in America, Chaldeans were proselytizing about the value of thrift and saving. “I give all my American friends having financial trouble the book,” says Faith Yono a senior finance major at Wayne State University in Michigan. “The book is small, but filled with wise financial sense. This is a reason why Babylonians are some of the wealthiest people even today.”
Yono is referring to the book titled the Richest Man in Babylon written by George Samuel Clason which gives financial advice through a collection of parables set in ancient Babylon. Through their experiences in business and managing household finance, the characters in the parables learn simple lessons in financial wisdom. By basing these parables in ancient times, but involving situations that modern people can understand and identify with, the author presents these lessons as timeless wisdom that is as relevant today as it was back then.
Chaldeans are known to teach that you should never spend what you borrowed. “America’s culture of consume on credit is very bad,” says Yono. “People are taught to buy whatever they like on credit cards and pay the crazy interest later. The same stupid thinking is now in government. They just want to borrow and spend and this is very bad.”
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| 15 Reminders for Chaldeans Leasing or Renting |
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By Rita Abro :: 14144 Views :: Living & Lifestyle, Business & Finance
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California, USA – “You have to know your rights. Otherwise they may take advantage of you when you rent from them,” says Khaloud “Kelly” Heso, a property manager in Orange Grove Townhouse and Apartments in a small town outside of San Diego, California. “I once worked with a company that taught us not to share renter rights with the tenants. I could not work for a company that operated in that way, so I left and came to Orange Grove.”
Chaldeans should know what their rights are when renting and you don't have to be expert in landlord-tenant law to protect yourself. Chaldeans are reminded to review their rights when renting or leasing and to always read the agreement before signing the dotted line.
Laws that protect both landlord and tenant have become so complex that understanding your rights can be difficult. Since landlord-tenant law varies by state, the key is knowing your rights -- preferably before you even sign your rental agreement. Understanding your state law and the terms of your lease are your best guarantees against future problems.
15 common renters' rights all Chaldeans should know:
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| The Attributes of a Chaldean Apostle 4 of 7 – Sacrifice / Charity |
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By Frank Dado :: 17505 Views :: Religion & Spirituality, Opinion and Editorials
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I am often asked by other Chaldeans, how am I to know if I am making God happy. My response, “First, we must obey Him. We must obey His laws and act in the way He has commanded. We know this, based on how we behave. We have been told that we are known by the fruit we bear; meaning our behavior and motivation. God calls us to obey Him, not man. How we choose will determine our future.”
Fr. Michael Sisco compliments this message by challenging us to that simple question. Are we to obey God or are we to obey men? Our actions answer this question. Some of us are blinded to how our actions please Jesus or offend him. Our actions are simply leaves to a tree of habit. That tree nourished or poisoned by its roots. What Chaldeans should be most concerned with is the root of their tree and how the roots are nourished and fed to their branches and leaves. The roots of every good Chaldean are nourished by two traits. Traits Fr. Sisco makes clear.
Like Fr. Sisco, I too favor Ubi caritas et amor, Deus ibi est, which means Where charity and love are, God is there. Charity and love is the sun and water for all Chaldean roots. The music Fr. Sisco refers to is breathtaking and included, with transcription, in this article for readers who wish to listen and meditate on how they can strengthen their obedience to God.
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