Subgenius Digest V4 #153

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Tue, 10 Aug 93 00:02:28 EDT

Subgenius Digest Tue, 10 Aug 93 Volume 4 : Issue 153

Today's Topics:
Fwd: Virgin Mary appears to two teenage Slovak girls,thousands of pilgrims
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Message-ID: <YgNgwrW00WB44SjXJ9@andrew.cmu.edu>
Date: Mon, 9 Aug 1993 18:27:03 -0400 (EDT)
From: Chris Koenigsberg <ckk+@andrew.cmu.edu>
To: Subgenius@mc.lcs.mit.edu
Subject: Fwd: Virgin Mary appears to two teenage Slovak girls,thousands of pilgrims

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BRATISLAVA, Slovakia (UPI) -- Two teenage Slovak girls told about 150,
000 pilgrims in an eastern Slovak village how the Virgin Mary appeared
to them for the second time in three years, newspapers reported Monday.
The appearances took place over the weekend in Litmanova, 186 miles
(300 km) northeast of Bratislava in the foothills of the Tatra
Mountains.
``My dear children, thank you for coming...the spirit never refuses
the favor of Your Lord who loves you madly,'' 14-year-old Iveta
Korcakova told the throng gathered at the foot of Mount Zvir, repeating
the Virgin's message.
Pilgrims from all over Slovakia sat rapt at the girls' description of
the Virgin Mary's golden robes and shiny crown, witnesses said.
The pilgrimage has become an annual event since Korcakova and her
friend Katerina Ceselkova first reported seeing the Virgin Mary in 1990.
And weeks before this year's pilgrimage, the girls said the Virgin
planned to make a return appearance.
But with many other similar cases around the world, the local church
hierarchy has reacted skeptically to these sightings.
Catholic officials from nearby city of Presov sent a bishop's
commission to Litmanova to assess the veracity of the girls' vision,
church officials in Bratislava told United Press International, refusing
to give further details.
The ``church doesn't endorse the events,'' said Katerina Szabova of
the weekly Katolicky Noviny (Catholic News). ``It's a delicate thing.''
But for many in this largely Catholic country, the girls' accounts of
the vision was overwhelming.
``Some women even pretended they saw a vision as well,'' said Maria
Sisulakova, from the Slovensky Dennik newspaper which is close to the
Christian Democratic Party. ``The nuns were excited and believed
everything.''
According to the Slovak Statistics Office, 60 percent of the
population is Roman Catholic and an additional 3 percent belong to the
long-banned Greek Catholic, or Uniate, Church.

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