Dear friends,
I am sending a link of our Unitarian Newsletter in Maros district,
which title is Joakarat , Good will in English:
http://www.lorinfo.ro/joakarat/
This edition it is in Hungarian with mediations and sermons or other
texts ( for example an artical by Sandor Balazs about Szentgerice's
service for community )and you see an image about Roberto Rosso's
ordination ( who is Unitarian minister in Italy ) and short text and
a link about this celebration by Rev. Knut Heidelberg from Norway.
Our plan is to edit this district level newsletter in each holy days,
when we have communions. We also plan to have an English and
Hungarian page about partner Church news and Liberal Christian
Churches being in contact with our district. So please feel free to
send us artical or news if you have something to share for us. We
can not promise you that we would edit all your text ( because of
limit of space), but we can promise that we will inform our readers
about you write.This page would be the first step for working for our
a separate newsletter what will be partner edition of Partner Church
news.
Have a spiritual Advent and a joyful Christmas!
Yours Szilard
p.c.Please feel free to share about this artica in web radio and fell
free to use it to read about articals if you may think useful.
Dear Friends, We managed to move the server of TUR to this address>http://tv3.stream-music.net:8424/listen.pls People just need to click on this and they can listen live at TUR. I am still working on the message panel to get it back to life. I am planning the show to start tonight at 11 pm my time. I am not sure what is the exact time over there. This server is only a temporary situation. Thank you for your help and understanding. Zsolt -
Unfortunately, TUR is having a problem with their hosting service.
:-( Technology giveth and technology taketh away )-:
Zsolt has rescheduled the program to next Sunday, Nov 1st @ 10:00 p.m. his time, 3:00 p.m. US East Coast, 12:00 noon West Coast time, etc. (we'll all be on Standard Time by then).
Have a great week!
Rodger
On Oct 26, 2008, at 8:32 AM, Mattlage Rodger wrote:
Szia mindenkinek! [Hello Everyone!]
Romania went back to Standard Time last night so they are 6 hours different than us here on the east coast until we catch up with them in a week.
So today's 10:00 p.m. broadcast will be at 4:00 p.m. here on the east coast, 1:00 p.m. on the west coast, etc.
Recordings: - typically Zsolt records the show and makes it available on the TUR Downloads page within 24 hours. If anyone else wants to commit to making an MP3 recording, I'd be happy to put it on the TURadio Yahoo Group's "Files" page.
Minden jót! [Best wishes!]
Rodger
On Oct 22, 2008, at 3:45 PM, Mattlage Rodger wrote:
Greetings all!
Zsolt Solymosi (the driving force behind TUR) has confirmed - this season's first English language broadcast this Sunday, October 26, at 3:00 p.m. (EDT) (that's 10:00 p.m. Transylvanian time in Kolozsvár/Cluj from where Zsolt will be broadcasting).
Topics will include news from Transylvania from the last few months, the 440th anniversary of the founding of Transylvanian Unitarianism, the anniversary of David Ference's death and the tri-annual synod coming up in December where they ordain ministers, and elect a new bishop as well as other church officials.
Romania went back to Standard Time last night so they are 6 hours different than us here on the east coast until we catch up with them in a week.
So today's 10:00 p.m. broadcast will be at 4:00 p.m. here on the east coast, 1:00 p.m. on the west coast, etc.
Recordings: - typically Zsolt records the show and makes it available on the TUR Downloads page within 24 hours. If anyone else wants to commit to making an MP3 recording, I'd be happy to put it on the TURadio Yahoo Group's "Files" page.
Minden jót! [Best wishes!]
Rodger
On Oct 22, 2008, at 3:45 PM, Mattlage Rodger wrote:
Greetings all!
Zsolt Solymosi (the driving force behind TUR) has confirmed - this season's first English language broadcast this Sunday, October 26, at 3:00 p.m. (EDT) (that's 10:00 p.m. Transylvanian time in Kolozsvár/Cluj from where Zsolt will be broadcasting).
Topics will include news from Transylvania from the last few months, the 440th anniversary of the founding of Transylvanian Unitarianism, the anniversary of David Ference's death and the tri-annual synod coming up in December where they ordain ministers, and elect a new bishop as well as other church officials.
Zsolt Solymosi (the driving force behind TUR) has confirmed - this season's first English language broadcast this Sunday, October 26, at 3:00 p.m. (EDT) (that's 10:00 p.m. Transylvanian time in Kolozsvár/Cluj from where Zsolt will be broadcasting).
Topics will include news from Transylvania from the last few months, the 440th anniversary of the founding of Transylvanian Unitarianism, the anniversary of David Ference's death and the tri-annual synod coming up in December where they ordain ministers, and elect a new bishop as well as other church officials.
and right click any of the programs and chose the option to Save/Download/Copy/... (depending on your browser) and chose a location on your local disk, then import it into iTunes.
Let me know if you have any questions!
Best wishes!
Rodger
On Jun 24, 2008, at 4:46 PM, adineichler wrote:
I am a new member of the San Francisco Unitarian Church and am jazzed that this radio station in Transylvania exists!
Is there a way to download the podcasts on iTunes?
I am a new member of the San Francisco Unitarian Church and am jazzed
that this radio station in Transylvania exists!
Is there a way to download the podcasts on iTunes?
Cheers,
Adin Eichler
Great news!! There's another English-language from TUR broadcast from TUR coming up, this Sunday, April 6th at 2:00 p.m. east coast time (Romania went to daylight savings on March 31st so now we're back to the normal 7 hour difference).
The program features photographer Stephen Spinder, interviewed by Zsolt (Solymosi).
If you are not already familiar with Stephen's wonderful work, I highly recommend it.
To: Current members of the Partner Church Council <pcc-chat@...>
Subject: [pcc-chat] Stephen Spinder photographer live at TUR on Sunday!
Reply-To: Current members of the Partner Church Council <pcc-chat@...>
Dear Friends!
On the 6th of April, Sunday, 9PM Romanian time - TUR will have as guest Stephen Spinder a fine art photographer, the author of two famous books: "10 years inTRansylvania through my lens" and Budapest through my lens; a solitary perspective". Stephen is in Transylvania this week, working on a new album about Unitarian Church photos in Transylvania, and he will be live at the studio, so you shouldn t miss asking your questions at www.unitarianradio.ro Click on it! Blessings, Rev. Zsolt Solymosi host of the english broadcasts
_________________________________________________________________ Discover the new Windows Vista http://search.msn.com/results.aspx?q=windows+vista&mkt=en-US&form=QBRE _______________________________________________ pcc-chat mailing list pcc-chat@... http://lists.uua.org/mailman/listinfo/pcc-chat
Listen to this very informative interview at the link in Zsolt's message below!
Minden jót! Best wishes!
Rodger
----- Forwarded Message ---- From: solymosi zsolt <solyomzs@...> To: pcc-chat@...; pcc-networkers@... Sent: Sunday, February 3, 2008 5:32:01 AM Subject: [pcc-chat] TUR interview with Rev. John Gibbons now available for podcast!
See message below from Zsolt with the link to the TUR Downloads page.
This is a very interesting and informative conversation - highly recommended!! Not only about science and religion, Zsolt and Scott also discuss some current happenings in Transylvania and some of the goings on in the High School and Theological Tnstitute in Kolozsvár/Cluj/Klausenburg/Napoca/Claudiopolis.
Note: The broadcast opens with a song by Koncz Zsuzsa - keep listening for Zsolt's introduction and then the conversation.
To play the file: Click the link on the TUR Downloads page to start playing the file using the default MP3 player set
up in your browser (or to initiate a pop-up dialog requesting you to download and install a player).
To download a copy of the file to your computer: right-click with a two-button mouse or hold the control key down and click with a one-button Macintosh mouse, to get a pop up menu and then select one of the following menu options, depending on the browser you are using:
Internet Explorer: "Save target as ..." Firefox - - - - - - : "Save link as ..." Safari - - - - - - -: "Download linked file"
Note: it's a large 229.5 MB file so it will take a few minutes even with a high speed connection. I'm not sure how long it will take with a dial up connection!!
To save you the step of going to the TUR downloads page, you can also play or download using this link:
Let me know if you have any questions about playing or downloading the file!
Enjoy the broadcast!!
Rodger
Rodger Mattlage TURadio Group Moderator
----- Forwarded Message ---- From: solymosi zsolt <solyomzs@...> To: Current members of the Partner Church Council <pcc-chat@...> Sent: Wednesday, January 9, 2008 11:53:09 PM Subject: [pcc-chat] Rev. Scott Prinster at TUR
Dear Friends and listeners of TUR, The last english broadcast with special guest Rev. Scott Prinster talking about science and religion is available now for podcast at http://www.unitarianradio.ro/site/letoltes.php
Please note the special TUR broadcast on this coming Monday afternoon (Jan 7) with Zsolt and Rev. Scott Prinster. Scott was the English teacher at the Protestant Seminary in Kolozsvár/Cluj from 1996 - 1998. It will be interesting to hear Scott's reflections upon his return to Transylvania and to hear what he is doing now!
See additional information in Scott's email below including the link to his web site where you can learn more about Scott.
Rodger Mattlage Moderator, TURadio Yahoo Group
----- Forwarded Message ---- From: Scott Gerard Prinster <prinster@...> To:
pcc-chat@... Sent: Saturday, January 5, 2008 8:38:35 AM Subject: [pcc-chat] Transylvanian Unitarian Radio program (shameless self-promotion)
Zsolt Solymosi has asked me to send out an announcement that he and I
will be doing an interview on Transylvania Unitarian Radio (TUR) on
Monday, January 7, at 11:00 pm Kolozsvar time. That's 4:00 pm EST and 1:00
pm PST for you folks back West. As always, if you're not able to
listen to the program live, just wait and the podcast link will be posted
on the "Downloads" page. Tune in to http://unitarianradio.ro , and as
always, thank you for your support of this great outreach project!
Click on the above link to go directly to the TUR download page.
Enjoy!
Rodger Mattlage
Moderator, TURadio Yahoo Group
----- Forwarded Message ---- From: solymosi zsolt <solyomzs@...> To: pcc-chat@... Sent: Sunday, December 23, 2007 8:04:55 AM Subject: [pcc-chat] Christmas gift from TUR
Dear Friends from all over,
with the end of the first year of TUR, I would like to thank you for
all the support you gave to the Transylvanian Unitarian WebRadio. We are experiencing a new dimension in building bridges.
The newest podcast to download from www.unitarianradio.ro is the
Christmas concert of our Choir from the Janos Zsigmond Unitarian Highschool from Kolozsvar.
Enjoy it, and let’s stay close to each other in the New Year!
We will be having an English broadcast on TUR this Thursday about the changing nature of food in Romania. There will be discussion of agriculture, farmers' markets, and the time-honored tradition of winter pig butchering. I hope that all can tune in. Unlike our normal broadcasts, this will be on at 5 PM EET (10 AM EST/ 7 AM PST). It will be podcast within 24 hours. I hope that you can hear this special broadcast. If you have any questions or comments please put them on our message board at www.unitarianradio.ro.
We will be having an English broadcast on TUR this Thursday about the changing nature of food in Romania. There will be discussion of agriculture, farmers' markets, and the time-honored tradition of winter pig butchering. I hope that all can tune in. Unlike our normal broadcasts, this will be on at
Hi everybody,
This evening at 7PM (12 PM EST) we will be live on TUR discussing
Francis David on the official church commemoration day of his death in
captivity at Deva in 1579. Kovacs Sandor, the Unitarian church
historian and professor at the Protestant Theological Institute will
be our special guest to discuss Francis David and the founding of
Unitarianism in Transylvania. I hope you can tune in, and if not,
podcast will be available at www.unitarianradio.ro within 24 hours of
broadcast.
Thanks and I hope to hear from you.
Ben Legg
Hi everybody. We at TUR are glad to announce that we will make a Podcast of Friday, November 9, 2007's program with an interview with Dr. Rosemary Chinnici available within 24 hours. Please keep your eyes and ears peeled to www.unitarianradio.ro so you can download this great show.
Next week we will broadcast Thursday, November 15, at 7 PM. The theme of the broadcast will be the life and times of Francis David, the founder of Unitarianism. I hope to hear from a lot of you and that you enjoy our show with Rosemary.
This is just an announcement that tomorrow at 6PM Romanian Time (11AM EST), we will have a special broadcast. We will be interviewing Dr. Rosemary Chinnici, who is currently in Kolozsvar doing a seminar on Professional Ethics with the theological students. The show will be available for Podcasting later, but let people know about the live broadcast if they want to ask questions during the show.
Hey everybody,
Sorry for the extreme short notice but the English language broadcast
of TUR will happen at 7 PM Romanian time (12 PM EST).
Bob Tripp recommended this time last week and it did turn out ot be
easier for Zsolt and me.
Hope to hear from you then.
Ben Legg
Zsolt and Ben cover a wide range of topics
including what's new in Cluj/Kolozsvar; Nov 1's "Day of the Dead" commemorations; the 450th anniversary celebrations of the founding of the Lutheran/Calvinist/Unitarian high school; and topics for upcoming broadcasts as well as musical interludes.
You can email Zsolt at "solyomzs@..." or Ben at "leggab@..." with questions and suggestions.
Plans are for additional weekly broadcasts each Thursday at 12:00 EST.
The podcast of each week's broadcast should be on the download page (link above) by afternoon the next day (i.e. Friday).
If you need information about listening to the live web broadcasts, go to the TURadio listeners' web site at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TURadio/ and click on the "Player Instructions" on the "Files" section. If you are not already a Yahoo Groups member, registration is free and easy at http://groups.yahoo.com/. Email me at "rmattlage@..." with comments and suggestions for the TURadio Yahoo Group pages.
Hey everybody!! Greetings from Kolozsvar! This is just a reminder that Zsolt and I will be broadcasting in English tomorrow at 6PM Eastern European Time.....that will be 12 noon on the East Coast and 9 AM on the West Coast (we switched off of daylight savings this past weekend here). Listen if you can and if you don't catch the show tomorrow it will be rebroadcast throughout the week. We have no topic planned so we will be discussing recent events at the JZsUK and Theological Institute. Hope to have a lot of you listening and we will keep you informed of what's going on for rebroadcasts. Szervusztok. Ben
HI everybody!
Due to a slight misunderstanding Zsolt and I had to cancel yesterday's
planned broadcast. This means that the first broadcast will be next
Thursday, November 1 at 6:00 PM Romanian time (11 AM East Coast). We
will be rebroadcasting each show throughout the week and will let you
know out rebroadcast schedule as well.
I apologize for yesterday's confusion and I hope that a lot of you try to tune in next week.
Sok tisztelettel
Ben
Hi everybody. I'm sorry for the short notice but Zsolt and I will be doing an English language broadcast at 5:00 PM CET (10 AM EDT/ 7 AM PDT).
I understand that it is a difficult time to listen to the show live and send in your comments, however, we will be rebroadcasting each show several times throughout the week now, and a comprehensive schedule listing the rebroadcasts will be posted in a few days so that you can try to catch the show at your convenience. While this new round of English language broadcasting will lack the dimension provided by listener participation, we hope to add a new dimension by having the broadcasts available at different times so that we can reach a broader audience. Do try to listen today and if you can't we will be providing a schedule for the rebroadcasts ASAP.
Thank you for you interest in TUR and we hope that this new round of broadcasting will be successful.
Dear Knut and everyone else on this TUR list,
Zsolt and the TUR Support Group are working on the programming for the
upcoming school year. Bob Tripp is there in Kolozsvar with Zsolt now,
exploring the options.
When Bob gets back in the next week or so, we'll send you all an update.
In the meantime, TUR continues to broadcast music and pre-recorded
programs 24x7x365.
Best wishes to all!
Rodger
--- In TURadio@yahoogroups.com, Knut Heidelberg <knut_heidelberg@...>
wrote:
>
> What's happening with TUR these days?
>
> Best wishes from Knut in Norway
>
> Knut Heidelberg
> http://heidelberg.no
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> _________________________________________________________
> Alt i �n. F� Yahoo! Mail med adressekartotek, kalender og
> notisblokk. http://no.mail.yahoo.com
>
What's happening with TUR these days?
Best wishes from Knut in Norway
Knut Heidelberg
http://heidelberg.no
_________________________________________________________
Alt i én. Fĺ Yahoo! Mail med adressekartotek, kalender og
notisblokk. http://no.mail.yahoo.com
For those of concerned with sustainable development in Transylvania, the mining controversy in Rosia Montana/Verespatak in the mountains not far from Torda,Transylvania provides one of the more complex, publicized and controversial examples. The attached article in yesterday's Wall Street Journal and the PBS show it talks about might be of interest to you.
The WSJ Article is pasted below for those for whom the above link doesn't work.
For Boston area folks, the film mentioned in the article is listed as showing tonight, Wed Aug 22nd, on "Wide Angle" at 6:00 pm and 9:00 pm on the WGBH World station (209 for us on Comcast in Lincoln, MA). As they say - check your local listings.
This morning at 2:00 am I woke up and caught the last 10 minutes of it on NH Public TV. It showed a Hungarian Unitarian woman who sold her home to the gold company and a Romanian woman who would not. It ended in a field with men cutting grass with scythes and one of their wives bring them water - they wanted no part of the gold company's plans.
It has more information about the movie and many links about material related to the mine, including a NYT article. If you can't see the show live, hopefully it will be posted on the PBS Wide Angle site in the near future as many of their other recent programs have been.
Best wishes,
Rodger
Make Up Your Own Mine
By JOHN FUND
August 21, 2007; Page A15, The Wall Street Journal
The recent tragedy in Utah has brightened the spotlight on mining, already under assault by environmental and anti-globalization activists world-wide. These activists have produced several documentaries, and the anti-mining campaign has attracted the attention of billionaire George Soros and actress Vanessa Redgrave -- and enough charges of greed or hypocrisy to fill a mine shaft.
Tonight, PBS will air "Gold Futures," a film by Hungary's Tibor Kocsis. The film focuses on residents in Romania's Rosia Montana, a rural Transylvanian town, who are divided over the benefits of a proposed gold mine. It also features Gabriel Resources, the Canadian mining company trying to convince them to relocate so it can dig for a huge gold deposit estimated at 14.6 million ounces, worth almost $10 billion. PBS describes the film as a "David-and-Goliath story."
While the film gives time to supporters and opponents of the mine, it leaves unsaid that half of the villagers voicing opposition have now either sold their homes or will not have to move, because they live in a protected area where the village's historic structures and churches will be preserved. Viewers who see pristine shots of the Rosia valley won't realize the hills hide a huge, abandoned communist-era mine, leaking toxic heavy metals into local streams -- or that while the modern mining project will level four hills to create an open pit, it will also clean up the old mess at no cost to the Romanian treasury.
The other side to the controversy is told in a new film that will never be shown on PBS, but is nonetheless rattling the environmental community. "Mine Your Own Business" is a documentary by Irish filmmakers Phelim McAleer and Ann McElhinney. They conclude that the biggest threat to the people of Rosia Montana "comes from upper-class Western environmentalism that seeks to keep them poor and unable to clean up the horrific pollution caused by Ceausescu's mining."
Mr. McAleer, a former Financial Times journalist who has followed the mine battle for seven years, says he "found that everything the environmentalists were saying about the project was misleading, exaggerated or quite simply false." He produced his film on a shoestring $230,000 budget largely provided by Gabriel Resources, but says he was given complete editorial control.
The Gabriel funding caused environmental groups to label the film "propaganda" and demand the National Geographic Society cancel plans to rent its Washington, D.C. theater to the free-market Moving Picture Institute for a screening. The Institute notes opponents rarely challenge the film's facts. As for Mr. Kocsis's documentary, his Flora Film corporate Web site lists as its partners Greenpeace, the Hungarian Ministry of Environment and the George Soros-backed Energy Club of Hungary, all of which oppose the Romanian project on either environmental or nationalistic grounds (Transylvania used to be part of Hungary).
High-profile mine opponents such as Ms. Redgrave (who hasn't visited Rosia Montana), have declared undying opposition to the project: "Our planet is dying and we have no right to destroy an ecosystem." In April, Mr. Soros, the chairman of the Open Society Institute and a large funder of groups opposing Rosia Montana, wrote to Wayne Murdy, then CEO of Newmont Mining, the Denver company that owns 19% of Gabriel Resources. He urged him not to invest in "a dubious project such as Rosia Montana," citing "the social costs involved in involuntarily resettling hundreds of people" and "the potential for disastrous environmental impact." Mr. Soros did not respond to an interview request.
Opponents of the mine claim that Rosia Montana residents agree with their stance. "Local opposition to the mine is strong and organized" says a statement signed by 80 environmental groups in January. In his letter, Mr. Soros cites a recent poll organized by some members of Romania's parliament that "found 90% of respondents rejecting the project." But the poll turns out to be an unscientific Internet survey, and one of the environmental groups Mr. Soros funds urged people outside Romania to participate in it. What is clear: Two-thirds of Rosia Montana's people have accepted Gabriel's voluntary offer to buy their homes at above market rates. Most will move four miles away to a less polluted area.
On the other side, Rosia Montana Mayor Virgil Narita supports the mine because it will create 700 permanent local jobs. He was re-elected with 80% of the vote this year. And in late 2004, the Council of Europe sent Eddie O'Hara, a British Labour Party member of the European Parliament, to Rosia Montana to file an official report. Opposition to the mine, he said, was "substantial," but it was "very much fueled by outside bodies, presumably well-meaning but possibly counterproductively. It seems in part at least exaggerated." Mr. O'Hara concluded the opposition "do not take account of modern mining techniques and in fact the Rosia Montana project will help to clear up existing pollution." He also warned that not allowing the mine "would remove any chance of local development for some time."
And there's the rub. Rosia Montana needs a cleanup and development. Three-quarters of its 600 families lack indoor toilets, unemployment tops 70% and the only truly viable crop is potatoes. In "Mine Your Own Business," Andrei Jurca, the local dentist, tells Mr. McAleer "we don't need foreign advocates. We are smart enough to take our own fate in our own hands." Other villagers note that concerns about Gabriel's use of cyanide in gold mining are misplaced. Seven out of nine existing gold mines in European Union countries use cyanide and the allowable limits in Rosia Montana will be lower than all of them.
Perhaps local unemployed miner Gheorghe Lucian says it best: "People have no food to eat . . . I know what I need -- a job." Mr. Soros's Romanian Open Society Foundation is touting "alternative economic activities such as organic agriculture and eco-tourism," unrealistic at best. Stefania Simon, legal counsel for the anti-mine group Alburnus Maior, has no answer for Mr. Lucian. "Unemployment is a problem, but it will not be solved by mining," she told Britain's Guardian newspaper. Noting that Gabriel has only a 17-year lease to mine, she says, "This is a solution for the short term." But right now, even non-permanent jobs and any cleanup of the existing pollution looks like a good deal to people like Mr. Lucian.
"Mine Your Own Business" also contains interviews with leading environmentalists opposing other mining projects who display smug indifference to bettering the lives of poor people. In Madagascar, Mr. McAleer finds Mark Fenn, country director for the World Wide Fund for Nature, who argues that the poor are just as happy as the rich because they smile more and that if Madagascar locals (who now earn $100 a month) get more money "they'll buy cases of beer, invite their friends, they'll throw a party . . . three, four days the money's gone." He then shows off his new $35,000 catamaran.
Mr. McAleer tells me such encounters should wake up people "who, like myself, unquestionably believed environmentalists were a force for good in the world." He still considers himself a liberal but, "it's sad that my fellow left-wingers and environmentalists who often come from the most developed countries are now so opposed to development."