INAUGURAL ANZAC CONFERENCE TO BE HELD ON LEMNOS

Australians visiting Greece and Europe in July are being invited to come to the northern Aegean Island of Lemnos and hear how Lemnos played a key role in Australia’s Anzac legend.

The Municipality of Lemnos, in conjunction with Australia’s Lemnos Gallipoli Commemorative Committee, have created what will become a regular event to raise the profile of the Lemnos link to Gallipoli and to focus activities on Lemnos leading up to the Centenary of Anzac in 2015.

Lemnos was the key base for the Anzac campaign, where the Anzacs left from, where they rested and recovered, where the Australian nurses cared for the injured and where the Anzacs were helped by and helped the local Lemnians.

As well as being a base for Australia’s 50,000 soldiers and sailors and 130 nurses, over 140 Australians remain in Lemnos’ war graves. The letters, diaries and photographs left behind from this meeting of Australians and Lemnians records the beginnings of Australia’s link to Greece.

This Conference will bring together a number of international guest speakers, including Australia’s Dr John Yiannakis, who recently addressed the issue of Lemnos at Melbourne’s Antipodes Festival and Dr Haluk Oral, celebrated author on Gallipoli from Istanbul University. The Hon John Pandazopoulos, MP, former Victorian Tourism Minister and President of the World Hellenic InterParliamentary Association, will address the Conference on how Lemnos can develop its unique cultural tourism links with Australia.

The Conference will bring together key government, tourism and community leaders on Lemnos to help plan and discuss preparations for the Centenary of Anzac in 2015.

The Conference will also include a tour of the key Anzac sites on Lemnos, led by Conference Organiser and Anzac historian, Mr Jim Claven.

The Conference would provide a unique opportunity to commemorate and discuss this historic link between Australia, Lemnos and Greece, as well as an opportunity to plan for a new era of commemorative tourism on the Island commencing in 2015.

Mr Claven said as we get closer to the Gallipoli Centenary it is essential for Australians to understand that without Lemnos as a base for allied troops for nealy a year there would have been no Gallipoli campaign.

“Australia’s Greek community should be proud of the role that Greece played in offering its islands for the Anzacs and allies. Australia and Greece share an Anzac and Gallipoli heritage. This is what will be explored in detail as part of the Conference as Greece prepares for the Centenary of Gallipoli.”

President of the Lemnos Gallipoli Commemorative Committee, Mr Lee Tarlamis, MP, who will be participating in the Conference said that for decades the Lemnian-Australian community has worked to ensure that the story was not forgotten.

“Its now our role as Australian’s to take the next step and reunite ourselves with our forgotten history”, he added.
Mr Pandazopoulos pointed out that Lemnos is the missing link of the Gallipoli story.

“We can never be true to our history and the 50000 Anzacs that were there-soldiers, navy, nurses and medical personnel and those Lemnians who enthusiastically supported the campaign.”

“As Australians and Kiwis pay pilgrimage at Gallipoli Lemnos will play its role as well as. They will be able to visit the 3 Commonwealth War Cemeteries, the site of the hospitals and rest camps, the sites explored by the Anzacs and the supply bases including remnants of the desalination plant that provided water to our Gallipoli troops”, he said.

The Conference will be held at Portianou Cultural Centre, over 11th to 13th July 2013. The cost of attending the Conference will be nominal, with free attendance for students and those under 22 years of age.

All those interested in better understanding and promoting the vital Lemnos link to the Gallipoli and Anzac Story are urged to attend and take part in this important conference. Those interested in attending the Conference are urged to contact the Secretary of the Lemnos Gallipoli Commemorative Committee, Mr Jim Claven at jimclaven@yahoo.com.au.

Those requiring accommodation or transport packages are available to those requiring them.
For further comment:
Jim Claven 0409402388
John Pandazopoulos 0408310733
Lee Tarlamis 0411553009

Tο κλείσιμο του Δημόσιου Φορέα Ραδιοτηλεόρασης στην Ελλάδα είναι «Πλήγμα για την Δημοκρατί

Δήλωση του Προέδρου της ΕΟΔ Mogens Blicher-Bjerregård

Ο Πρόεδρος της ΕΟΔ Mogens Blicher-Bjerregård δήλωσε:

“Αυτά τα σχέδια είναι απλά παράλογα. Θα είναι ένα σημαντικό πλήγμα για την δημοκρατία, την πολυφωνία στα μέσα ενημέρωσης και στη δημοσιογραφία ως δημόσιο αγαθό στην Ελλάδα, στερώντας έτσι από τους πολίτες το δικαίωμά τους να δέχονται ειλικρινείς, ψύχραιμες και αμερόληπτες πληροφορίες. Αλλά αυτό θα σημαίνει επίσης και απώλεια θέσεων εργασίας πολλών δημοσιογράφων σε ολόκληρη τη χώρα.

Οποιαδήποτε σχέδια για περικοπές θέσεων εργασίας στην ΕΡΤ και για ιδιωτικοποίηση των Δημόσιων Μέσων Ενημέρωσης στην Ελλάδα είναι απαράδεκτες. Οι δημόσιοι περιφερειακοί σταθμοί δεν μπορούν να υποκατασταθούν από οποιαδήποτε εταιρικό συμφέρον.

Η ΕΟΔ υπενθυμίζει ότι η Οργάνωση Υψηλού Επιπέδου (High Level Group) για τα ΜΜΕ που έχει συσταθεί από την Ευρωπαϊκή Επιτροπή συνιστά ότι «θα πρέπει να υπάρξει πρόβλεψη της κρατικής χρηματοδότησης για τα Μέσα που είναι απαραίτητα για την πολυφωνία»

Η Ευρωπαϊκή Ομοσπονδία Δημοσιογράφων είναι η ευρωπαϊκή οργάνωση της Διεθνούς Ομοσπονδίας Δημοσιογράφων. Αντιπροσωπεύει πάνω από 300 000 δημοσιογράφοι σε 37 χώρες.

Aπο την ιστοσελίδα της Διεθνούς Ομοσπονδίας Δημοσιογράφων (IFJ)

Μετάφραση: LEFTeria-news

Victory lures Greek champion Giorgos Karagounis

Source: TheAustralian

MELBOURNE Victory is hoping to pull off a stunning coup by signing one of Greece’s greatest players, Giorgos Karagounis.

The Australian understands coach Ange Postecoglou was in Athens last week speaking with the most capped player in Greek football with a view to him joining the club for next season’s A-League.

Karagounis, 36, is understood to be ready to make a decision in the next week. The quality midfielder is set to leave English Premier League club Fulham, where he played 21 games last season and was a teammate of Socceroos goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer, and is also considering offers from Greek giants Panathinaikos and other European clubs.

While he does not have the profile of an Alessandro Del Piero, who took the A-League by storm with his brilliant efforts for Sydney FC last season, Karagounis would nonetheless be a coup for the A-League.

Karagounis, who is the captain of the Greek national team and is remembered for leading it to a stunning upset win at Euro 2004, would prove a massive hit in Melbourne, where the city’s huge Greek population would be well aware of his stature.

And, his signing would no doubt provide a huge boost for Victory’s membership and gate figures.

Karagounis has had a wonderful 15-year professional career, playing for the likes of Panathinaikos (118 games), Inter Milan (21 games) in the Italian Serie A and Portugal’s Benfica.

Despite his age, he is still a regular with the Greek national team and has played over 125 games for his country. He played in the 1-0 win over Lithuania in a World Cup qualifier on Saturday.

The remains of Australians killed in World War II may soon be unearthed near a small village in Greece

Source: TheAge

Taking cover behind a stone wall near a village in northern Greece on April 12, 1941, two Australian soldiers, Private John McGarrity and Lance Corporal Robert Brown, decided to snatch a break after narrowly escaping German heavy machinegun fire.

”I guess that was close,” McGarrity said, figuring they were safe for a moment, despite the enemy’s proximity. ”Let’s make the best of it and have a smoke.”
He rolled his cigarette, but never got to light it. ”He gave a soft cry and collapsed to the ground,” Brown later told the Red Cross.

Almost immediately, Brown was also shot. As the two Diggers lay bleeding on the freezing earth, a German officer appeared. Brown was told he was now a prisoner of war; medics would see to his mate.

”I had one last look at Private McGarrity,” he said in his Red Cross statement, ”but he was lying very still. I cannot say [if] he was dead or wounded – that was the last time I saw him.”

Brown’s testimony, from a German POW camp in 1943, is the only source of information about McGarrity’s fate: his body, like those of up to 20 other Australian soldiers killed during the same battle, was never recovered.

Now, with mixed emotions, McGarrity’s family, including his 75-year-old daughter, is preparing for the possible discovery of his remains in the grounds of a disused military compound near the tiny Greek village of Vevi.

Greece’s minister for Macedonia and Thrace (the region in which Vevi is located) has told Fairfax the Greek government is prepared to fund a dig at a site near where McGarrity and about 20 others are believed to have been buried anonymously in 1941.

If the dig proves its supporters correct, Vevi could resonate for Australians in the same way as the French town of Fromelles where, in 2009, researchers unearthed the remains of 250 Allied soldiers from World War I, including 124 Australians whose identities have been established by DNA tests.

Like the long campaign to unearth the Pheasant Wood site at Fromelles in northern France, the push to explore the fields around Vevi was initiated by amateur historians who have cross-referenced military documents with local knowledge and hearsay.

Keith Rossi, Victoria’s RSL historian for the past 26 years, is among those who believe an investigation of Vevi is well overdue.

”Look at Fromelles, when they had all that evidence – for years they didn’t do a bloody thing,” says the 91-year-old retired brigadier. ”Why doesn’t someone just go up and have a look?”
Rossi was in Vevi in 1991 to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Greek campaign when he had an illuminating encounter.

”I was standing there at the wreath-laying ceremony and an elderly chap spoke to me,” Rossi says. ”We got talking about dead soldiers and the 2/8th Battalion, and this local said there were Australian soldiers from the war buried across the road – behind the wall.”

Rossi has talked about his encounter ever since, but it has taken nearly a quarter of a century for the conversation to grow into a concerted campaign to unravel the mystery, and to prove – one way or the other – if the rumours are true.

John McGarrity, the son of an Irish Catholic shipwright, was born in Newcastle, England, in 1905, and emigrated to Australia with an assisted passage in 1928, listed as a labourer.

He worked as a farmhand in Victoria and in manufacturing in Sunshine, where he was a member of the local running club. In 1937, aged 32, he married Norma Plumridge. Daughter Patricia was born in October the same year and Margaret in February 1939.
Within months of Margaret’s birth, Australia was at war with Germany.

McGarrity enlisted and in April 1940, his 2/8th Infantry Battalion left Melbourne for the Middle East. Having suffered the heaviest casualties of any Australian unit during the first battle for Tobruk in January 1941, it embarked for Greece on March 31.

Twelve days later, McGarrity, a popular soldier ”full of wit and humour”, according to a fellow Digger quoted in his military record, would become one of the first of more than 600 Anzac troops killed in the doomed Greek campaign.

It was an operation that began in the snows of northern Greece, where Australian and New Zealand forces – supported by Greek and British units – took on the might of Hitler’s invading Panzer army, and the SS Leibstandarte, the elite and fanatical Nazi division originally formed as bodyguards for Hitler.

Facing the same troops that had torn through Poland, France and Belgium, the Commonwealth forces were handicapped from the start by inferior armaments, poor communications and virtually no air cover.

On April 12, 1941, the 2/8th Battalion was 16 kilometres south of the border with Yugoslavia, clinging precariously to the eastern side of the Monastir Gap, near Vevi.

For more than 24 hours it repulsed the enemy. The mission was to hold the German advance long enough to allow the withdrawal of Greek forces on the Yugoslav and Albanian borders.

That afternoon, a vital phone line connecting the 2/8th’s front line to Battalion HQ was cut. McGarrity and Lance Corporal Brown volunteered to make the repair.

As they made their way forward, the German attack intensified. The 2/8th’s front line began to disintegrate, overrun by German infantry and fast-moving Panzers.

About 4pm, exposed in open ground, McGarrity and Brown came under heavy machinegun fire. The stone wall they sheltered behind proved useless, with both men shot and Brown taken prisoner of war.

McGarrity was among 28 Australian troops killed at Vevi, many of whom, from the 2/8th and 2/1st Anti Tank Regiment, were never recovered.

He was reported as ”missing in action, presumed killed” and it would not be until 1944 that McGarrity’s wife, Norma, bringing up their two daughters in Kew, would receive confirmation from the army that her husband was dead. They could not tell her what happened to his body.

If Allied prisoners died of their wounds in enemy hands, German burial units would usually identify them from identity discs or paybooks and create written records, simplifying identification of a burial site and the individuals within it years later. No such documentation has ever been found for McGarrity and a number of other members of his battalion who fell at Vevi.

After Greece was liberated in 1944, the work of the Australian War Graves Commission – charged with finding burial sites – was hampered severely in northern Greece by the Greek Civil War. The remains of those who were found were reinterred at Phaleron War Cemetery in Athens. Some 2029 Commonwealth servicemen who died on the mainland in the Greek campaign are buried or commemorated at Phaleron; 596 of the burials are unidentified. Only one member of the 2/8th Battalion killed on April 12, 1941, has a known grave at Phaleron.

Maria Cameron is one of three amateur historians involved in research on the Vevi missing.

The Port Fairy researcher, whose other projects include identifying the remains of World War I Diggers at Fromelles, has cross-referenced Australian and German military records, and believes there is ample evidence to support the proposition that Vevi still holds the remains of Australians killed there.

”If the AWGC did recover bodies in the area after the war, the German records would have given the recovery units a clue. For McGarrity and others, there are no records of that kind at all,” Cameron says.

”The absence of information in the records on John McGarrity and others from the 2/8th show they’re the ones who were never recovered. ”It’s the same as Fromelles, we couldn’t say they were definitely there.”

Melbourne military historian Carl Johnson has also examined the records relating to Vevi, and says that McGarrity qualifies as a leading contender for a soldier who fell at Vevi and is likely to be still there.

”His files were held open to September 1945, which shows the total lack of information the military had about his final resting place,” says Johnson.
”In addition to McGarrity, I’d say there’s strong evidence for others being contenders for those never recovered from the 2/8th and 2/1st Anti Tank Regiment. There could be up to 20, from both units all told.”

A third researcher, Newcastle schoolteacher Tom Tsamouras, who has been working on identifying the site pointed out in 1991 by Rossi, is also confident about the location. ”What needs to happen is for the Australian government to help the Greek authorities investigate it,” he says.

A spokesperson for Unrecovered War Casualties – Army, the unit of the Australian Defence Force that investigates alleged burial locations of Australian soldiers, said while the department had ”no verifiable evidence”, it was looking into the matter.

The Greek government has been more enthusiastic. ”The army have already drafted plans for a preliminary 15-day dig covering an area of two acres at the location, which is near a disused military compound,” says Tsamouras, who, through Greek contacts, brought the matter to the attention of Greece’s Minister for Macedonia and Thrace, Theodoros Karaoglou.

Karaoglou confirmed these details and says he believes the cost of an initial dig would be less than €30,000 ($41,000). He has vowed to authorise the expenditure personally.

Karaoglou says the dig will go ahead once the Greek army, on whose land the site sits, gives permission.

Despite the likely imminence of the dig, there has been no communication between the Greek authorities and the Australian Defence Force, according to the UWCA spokesperson.

Nonetheless, members of McGarrity’s family believe the Australian government should get involved.

Daughter Margaret died last year, but Patricia still lives in Melbourne’s eastern suburbs. Pat’s daughter, Loren Brown, says she and her mother support the idea of an investigation taking place – whatever its findings.

”The possibility of an investigation has raised a mix of emotions in the family. Some believe we should leave history as it is, undisturbed. Others feel cautious optimism, to finally know the truth,” says Loren.

”It would be wonderful to give our grandfather a proper grave, titled and recognised. These men gave their young lives for their country. Surely it is Australia’s responsibility to find them and give them the recognition they deserve.”

Margaret’s son, Phillip Wittmer, agrees. ”It’s about honouring his memory,” he says. ”These men made the ultimate sacrifice. We owe them the honour of a proper burial, to dignify their lives, rather than leaving them. At the same time, I’m not getting my hopes up too much. What will be will be.”

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Loren Brown, the grand-daughter of Private John McGarrity, who was killed in April 1941 and whose remains have never been found. Photo: Meredith O’Shea

Greece has been sacrificed on the altar of the failed euro experiment

By Nigel Farage, Ukip Leader

An IMF report proves that British taxpayers’ money was used to back a coup against the Greek people, says Nigel Farage.

In June 2011, I stood in front of the assembled ranks of Eurocrats – Barrosso et al – with a copy of the IMF charter in my hand and read it out. The IMF expressly rejects the idea of supporting currencies; it is there instead to support countries.

Now, exactly two years later, we find that the IMF – with the support of the political establishment of the European Union, including our own George Osborne and David Cameron – was preparing to gamble billions of pounds on a lie.

Greece has been sacrificed on the altar of the failed euro experiment, its business community decimated, its families driven to penury, its suicide rate through the roof (up more than 40 per cent over the period of the crisis). Unemployment in the strike country has quadrupled, and youth unemployment is now at 64%. Dreams have been destroyed, a future mortgaged – and hopes left rotting in untended olive groves.

What has happened is nothing so much as the desperate play of an ancient regime, throwing a loaded dice at a Versailles gaming table, hoping against hope that for once the numbers will come up. They never did; they haven’t now.

According to the IMF report published this week, of the four criteria that they set themselves as to whether a bailout is acceptable, the bailout clearly failed on one of those, and they say with hindsight it should have failed on two more. In bald figures, Greece was needful of seven times the IMF-imposed quote. A staggering amount.

And as to British money in this venal, below-the-counter deal? This is what the Chancellor said: “The IMF contributing money to the eurozone bailout fund? No. And Britain contributing money to the eurozone bailout fund? No. That is Britain’s clear position.”

Except, of course, we now learn that the IMF was well aware at the time that the money was to be used to bail out the euro, the eurozone, and not to support the country of Greece.

I am not sure how Mr Osborne will try to wriggle out of this; maybe he will try to use the defence of hindsight. The problem with that is that there were plenty of people at the time making it very clear that they knew that this was a breach of the IMF rules, even on his own backbenches.

Maybe he was stuffing wax into his ears at the time, or maybe he was just being economical with the communiqué.

The tragedy of all this dishonesty is that it has failed. It has in no way helped the Greeks, and has merely extended the pain and the trauma. It has resulted in the overthrow of good sense, and of democracy. There is a chilling passage in the IMF report that shows in simple language the effect of all this on the basic principles of democracy and good governance.

“As 2011 progressed, a Greek euro exit became a serious possibility particularly after being discussed by euro leaders at the Cannes summit in November 2011. The government then announced a referendum to test the views of the Greek people. This was subsequently cancelled, but the government resigned later that month and was replaced by a technocratic government. “

What we saw here was a coup, against the Greek people, a coup orchestrated with our connivance and backed by our money.

DNA reveals origin of Greece’s ancient Minoan culture

Source: BBC

Europe’s first advanced civilisation was local in origin and not imported from elsewhere, a study says.

Analysis of DNA from ancient remains on the Greek island of Crete suggests the Minoans were indigenous Europeans, shedding new light on a debate over the provenance of this ancient culture.

Scholars have variously argued the Bronze Age civilisation arrived from Africa, Anatolia or the Middle East.
Details appear in Nature Communications journal.

The concept of the Minoan civilisation was first developed by Sir Arthur Evans, the British archaeologist who unearthed the Bronze Age palace of Knossos on Crete.

Evans named the people who built these cities after the legendary King Minos who, according to tradition, ordered the construction of a labyrinth on Crete to hold the mythical half-man, half-bull creature known as the Minotaur.

Evans was of the opinion that the real-life Bronze Age culture on Crete must have its origins elsewhere.

And so, he suggested that the Minoans were refugees from Egypt’s Nile delta, fleeing the region’s conquest by a southern king some 5,000 years ago.

Surprisingly advanced
“He was surprised to find this advanced civilisation on Crete,” said co-author George Stamatoyannopoulos, from the University of Washington in Seattle, US.
The evidence for this idea included apparent similarities between Egyptian and Minoan art and resemblances between circular tombs built by the early inhabitants of southern Crete and those built by ancient Libyans.

But other archaeologists have argued for origins in Palestine, Syria, or Anatolia.

In this study, Professor Stamatoyannopoulos and colleagues analysed the DNA of 37 individuals buried in a cave on the Lassithi plateau in the island’s east. The majority of the burials are thought to date to the middle of the Minoan period – around 3,700 years ago.

The analysis focused on mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) extracted from the teeth of the skeletons, This type of DNA is stored in the cell’s ‘batteries’ and is passed down, more or less unchanged, from mother to child.

They then compared the frequencies of distinct mtDNA lineages, known as ‘haplogroups’, in this ancient Minoan set with similar data for 135 other populations, including ancient samples from Europe and Anatolia as well as modern peoples.

The comparison seemed to rule out an origin for the Minoans in North Africa: the ancient Cretans showed little genetic similarity to Libyans, Egyptians or the Sudanese. They were also genetically distant from populations in the Arabian Peninsula, including Saudis and Yemenis.

The ancient Minoan DNA was most similar to populations from western and northern Europe. The population showed particular genetic affinities with Bronze Age populations from Sardinia and Iberia and Neolithic samples from Scandinavia and France.

They also resembled people who live on the Lassithi Plateau today, a population that has previously attracted attention from geneticists.

The authors therefore conclude that the Minoan civilisation was a local development, originated by inhabitants who probably reached the island around 9,000 years ago, in Neolithic times.

“There has been all this controversy over the years. We have shown how the analysis of DNA can help archaeologists and historians put things straight,” Professor Stamatoyannopoulos told BBC News.
“The Minoans are Europeans and are also related to present-day Cretans – on the maternal side.”

He added: “It’s obvious that there was very important local development. But it is clear that, for example, in the art, there were influences from other peoples. So we need to see the Mediterranean as a pool, not as a group of isolated nations.”

“There is evidence of cultural influence from Egypt to the Minoans and going the other way.”

Ark Encounter’, Noah’s Ark Theme Park, Hopes To Show Biblical Flood Was ‘Plausible’

The Biblical account of Noah and his Ark poses a lot of questions, even for believers like the creators of the controversial Creation Museum in Kentucky.

What is “gopher wood”? How did Noah fit all those animals on the boat? And how did he stand the smell?

In an office park in Hebron, Kentucky, the designers of the proposed “Ark Encounter” theme park are trying to answer questions like these in order to build faith in the Bible’s literal accuracy. The project has run into delays because of lack of financing, which could cost it millions in potential tax breaks. Despite the uncertainty, a recent Reuters preview of the project showed that plans for the ark are continuing.

“We’re basically presenting what the Bible has to say and showing how plausible it was,” said Patrick Marsh, design director for the park, which will feature a 500-foot-long wooden ark and other Old Testament attractions, including a Tower of Babel and a “Ten Plagues” ride. “This was a real piece of history – not just a story, not just a legend.”

The project is currently in the design phase. Not enough private donations have come in to start construction, and building permits will not be ready until November, according to Ark Encounter co-founder and Senior Vice President Michael Zovath.

The project has $12.3 million in hand and $12.7 million more in committed donations; it needs $23 million more to start building the ark alone. Zovath does not know when that will happen.

Like Noah before the Flood, the builders are in a bit of a time crunch, since Kentucky tourism tax incentives for the project are set to expire in May 2014.

The longer it takes to start building the $150 million park, originally planned to open in spring 2014, the less the project stands to gain from the rebates, which allow it to receive up to 25 percent of project costs over 10 years from sales taxes generated by the business.

Zovath said the project may refile for the incentives, which critics argue are a violation of the constitutional divide between church and state. If the rebates applied to the full project cost, they could amount to $37.5 million.

SPECULATING ON THE ARK SPECS

Ark Encounter is a project of Answers in Genesis, the ministry founded by creationism proponent Ken Ham. The ministry built the Creation Museum in nearby Petersburg.

The museum, which has been harshly criticized by educators and scientists, argues that the earth is around 6,000 years old and was created by God in six 24-hour days with dinosaurs existing at the same time as humans. It rejects the theory of evolution and explains phenomena like the Grand Canyon as a consequence of the Flood.

Attendance at the Creation Museum has declined since it attracted 400,000 visitors in the first year after its 2007 opening, said Zovath. He attributes this to the poor economy and believes some visitors may be delaying their visits until the ark exhibit opens.

The Biblical account of the ark does not provide much detail on how it was made, so the designers have had to speculate.

The Bible calls for gopher wood, for instance, although it is unclear if this is a now-extinct type of wood or if the term refers to the way the wood was cut, said Marsh, who has done work for Universal Studios. Ark Encounter will go with a mix of woods.

Another big question is how Noah got mating pairs of all the animals of the earth, including dinosaurs, onto a boat half the length of a cruise ship.

Scientists have cataloged 1.3 million species of animals, but Ark Encounter protagonists figure Noah could have brought on just 1,000 to 2,000 pairs to represent every animal “kind,” as the Bible puts it.

“If you start with a wolf, you can basically generate all of these dog-like kinds,” said Marsh. As for large animals like dinosaurs, Marsh said Noah could have brought them on as eggs or juveniles, to save room.

Though the park is meant to teach that the Noah story is true, it is also for profit, and Marsh takes inspiration from secular theme parks. In the exhibit depicting the wicked pre-Flood society that God wanted to destroy, for example, Marsh plans a pagan temple with pagan ceremonies done in a “Disneyesque” way.

“You want everyone to have fun and buy souvenirs and have a good time, but you also want to tell everybody how terrible everything (was),” Marsh said.

He also plans exhibits within the three-level ark on how animal waste could have been taken away by mechanical devices and how fresh air could have been brought in.

CONSTITUTIONAL VIOLATION?

Explanations about the origins of the earth from Answers in Genesis are contrary to scientific consensus, which says that the planet formed about 4.5 billion years ago.

The Creation Museum was condemned by the National Center for Science Education, which said that students who accept material presented at the museum as valid are “unlikely to succeed in science courses at the college level.”

Many Biblical scholars interpret the Creation and Flood stories as poetic myths and not history.

About one out of three Americans accepts the Bible literally, a percentage that has declined over time, according to a 2011 Gallup poll. Nevertheless, creationism has in recent years re-entered public debate over how to teach science in schools.

Marsh said that while you can be a Christian without believing in creationism, you are on a “slippery slope.”

“So many people have gotten hooked with the concept of evolution that it really makes their faith very delicate,” he said.

Barry Lynn, a United Church of Christ minister who heads Americans United for Separation of Church and State, said the planned park promotes “junk science.”

“You don’t pay for the ministry of people out of the taxpayer’s collected dollars,” said Lynn, who said his group will consider a lawsuit if the tax breaks for the ark ever kick in.

Zovath argues that the tax breaks do not violate the Constitution, since the state is not giving the park money up-front, but is only returning some of the tourism money the park will bring to the state.

“If somebody wants to come into Kentucky and build a Harry Potter park and teach all the fun things about witchcraft, nobody would say a word about it – they’d just think it was so cool,” Zovath said. “But if we want to come in … and build a Biblical theme park, everybody goes crazy.”

(Editing by Arlene Getz and Prudence Crowther)

ΤΟΥΡΚΙΑ: ΝΕΕΣ ΣΥΓΚΡΟΥΣΕΙΣ ΣΕ ΚΩΝΣΤΑΝΤΙΝΟΥΠΟΛΗ ΚΑΙ ΑΓΚΥΡΑ

Η τουρκική αστυνομία χρησιμοποίησε δακρυγόνα το βράδυ της Κυριακής για να διαλύσει πολλές χιλιάδες διαδηλωτές οι οποίοι είχαν συγκεντρωθεί έξω από το γραφείο του πρωθυπουργού της Τουρκίας Ρετζέπ Ταγίπ Ερντογάν στην Κωνσταντινούπολη.

Όπως ανέφερε φωτορεπόρτερ του Γαλλικού Πρακτορείου ο οποίος βρισκόταν στο σημείο, σημειώθηκαν συγκρούσεις μεταξύ αστυνομικών και διαδηλωτών στο σημείο, το οποίο ωστόσο απέχει αρκετά χιλιόμετρα από την πλατεία Ταξίμ.

Εκτεταμένη χρήση χημικών προκειμένου να διαλύσει τους διαδηλωτές έκανε η αστυνομία και στην Άγκυρα, καθώς συνεχίζονται και στην πρωτεύουσα, για τρίτη ημέρα, οι αντικυβερνητικές διαδηλώσεις.

Source: ‘The New Daily Mail’