I seem to have done something to the HTML when including the Brown Youtube video that has made the comments disappear. Here they are again.
4 comments:
Anonymous
said...
said... I was talking about Papal visits yesterday, because a colleague who use to work for Glasgow council doing something with trees told me that when JPII visited that city, a Catholic organisation - maybe the local diocese - applied for planning permission to temporarily remove all the trees from a certain avenue, so that people could get a clear view of him! I'm not sure if he was winding me up or not - have you ever heard that?
Madame E I think this may be about the removal of trees in bellahouston park for the 1982 visit. I found this on Wikipedia:
`The Papal visit of John Paul II in June 1982, despite being massively attended, was the cause of some disquiet. The Roman Catholic Church had paid for drainage for some parkland close to Mosspark Boulevard which was prone to flooding, in order to increase the number of worshippers able to attend. Six trees were also removed to improve the view of a partially walled hole that housed the dais where the Pope was to celebrate Mass. However, protesters chained themselves to the trees to prevent this. There was also another protest in the form of Pastor Jack Glass, who stood in a local election for the "Pastor Jack Glass against the Papal visit" political party. There was further disquiet after the event when the church failed to honour its pledge to return the park to its original condition, and a white brick painted wall that accommodated the rear of the stage has been maintained. On the death of John Paul II in April 2005, flowers were laid against the wall.`
One of those who protested with Pastor Jack Glass later became a Catholic after being blessed by the Pope! He became a priest but has gone back to a middle-of-the-road Protestantism the last I heard.
7:22 PM Fr Michael Brown said... P.S. I thought the trees were removed!
Father, yes that's it, I couldn't remember the name of the place he mentioned but you've reminded me - it WAS bellahouston park. So it really is true!
Old Believer, I don't think they were actually felled, what my colleague said is that trees can sometimes be removed and then re-planted, but they don't always survive, and he wasn't sure whether these ones had. He didn't say it was in the early 80s, but it obviously had an effect because over 25 years later he's still outraged. I don't think he was that impressed with the protesters either though - he said they were only doing it because they were Protestants (lol) rather than tree-lovers.
4 comments:
said...
I was talking about Papal visits yesterday, because a colleague who use to work for Glasgow council doing something with trees told me that when JPII visited that city, a Catholic organisation - maybe the local diocese - applied for planning permission to temporarily remove all the trees from a certain avenue, so that people could get a clear view of him! I'm not sure if he was winding me up or not - have you ever heard that?
7:05 PM
Madame E I think this may be about the removal of trees in bellahouston park for the 1982 visit. I found this on Wikipedia:
`The Papal visit of John Paul II in June 1982, despite being massively attended, was the cause of some disquiet. The Roman Catholic Church had paid for drainage for some parkland close to Mosspark Boulevard which was prone to flooding, in order to increase the number of worshippers able to attend. Six trees were also removed to improve the view of a partially walled hole that housed the dais where the Pope was to celebrate Mass. However, protesters chained themselves to the trees to prevent this. There was also another protest in the form of Pastor Jack Glass, who stood in a local election for the "Pastor Jack Glass against the Papal visit" political party. There was further disquiet after the event when the church failed to honour its pledge to return the park to its original condition, and a white brick painted wall that accommodated the rear of the stage has been maintained. On the death of John Paul II in April 2005, flowers were laid against the wall.`
One of those who protested with Pastor Jack Glass later became a Catholic after being blessed by the Pope! He became a priest but has gone back to a middle-of-the-road Protestantism the last I heard.
7:22 PM
Fr Michael Brown said...
P.S. I thought the trees were removed!
7:24 PM
It must be the atavistic pagan in me but the thought of felling trees for anyone's visit I find quite repugnant.
If trees were indeed removed I hope the Vatican payed for many more to be planted.
7:48 PM
Father, yes that's it, I couldn't remember the name of the place he mentioned but you've reminded me - it WAS bellahouston park. So it really is true!
Old Believer, I don't think they were actually felled, what my colleague said is that trees can sometimes be removed and then re-planted, but they don't always survive, and he wasn't sure whether these ones had. He didn't say it was in the early 80s, but it obviously had an effect because over 25 years later he's still outraged. I don't think he was that impressed with the protesters either though - he said they were only doing it because they were Protestants (lol) rather than tree-lovers.
9:17 PM
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