Sunday, December 13, 2020

Sankta Lucia.. The Winter Solstice .. Northern Hemisphere.

Lucia of Siracusa
Saint Lucia's Day is on December 13.  This feast once coincided with the Winter Solstice.  It has become a festival of light.

St. Lucia’s Day is celebrated in Scandinavia with their long dark winters.

A young women is dressed in a beautiful white dress.  Draped around her waist is a red ribbon sash.  The red is symbolic of martyrdom.  The girl carries palm fronds and she precariously wears a wreath circlet with candles attached on her head.

In the countries of Sweden and Norway it is traditional now for a group of young girls to dress as Lucy and carry rolls and biscuits with them in a procession while singing songs.

Celebrating St Lucia's Day is said to bring favor to endure the long winter with enough light.  

In America, the Swedish American Society of West Michigan honours this festival on the first Saturday of the month of December each year.

December 13 is the feast day of Sankta Lucia, the patron saint of Sweden. Until the Pope Gregory XII made the Gregorian calendar official in AD 1582, the winter solstice fell on December 13-Lucia’s feast day. Lucia (Lucy) was actually an Italian, she is celebrated in certain parts of Italy, but she is most associated with the Nordic countries. 

Read More Here : Sankta Lucia: The Survival of a Nordic Sun Goddess 

Modern Traditions have the eldest daughter dressing up and making the coffee and serving rolls dressed in the classic white dress with red ribbon.  

More Images @ Eminpee Fotography

Saturday, December 12, 2020

Regional Towns abandoned & killed off by Governments are quaintly called Villages!

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Little towns abound in the New England area of NSW and I am sure its similar all over Australia.  The towns that made some Australians very rich have been abandoned and forgotten. 
The services are few and far between.  Don't get sick or need a hospital because they are all in the cities. We no longer have hospitals or Doctors  We are left to fend for ourselves.  

Below is a Hansard Transcript of Mr Bruce Scott who was the National Party Member for Maranoa in the years 1990 to 2016.  He was also Veterans Affairs Minister from 1996 to 2001.  He spoke passionately about the situation ten years ago.  Ten years later things are so bad in the bush.  Lack of services and a feeling the government is trying to push us into the horrible cities.  We will not be leaving. 

HANSARD - Monday, 25 October 2010 - Page: 1395
link to Hansard Page

Mr BRUCE SCOTT
 (9:49 PM) — I rise this evening to talk about something I am quite passionate about and that is how we can halt the slow decline of many of our rural communities across Australia—those lovely little country towns. Once upon a time Australia was dotted with thriving small towns, many of which, not long after Federation, lived on the agricultural wealth of the region and—I see the member for Lyne here on the wool industry. We used to talk about, in the history I learned at school, ‘riding on the sheep’s back’. In those days we had about eight to 10 million people in this country. Today we are a nation of in excess of 22 million and growing.

Contributing to the decline in the fortunes of our agricultural sector in Australia have been the harsh realities of economic rationalism, government choices in some cases and the pulling up of railways. In Queensland the forced amalgamation of many shires has had a significant impact on many country towns through the loss of part of their workforce. Many of those country towns once had a local government which was at the heart and centre of the community, because local government is about local issues, and many of those communities have just lost heart. They still have fight in them, but they have lost heart because they feel that the government is not supporting them. The amalgamation of those shires has led to a number of them continuing to decline in size.

We have to reverse this decline before it is too late, Mr Speaker. Our capital cities, as you and many in this House would know, are growing beyond the capacity to meet the needs of the people who want to live there. They have traffic congestion and water shortages, just to name a couple of issues. These large towns continue to grow, with ever more people wanting to move into our capital cities. There is an opportunity to attract these people to regional and rural areas, but we must change the perception that many city people have of our country areas. We need to lose this image that rural communities are just like that old, lonely roly-poly running across a drought stricken plain. That is the image that some have of our outback towns, but we must change that perception because it is not the reality.

Regional, rural and remote communities so often offer opportunities for many types of businesses. There are opportunities galore, but we have to be able to encourage people to move into rural communities and out of our congested capital cities. We must tap into that potential and attract and encourage people to move out of our capital cities. There really are great benefits in making the tree change and we must strongly promote those benefits.

The future of much of our rural and remote Australia is a case of ‘if we build it they will come’. One example where the infrastructure has been built in my electorate is in outback tourism. It is a growing opportunity—hospitality, motels, the tourism attractions that we have out there. It is certainly changing the economy of many of our towns. But we have to build the infrastructure. To halt the decline in our rural communities we must make serious investments in infrastructure.

The government often talks about nation building, but so often these nation-building projects are in our capital cities. I am not saying that our capital cities do not need this infrastructure. They certainly do. But many of them have suffered from short-sighted Labor state governments over the past decade, in particular in my own state of Queensland. If we had just a third of the money from royalties out of our mining sector going back into our rural communities we could invest it in roads and other essential infrastructure and see people moving out into these rural communities. But where does this money go? It goes into the capital cities. It is spent in the capital cities, yet the wealth has come from the rural communities from things like the coal seam methane gas extension that was only announced last Friday by the Minister for Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities, Tony Burke.

The minister announced, for instance, that that Santos and British Gas project for LNG, which is to be exported out of Gladstone, is going to drill 6,000 holes in this coal seam methane area. Yet there was no announcement about money being invested in the Warrego Highway. All of that infrastructure to build the coal seam methane gas industry is going to pass over the Warrego Highway. We have to have royalties being returned to the regions where the wealth comes from to build this infrastructure. (Time expired)  

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Deepwater Village in the New England NSW

I do not support the National Party and never have so lets be clear on that fact.  But in truth it is like there were two National Parties when it comes to the bush in Australia.

It is blatantly obvious what has happened in our regional areas and Mr Scott identified this.  What Mr Scott could not see was his chronie compatriots all had snouts in the trough where mining was concerned and all they had was $$$ signs in their eyes. 

Mr Scott sounded like he was 'old school' as we call it.  He was a man for the bush - the National Party is a party for Mining now only, and nothing about farmers unless they are big corporate overseas concerns.  They are pushing for small farmers to leave their family properties. 

The Nationals have sold out the bush completely.  Sad but true reality to families who have been on this land farming for 5 or 6 generations. 

Images @ Eminpee Fotography 

Sunday, December 06, 2020

Baphomet is a French word meaning "Mohammed".

French Knights and French Aristocracy.  The 'red' cross didn't start with the Templars either.  It was a bunch of connected French families.



A military order that began circa 1129, the Knights Templar remained active until the first part of the fourteenth century.

Templar knights wore pristine white mantles that sported a bright red cross. Known for military prowess, these highly skilled fighting units reached prominence during the Crusades.

A major financial institution, the Knights Templar managed a large economic infrastructure throughout Europe.

At dawn on Friday, Oct. 13, 1307 (possibly the origin the Friday the thirteenth superstition), French King Philip IV ordered the arrest and execution of the Knights Templar Grand Master Jacque de Molay and scores of other leading knights.   

Jacque de Molay was burned in the year 1314.  The order went underground after this.  French and Scottish Rite Masonry took on some of the ritual but this isn't always seen as solid information.  

There seemed a fantastic connection to the Pope (Templars). How did they come to have such favor with the Roman Church?  Clairvaux was the connection and favor with Baldwin ll.  The church encouraged Pilgrimages and so it was necessary to protect the Pilgrims.   



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Molay was sentenced to death together with Geoffroi de Charney in 1314 as a direct result of cardinal legates' decisions and actions rather than being ordered by King Philip the fair. He was burnt at the stake on the Ile des Javiaux in the SeineWikipedia  


800px-Jaques_de_Molay_gravestone


Images @ Eminpee Fotography  

Postscript..  I was married to a man with surname Baldwin.  His family goes back to this Royal French Baldwins.  We named our daughter Matilda as did the original Baldwin / Bourdin.