THE HAND OF GOD IS DESCENDING ON YOUR CORRUPT NATION, ON YOUR HYPOCRITICAL PEOPLE, ON THE LIARS AND CRIMINALS RUNNING IT LIKE A HORSE FOR THEIR PLEASURE. THERE WILL BE NO TEARS LEFT OVER FOR ANYONE TO CRY IN THE US, YOU DO NOT LEARN, YOU CANNOT LEARN, YOU REFUSE TO LEARN. BUT THIS IS THE HAND OF GOD. IT IS NOT JUST, IT IS MADE OF JUSTICE, IT IS NOT JUST, IT IS MADE OF TRUE SUFFERING, IT IS NOT JUST, IT IS MADE OF JUST VENGEANCE FOR THE SLAUGHTER OF THE WEAK, THE POOR, THE UNLAWFUL PRISONERS OF YOUR ECONOMY, THE PLANET TAKEN UNLAWFULLY CAPTIVE BY YOUR NATION ... AND ITS STUPIDITY. THE UNSPEAKABLE SUFFERING YOU DEEM TO HAVE THE RIGHT TO IMPOSE ON THIS WORLD IS NOW YOUR SUFFERING.

 

Biden vows retribution after 13 U.S. service members were killed in Afghanistan bombing

President Biden on Aug. 26 spoke about terrorist attacks in Kabul that killed multiple U.S. service members and dozens of Afghans. (JM Rieger/The Washington Post)

This live coverage has ended. For Friday’s live updates, click here.

In a speech Thursday in which he said the United States would punish the Islamic State for a deadly attack on American service members and Afghans in Kabul, President Biden said he would send additional troops to aid Americans in Afghanistan if his military advisers ask — though he said that has not been requested.

The Islamic State attack at the Kabul airport, which included two suicide bombings, killed 13 U.S. troops and wounded 18.

“We will hunt you down and make you pay,” Biden said in the White House speech, calling those military members who died “heroes who’ve been engaged in a dangerous, selfless mission to save the lives of others.”

Biden said military leaders were standing by their Aug. 31 deadline to exit Afghanistan, though he left open the possibility that more troops may be sent there.

American officials are bracing for the possibility of future attacks, including possible car bombs or rockets being fired at the airport, as the evacuation continues. Marine Gen. Kenneth “Frank” McKenzie, chief of U.S. Central Command, said at a news briefing Thursday that the risk of an attack from Islamic State persists alongside other threats.

After an explosion at the airport’s Abbey Gate, where Americans were searching potential Afghan evacuees, gunmen opened fire, McKenzie said. Another blast later occurred at a hotel outside the airport. He attributed the attack to the Islamic State, which claimed responsibility, and indicated that U.S. military action in response is possible.

The toll of dead and wounded remained uncertain late Thursday. One person with knowledge of the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media, said 40 were killed and 120 injured. Other reports put the tally far higher. It’s unclear whether those figures included the 12 U.S. service members.

For months, terrorism analysts warned that Islamic State-linked militants in Afghanistan would try to turn the Biden administration’s exit into a bloody spectacle.

On Thursday in Kabul, those predictions were realized.

ISIS-Khorasan, the Islamic State’s Afghanistan and Pakistan arm, issued a statement claiming responsibility for the suicide bombing attack that killed 13 U.S. service members and dozens of Afghans in an attack outside the airport.

The attack was seen by many observers as a reminder to both the Americans and the Taliban that, no matter who was in the presidential palace, Afghanistan would remain contested.

Authorities had instantly suspected the Islamic State affiliate, known as ISIS-K or ISK for short.

The group’s rivalry with the Taliban is a microcosm of the competition between al-Qaeda and its more radical spinoff, the Islamic State, analysts say. There are generational and doctrinal splits between the groups, with the Islamic State brand more popular with militants in recent years because it captured territory and created a short-lived extremist fiefdom that spanned Iraq and Syria.

In Afghanistan, with the U.S.-backed government gone from power, ISIS-K can now focus on undermining its other local enemy, the Taliban, which analysts said will be hard-pressed to stave off attacks as it struggles to secure and govern a war-weary nation.

Key update

Single suicide bomber caused deaths of service members at airport gate, U.S. commander says

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Key update

A 13th U.S. service member dies and 18 are reported injured, military says

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With the withdrawal from Afghanistan turning deadly for U.S. troops, President Biden faces new criticism for a situation that he argues presents him few options.

The deal last year that President Donald Trump cut with the Taliban forced Biden to choose between a withdrawal now or an escalation of the war, Biden said Thursday, as he addressed the nation after at least 12 U.S. military members were killed in Kabul.

He chose withdrawal.

“I had only one alternative,” he said, “to send thousands more troops back into Afghanistan to fight a way that we had already won relative to the reason why we went in the first place.”

When Biden took over, there were 3,500 U.S. troops left in the country (from a high of 100,000 during the Obama years). He pushed back the date of the planned withdrawal from May 1 to four months later, but he kept the deal intact. U.S. troops would be out of Afghanistan by the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, he said.

The Taliban didn’t even wait for the Americans to completely leave before they took over the country in a matter of days. As the world watched Kabul fall, Biden has defended his decision not to stay and fight by saying Trump’s deal required him to either maintain the withdrawal or escalate fighting.

On Thursday, Biden credited the deal for the fact that the Taliban hadn’t attacked Americans during the withdrawal.

Critics have contended that that’s a false choice, noting how many other international agreements of Trump’s that Biden has eschewed or rewritten. But given that Biden shared the goal to withdraw, it left him little leverage to renegotiate with the Taliban.

Biden to those who carried out Kabul attacks: ‘We will hunt you down and make you pay’

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President Biden on Thursday promised retribution against terrorists who carried out an attack outside the Kabul airport that killed 12 U.S. service members and dozens of civilians.

“To those who carried out this attack, as well as anyone who wishes America harm, know this: We will not forgive. We will not forget. We will hunt you down and make you pay,” Biden said in an address to the nation Thursday evening. “I will defend our interests and our people with every measure at my command.”

Biden said he had ordered his commanders to develop operational plans to strike key assets, leadership and facilities of the Islamic State terrorist group in Afghanistan, which he said had been planning a complex set of attacks on U.S. personnel in recent weeks.

“We will respond with force and precision at our time, at a place we choose, in a moment of our choosing,” Biden said. “These ISIS terrorists will not win. We will rescue the Americans and we will get our Afghan allies and our mission will go on. America will not be intimidated.”

Biden also called the fallen U.S. service members heroes and vowed to continue evacuation efforts.

“These American service members who gave their lives … they were heroes — heroes who have been engaged in a dangerous, selfless mission to save the lives of others,” Biden said. “They are part of an airlift and evacuation effort, unlike any seen in history. … They are part of the bravest, most capable, the most selfless military on the face of the Earth.”

Coalition forces use a controlled detonation at the Kabul airport

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A controlled demolition by coalition forces took place at the Kabul airport Thursday after the deadly attack, a defense official said, putting residents and evacuees at further unease.

It is unclear what the controlled detonation was for. Troops will sometimes destroy equipment in a withdrawal if they can’t take it with them, or will obliterate damaged equipment if it contains classified components.

Controlled detonations are also used to destroy unexploded ordnance such as rockets and suicide bombs. The attacker, who officials described as an Islamic State militant, used a suicide vest with explosives to kill at least 12 U.S. troops and wound 15 more, McKenzie said in a news conference.

At least 60 Afghan civilians were killed, according to the Associated Press.

ISIS claims responsibility for attack

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The Islamic State took responsibility for the attack in a statement Thursday evening.

The statement, verified and shared by SITE Intelligence Group, said an Islamic State adherent penetrated security barriers around the airport, dived into a large crowd of American forces and civilians, and detonated an explosive belt.

A separate statement released by the Islamic State-affiliated Amaq News Agency purported to show a photo of the attacker standing in front of a black Islamic State flag.

Taliban has ‘thwarted’ other attacks, U.S. commander says

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Marine Gen. Kenneth F. McKenzie Jr., head of U.S. Central Command, told reporters Thursday that U.S. forces have relied on Taliban militants to monitor threats and in some cases thwart attacks, comments that came after an explosion that killed at least 12 U.S. troops.

While U.S. helicopters, drones and other aircraft are used to monitor crowds and search for potential attackers, such as the Islamic State militant who struck Thursday outside the Kabul airport, McKenzie said, one of the last rings of security is in the hands of the Taliban, which has set up perimeters and checkpoints outside the airport.

U.S. forces have shared threat assessments and other curated information with Taliban leaders, McKenzie said.

“We believe attacks have been thwarted by them,” he said, but he added that it is unclear whether Taliban members allowed the militant near Abbey Gate, where the attack occurred. One of the Taliban’s responsibilities is to filter people who approach the gate.

In response to the attack, U.S. forces have sought the Taliban’s assistance to close roads to forestall any car bombings, McKenzie said.

Officials are investigating how the airport attack unfolded even as U.S. troops prioritized putting distance between civilians trying to enter through the gate and where they operate.

While the attacker didn’t breach the gate, service members are in an inherently dangerous and close position because they have to search every potential evacuee, McKenzie said.

“This is close-up work. The breath of the person you are searching is upon you,” he said. “While we have overwatch in place, we still have to touch the clothes of the person coming in. I think you can all appreciate the courage and dedication that is necessary to do this job, and to do it time after time.”

Images of gruesome scenes emerge outside Kabul airport

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One of the bombings that hit Kabul airport on Aug. 26 targeted a canal where large crowds of people were waiting near the Abbey Gate to enter the facility. (AP)

Within seconds, Thursday’s bomb attack transformed a canal that flowed by the blast walls of Kabul’s international airport into a graveyard, according to a video of the aftermath that was posted to social media. In one section, twisted bodies, mostly of young men, lay piled atop each other, some faces frozen in agony.

In another section, bodies were partly submerged in the water. One man tried to pick up an unconscious youth, calling him as “bacha” — child. Nearby, the wounded, their faces bloodied, were being helped up by those physically untouched by the blast.

Moments before, the victims all shared something in common: a desire to leave their country and the uncertainty of life under the Taliban. They had waited for hours, perhaps days, for an opportunity to enter the airport through Abbey Gate, controlled by American forces. They were young and old, women and men, children and babies.

At least 13 people were killed in the explosions, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said. It was unclear whether the U.S. service members killed were included in the death toll.

Those who survived the twin bombing, depicted in videos and photos posted on social media, managed to stagger away, their bodies covered in blood. Some were rolled away in wheelbarrows and taken to emergency wards, already crowded with patients, where crowds gathered to learn of the fates of their loved ones.

“Our hospital in Kabul was already 80% full before the explosions. Now we added extra beds to admit wounded people coming from the airport in life-threatening conditions,” said Rosella Miccio, the head of Emergency, a medical charity that helps victims of war, in a statement the group posted to Twitter.

In a separate statement, the organization quoted a medical coordinator at its hospital in Kabul describing the scenes he witnessed there.

“Those who arrived could not speak, many were terrified, their eyes totally lost in emptiness, their gaze blank,” the coordinator, identified as Alberto, was quoted as saying. “Rarely have we seen such a situation.”



Italy’s Politicians Are Making the Coronavirus Crisis Worse: MA NON SI PUO' OSARE DI DIRLO, SONO SACRI, AUTONOMINATI SANTI INTOCCABILI E SEMPRE SENZA PECCATO

 

Italy’s Politicians Are Making the Coronavirus Crisis Worse

Squabbling leaders, publicity-seeking scientists, and late containment efforts show that authoritarian regimes aren’t the only ones mismanaging public health crises.

By , the managing editor of the Italian newspaper Domani.
Anti-riot police officers wearing masks stand guard following a prison revolt at the Sant'Anna prison in Modena, Emilia-Romagna, in one of Italy's quarantine red zones on March 9.
Anti-riot police officers wearing masks stand guard following a prison revolt at the Sant'Anna prison in Modena, Emilia-Romagna, in one of Italy's quarantine red zones on March 9. PIERO CRUCIATTI/AFP via Getty Images

ROME—Italy currently has the worlds second-largest reported coronavirus infection rate after China, and it is the first country in the West dealing with a sizable outbreak, with 9,172 confirmed cases and 463 deaths; so far, 724 people have recovered after being treated. The head of the center-left Democratic Party, Nicola Zingaretti, has tested positive for COVID-19, as has the governor of the Piedmont region.

On Saturday, in a dramatic step, the government put the entire region of Lombardy and 14 other provinces in the countrys north on lockdown, effectively quarantining about 16 million people until at least April 3 in a region that is the countrys economic powerhouse—a move akin to locking down the entire New York or London metropolitan areas. Schools and universities will be closed until early April, and all public events are canceled, while coffee shops, and other stores will be opened only on weekdays and until 6 p.m. Schools will remain closed in the rest of Italy until March 15, although the date will likely be extended.

More from Foreign Policy

Students draw images commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Chinese Communist Party in Qingzhou, China, on June 24.

Italian boy may have had the coronavirus in December last year, three months before the country's first official case

 

Italian boy may have had the coronavirus in December last year, three months before the country's first official case

Researchers investigated blood samples taken from a child in Milan who was thought to have measles.

By
Chia-Yi Hou | Dec. 14, 2020

Story at a glance

  • Researchers tested blood samples taken a year ago for the novel coronavirus.
  • The samples are from a group of children who, based on their symptoms, were suspected to have measles.
  • One child tested positive for SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus causing COVID-19.

Researchers around the world are looking at blood samples taken in late 2019 to see if there are any early signs of the coronavirus. The latest example is of researchers looking at old blood samples taken from children in Milan. One boy’s blood sample tested positive for SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes COVID-19, and researchers say that it is similar to the strain that was found in Wuhan, according to the study published in Emerging Infectious Diseases.

The authors report that the sample was taken in early Dec. 2019, about three months earlier than the first official reported coronavirus case in Italy. The segment of viral genetic material was identified as matching the Wuhan and other strains of the coronavirus, although they could not identify it further as to which exact strain it was.

The child was not asymptomatic, which is why they took blood samples from him on the suspicion that he had measles. Children sampled in this group were experiencing fever, cough and skin rashes. This child had cough and inflammation in the mucous membrane in his nose and was admitted to the hospital with respiratory symptoms and vomiting, according to the study. All the children in this group tested negative for measles, but only this one child tested positive for SARS-CoV-2.


WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT CORONAVIRUS RIGHT NOW

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“This finding is of epidemiologic importance because it expands our knowledge on timing and mapping of the SARS-CoV-2 transmission pathways,” write the authors. “Long-term, unrecognized spread of SARS-CoV-2 in northern Italy would help explain, at least in part, the devastating impact and rapid course of the first wave of COVID-19 in Lombardy.”


Our country is in a historic fight against the Coronavirus. Add Changing America to your Facebook or Twitter feed to stay on top of the news.


Other researchers are also investigating blood samples taken in late 2019 by testing for the coronavirus and its antibodies. Some are also looking at sewage samples for surveillance and retrospectively as an investigation. Together with this new study, the findings suggest that the virus may have been circulating in Italy long before the first case was detected.

However, there needs to be more studies to confirm if that was the case. Virus found in sewage is typically damaged. Antibodies are indirect evidence that the coronavirus was present. There could be cross contamination of samples if not handled carefully, and all tests have the potential to produce false positives.

Benjamin Neuman, who is professor and chair of biological sciences at the University of Texas-Texarkana, says to the South China Morning Post, “I will continue to watch and wait for more compelling evidence.”

For up-to-date information about COVID-19, check the websites of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization. For updated global case counts, check this page maintained by Johns Hopkins University or the COVID Tracking Project.

You can follow Chia-Yi Hou on Twitter.


BREAKING NEWS ON THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC

PFIZER’S VACCINE IS GIVEN IN TWO DOSES — BUT FDA SAYS FIRST DOSE ALONE IS HIGHLY EFFECTIVE

HOW DID THE UK GET THE CORONAVIRUS VACCINE BEFORE THE US?

FORMER ALABAMA STATE SENATOR DIES OF COVID-19, LAST WORDS ARE ‘WE MESSED UP’

CDC CUTS LENGTH OF COVID-19 QUARANTINE TIME AFTER EXPOSURE


 

Published on Dec 14, 2020

Obituary: Riccardo Gasparini of Miami dies of COVID-19 at 61 | Miami Herald

 

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Palmetto Bay

His life spanned Italy, Caracas and Miami — with friends in all three. He died of COVID

Riccardo Gasparini, who grew up in Italy and Venezuela before moving to Palmetto Bay, died of complications from COVID-19. He was 61.
Riccardo Gasparini, who grew up in Italy and Venezuela before moving to Palmetto Bay, died of complications from COVID-19. He was 61.

This is the story of a man I knew who could wrestle whatever life threw at him.

Father, friend, companion, confidant, scholar, inventor, mechanical engineer Riccardo Gasparini died July 27 of complications from COVID-19. He was 61.

He lost his mother when he was 16 after she had been sick for four years. He lost his father two years later, and was an orphan the week after his 18th birthday.

But he persevered, despite living with Tourette syndrome and the tics it caused since he was 6 years old. It made him brilliant and he wouldn’t take medication. He thought fast, worked fast, and could talk about anything. He remembered everything he learned.

Except for directions in Miami: He did love his Garmin.

He loved inventing. His Green Luggage, a portable energy device, kept my Mom alive one more day in hospice when the power went out.

FIU graduate

He got his master’s and Ph.D. degrees at Florida International University’s College of Engineering. It was one of his happiest days when he received that Ph.D. It was a challenge he set for himself and he did it, at age 55. Everyone cheered for him at graduation.

He lived in Palmetto Bay, but he loved growing up in Modena, Italy, and Caracas, Venezuela. He was the equivalent of an Eagle Scout in both those countries. He sailed and loved hiking high up into the Alps.

He later served with the United Nations Blue Helmets, the military peacekeepers, when he was in his 20s. He was deployed to Beirut and later Somalia. He was proud to help, but agonized over war.

Fan of U2, Clapton, Rolling Stones

Riccardo loved music and traveled long distances to see his favorite bands.

He saw his first concert, Emerson, Lake & Palmer in Milan, when he was 13. He saw The Rolling Stones all over Europe and the U.S. He loved U2, Pink Floyd, Roger Waters, The Who and Roger Daltrey, Elton John, Bowie, Yes, Pearl Jam and Clapton. He knew all the words to all the songs. I even dragged him to a Billy Joel concert.

He loved movies and television. He watched the original “Star Trek” with Captain Kirk over and over again. He laughed into tears at British comedy shows and I think he learned a lot of English through them.

He knew so many languages, and that made traveling with Riccardo amazing, but he hated to fly. He never worried about figuring out trains.

Once, we discovered I had made a mistake for the day to pick up a rental car in a small Italian town. Turns out it was Ferragosto, Aug. 15, and “even the Pope takes a holiday this day, Christina,” he said. Our reservation was for the day before.

Riccardo hopped us off one train and we hurried through the station to catch a different one to the airport. He knew, correctly, that there would be rental cars there. I can still see him carrying both our rolling bags up all those old Italian station stairs. He was so strong.

Became an American citizen

Riccardo was very proud to become an American citizen in 2018. Every morning at Starbucks he would have his coffee and lemon loaf, or a croissant, and read the U.S. and global news on his iPad. He always wanted to know what was happening. He read the world news in other languages too.

He volunteered to grill at every backyard party. He loved to swim and was on the swim team in high school. He briefly played in a band and would have loved to be a rocker like Mick Jagger, whom he could imitate perfectly. He studied classical guitar at a conservatory and could play almost any song you asked.

As an engineer with his own company, he loved a construction puzzle.

Once, there was a fire escape behind an older Lincoln Road building that had a jazz club upstairs. No one could figure out how to fix the escape stairs. But Riccardo designed something new, and the Miami Beach inspectors were thrilled. It passed.

He was the professional engineer for so many South Florida buildings. He ran himself ragged making plans for new ones, trying to fix older ones, and helping people who needed him for renovations.

He loved the Miami Heat and Italian soccer. He loved brunch and eggs Benedict with smoked salmon, peaches and Prosecco, and Dewar’s White Label.

He loved listening to local bands at local bars, and he loved to laugh and dance. He loved all his friends at Miller’s Ale House in Palmetto Bay.

He loved strawberry milkshakes from Shake Shack, and eating at Trattoria Luna on Vigilia di Natale. He loved Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden, where we walked.

He skied black diamond runs into his 50s. He loved the cold and the snow, and the mountains near where he grew up, and also in the U.S. though they weren’t nearly tall enough.

There’s a lot of the word “love” here, because Riccardo did love a lot.

He loved his sons Ruben and Carlo fiercely, and proudly, as they grew into men. He carried in his heart his son Alberto in Spain, and his brother Carlo in Chile. He loved my children. And me.

He waited too long to go to the hospital. He never even got a cold.

Riccardo’s friends called him a Renaissance man. He was curious, smart, honorable, brave, funny, good and true. He truly “shone like the sun,” the lyrics to one of his favorite Pink Floyd songs.

He will be missed.

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Read more here: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/palmetto-bay/article253280848.html#storylink=cpy

Rocco Ursino, Italian immigrant who dedicated his life to his seven children, dies of coronavirus disease

 

Rocco Ursino, Italian immigrant who dedicated his life to his seven children, dies of coronavirus disease

Editor’s note: The impact of the coronavirus pandemic is generally expressed in numbers of cases and deaths. But each data point represents a human life whose loss is felt by countless other people. We are chronicling some of them in an obituary series called Lives Remembered. If you know someone who has died of COVID-19, please tell us about them by emailing newstips@seattletimes.com with the subject line “Lives Remembered,” or by filling out the form at the bottom of this page.

• • •

Rocco Ursino loved being Italian.

Whenever he felt blue, he’d strap on an apron and make spaghetti sauce. There was a freezer full of it in the garage. When friends came for dinner, they left with spaghetti sauce. When they dropped in or came for coffee, they left with spaghetti sauce. When they helped him fix his car, they left with spaghetti sauce.

With his wife of 64 years, he raised seven children and threw himself into all aspects of their lives: Their schools, sporting events, fundraising for parent-teacher organizations. He was social and outgoing to the extreme. He had a coterie of friends he kept for more than half a century: Friends from grade school, friends from college, friends he met traveling. He kept in touch with them all. And his circle kept expanding.

When, late in life, he lived in a senior-living facility, he organized dinners to welcome new people moving in. Within a year he knew every one of the 200 or so other residents by name.

“One thing he didn’t understand is that not everybody was as social as he was, he didn’t understand how anybody could move in and just go about their lives quietly,” said his son, Christian Ursino, a Seattle interior designer. “I’d say ‘leave them alone,’ but he gave it the old college try.”

Mr. Ursino died on March 26 from complications of COVID-19. He was 90.

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Until he got sick, he was very active and very healthy, his son said. His 90th birthday party, scheduled for less than two weeks before he would die, was postponed because of the pandemic, before anyone even knew he was sick.

Rocco Patrick Ursino was born March 15, 1930, in Bari, on Italy’s southern Adriatic coast. His family immigrated to the United States when he was 5, in search of more opportunity and a better life. They landed in New York, where they stayed briefly, before moving to Chicago. Around age 10, he moved with his family to Seattle.

They settled in the Rainier Valley, nicknamed Garlic Gulch at the time because of the concentration of Italian immigrants, one of Seattle’s old ethnic neighborhoods that has faded into history.

He went to grammar school at Our Lady of Mount Virgin church, where he met Gloria Sergi. They married in 1953, after high school at Seattle Prep and Mr. Ursino’s service in the Marines during the Korean War.

An optician, Mr. Ursino worked for decades in several local Sears stores, fitting people for glasses and managing the optical departments.

The Ursino family moved, as so many immigrant families have, from Rainier Valley, to Beacon Hill and, eventually, to Bellevue. Along the way, all their children went to local Catholic schools: St. George School, Sacred Heart School, Holy Names Academy, Eastside Catholic, O’Dea. Mr. Ursino faithfully attended weekly Mass at Sacred Heart in Bellevue.

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In retirement, Mr. Ursino had a weekly tee time at Foster Golf Links in Tukwila with three Italian American friends he’d known for more than 50 years, including one he’d known since grade school. They called themselves “The Mafia.” He returned regularly to his old neighborhood in the Rainier Valley for coffee and pastries with friends at Borracchini’s Bakery.

All seven of  his children still live in the Seattle area with their own families. Because of social distancing guidelines, only his children were allowed to attend the funeral, limited to a graveside service. Once restrictions are lifted, they plan a full service, including military honors. The near-solitary death and sparse funeral — for such a genial man — were the most difficult parts for his family.

“Their lives were really about their children, they dedicated their lives, their resources, their energy, their time, to raising their children,” Christian Ursino said of his parents. “We’re a very large Italian family. In good times and bad we gather, we eat, we console, that’s what we do.”

QUESTA GENTE NON VA PIU' RIELETTA: VA ASSASSINATA A FORZA DI DRONI. HANNO ABBANDONATO A SE' STESSI MILIONI DI ITALIANI ALL'ESTERO, MA PER PULIRSI LA COSCIENZA SPORCA SPALANCANO LE PORTE AGLI AFGHANI.

 

Nardella “Non basta un tetto, vogliamo dare studio e lavoro ai profughi afghani"

Intervista al sindaco di Firenze: "Il nostro sarà un modello di integrazione, non di mera assistenza"
2 minuti di lettura

«Queste persone non hanno bisogno solo di cibo e di un tetto, ma di un percorso di inclusione nella nostra società». I profughi afghani hanno appena iniziato a scendere dai voli dell’operazione Aquila Omnia e Dario Nardella, sindaco di Firenze, già sa che la sfida ora si sposta nelle città italiane.

TUO FRATELLO E TUA SORELLA SONO D'ITALIA

 

VISITA A LAMPEDUSA

OMELIA DEL SANTO PADRE FRANCESCO

Campo sportivo "Arena" in Località Salina
Lunedì, 8 luglio 2013

 

Immigrati morti in mare, da quelle barche che invece di essere una via di speranza sono state una via di morte. Così il titolo dei giornali. Quando alcune settimane fa ho appreso questa notizia, che purtroppo tante volte si è ripetuta, il pensiero vi è tornato continuamente come una spina nel cuore che porta sofferenza. E allora ho sentito che dovevo venire qui oggi a pregare, a compiere un gesto di vicinanza, ma anche a risvegliare le nostre coscienze perché ciò che è accaduto non si ripeta. Non si ripeta per favore. Prima però vorrei dire una parola di sincera gratitudine e di incoraggiamento a voi, abitanti di Lampedusa e Linosa, alle associazioni, ai volontari e alle forze di sicurezza, che avete mostrato e mostrate attenzione a persone nel loro viaggio verso qualcosa di migliore. Voi siete una piccola realtà, ma offrite un esempio di solidarietà! Grazie! Grazie anche all’Arcivescovo Mons. Francesco Montenegro per il suo aiuto, il suo lavoro e la sua vicinanza pastorale. Saluto cordialmente il sindaco signora Giusi Nicolini, grazie tanto per quello che lei ha fatto e che fa. Un pensiero lo rivolgo ai cari immigrati musulmani che oggi, alla sera, stanno iniziando il digiuno di Ramadan, con l’augurio di abbondanti frutti spirituali. La Chiesa vi è vicina nella ricerca di una vita più dignitosa per voi e le vostre famiglie. A voi: o’scià!

Questa mattina, alla luce della Parola di Dio che abbiamo ascoltato, vorrei proporre alcune parole che soprattutto provochino la coscienza di tutti, spingano a riflettere e a cambiare concretamente certi atteggiamenti.

«Adamo, dove sei?»: è la prima domanda che Dio rivolge all’uomo dopo il peccato. «Dove sei Adamo?». E Adamo è un uomo disorientato che ha perso il suo posto nella creazione perché crede di diventare potente, di poter dominare tutto, di essere Dio. E l’armonia si rompe, l’uomo sbaglia e questo si ripete anche nella relazione con l’altro che non è più il fratello da amare, ma semplicemente l’altro che disturba la mia vita, il mio benessere. E Dio pone la seconda domanda: «Caino, dov’è tuo fratello?». Il sogno di essere potente, di essere grande come Dio, anzi di essere Dio, porta ad una catena di sbagli che è catena di morte, porta a versare il sangue del fratello!

Queste due domande di Dio risuonano anche oggi, con tutta la loro forza! Tanti di noi, mi includo anch’io, siamo disorientati, non siamo più attenti al mondo in cui viviamo, non curiamo, non custodiamo quello che Dio ha creato per tutti e non siamo più capaci neppure di custodirci gli uni gli altri. E quando questo disorientamento assume le dimensioni del mondo, si giunge a tragedie come quella a cui abbiamo assistito.

«Dov’è il tuo fratello?», la voce del suo sangue grida fino a me, dice Dio. Questa non è una domanda rivolta ad altri, è una domanda rivolta a me, a te, a ciascuno di noi. Quei nostri fratelli e sorelle cercavano di uscire da situazioni difficili per trovare un po’ di serenità e di pace; cercavano un posto migliore per sé e per le loro famiglie, ma hanno trovato la morte. Quante volte coloro che cercano questo non trovano comprensione, non trovano accoglienza, non trovano solidarietà! E le loro voci salgono fino a Dio! E una volta ancora ringrazio voi abitanti di Lampedusa per la solidarietà. Ho sentito, recentemente, uno di questi fratelli. Prima di arrivare qui sono passati per le mani dei trafficanti, coloro che sfruttano la povertà degli altri, queste persone per le quali la povertà degli altri è una fonte di guadagno. Quanto hanno sofferto! E alcuni non sono riusciti ad arrivare.

«Dov’è il tuo fratello?» Chi è il responsabile di questo sangue? Nella letteratura spagnola c’è una commedia di Lope de Vega che narra come gli abitanti della città di Fuente Ovejuna uccidono il Governatore perché è un tiranno, e lo fanno in modo che non si sappia chi ha compiuto l’esecuzione. E quando il giudice del re chiede: «Chi ha ucciso il Governatore?», tutti rispondono: «Fuente Ovejuna, Signore». Tutti e nessuno! Anche oggi questa domanda emerge con forza: Chi è il responsabile del sangue di questi fratelli e sorelle? Nessuno! Tutti noi rispondiamo così: non sono io, io non c’entro, saranno altri, non certo io. Ma Dio chiede a ciascuno di noi: «Dov’è il sangue del tuo fratello che grida fino a me?». Oggi nessuno nel mondo si sente responsabile di questo; abbiamo perso il senso della responsabilità fraterna; siamo caduti nell’atteggiamento ipocrita del sacerdote e del servitore dell’altare, di cui parlava Gesù nella parabola del Buon Samaritano: guardiamo il fratello mezzo morto sul ciglio della strada, forse pensiamo “poverino”, e continuiamo per la nostra strada, non è compito nostro; e con questo ci tranquillizziamo, ci sentiamo a posto. La cultura del benessere, che ci porta a pensare a noi stessi, ci rende insensibili alle grida degli altri, ci fa vivere in bolle di sapone, che sono belle, ma non sono nulla, sono l’illusione del futile, del provvisorio, che porta all’indifferenza verso gli altri, anzi porta alla globalizzazione dell’indifferenza. In questo mondo della globalizzazione siamo caduti nella globalizzazione dell'indifferenza. Ci siamo abituati alla sofferenza dell’altro, non ci riguarda, non ci interessa, non è affare nostro!

Ritorna la figura dell’Innominato di Manzoni. La globalizzazione dell’indifferenza ci rende tutti “innominati”, responsabili senza nome e senza volto.

«Adamo dove sei?», «Dov’è il tuo fratello?», sono le due domande che Dio pone all’inizio della storia dell’umanità e che rivolge anche a tutti gli uomini del nostro tempo, anche a noi. Ma io vorrei che ci ponessimo una terza domanda: «Chi di noi ha pianto per questo fatto e per fatti come questo?», Chi ha pianto per la morte di questi fratelli e sorelle? Chi ha pianto per queste persone che erano sulla barca? Per le giovani mamme che portavano i loro bambini? Per questi uomini che desideravano qualcosa per sostenere le proprie famiglie? Siamo una società che ha dimenticato l’esperienza del piangere, del “patire con”: la globalizzazione dell’indifferenza ci ha tolto la capacità di piangere! Nel Vangelo abbiamo ascoltato il grido, il pianto, il grande lamento: «Rachele piange i suoi figli… perché non sono più». Erode ha seminato morte per difendere il proprio benessere, la propria bolla di sapone. E questo continua a ripetersi… Domandiamo al Signore che cancelli ciò che di Erode è rimasto anche nel nostro cuore; domandiamo al Signore la grazia di piangere sulla nostra indifferenza, di piangere sulla crudeltà che c’è nel mondo, in noi, anche in coloro che nell’anonimato prendono decisioni socio-economiche che aprono la strada ai drammi come questo. «Chi ha pianto?». Chi ha pianto oggi nel mondo?

Signore, in questa Liturgia, che è una Liturgia di penitenza, chiediamo perdono per l’indifferenza verso tanti fratelli e sorelle, ti chiediamo Padre perdono per chi si è accomodato e si è chiuso nel proprio benessere che porta all’anestesia del cuore, ti chiediamo perdono per coloro che con le loro decisioni a livello mondiale hanno creato situazioni che conducono a questi drammi. Perdono Signore!

Signore, che sentiamo anche oggi le tue domande: «Adamo dove sei?», «Dov’è il sangue di tuo fratello?».


Al termine della Celebrazione il Santo Padre ha pronunciato le seguenti parole:

Prima di darvi la benedizione voglio ringraziare una volta in più voi, lampedusani, per l'esempio di amore, per l'esempio di carità, per l'esempio di accoglienza che ci state dando, che avete dato e che ancora ci date. Il Vescovo ha detto che Lampedusa è un faro. Che questo esempio sia faro in tutto il mondo, perché abbiano il coraggio di accogliere quelli che cercano una vita migliore. Grazie per la vostra testimonianza. E voglio anche ringraziare la vostra tenerezza che ho sentito nella persona di don Stefano. Lui mi raccontava sulla nave quello che lui e il suo vice parroco fanno. Grazie a voi, grazie a lei, don Stefano.

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