10-04-2005, 02:36 PM
It appears as if these 300 fetuses were being used in some types of Sexual Ritual Magick and Demon Invocation by certain Roman Catholic clergymen. It is very interesting to note that a funeral director would take home 300 aborted fetuses and place them in his garage in Pittsburgh in the first place. The fact that on Thursday Catholic, Protestant and Judaic religious authorities will be there is very strange indeed. Is this a ceremony to activate New World Religion Programming in specific Mind Control Victims?This is a very bizarre and unusual funeral service.A Memorial Service Will Be Held On Thursday For Fetuses Found In A McKeesport Garage12th of September 2005By Ann RodgersPittsburgh Post-GazetteAn interfaith service will be held Thursday to pray for more than 300 fetuses whose remains were found in a McKeesport garage once owned by a suspended funeral director who had a contract with Magee-Womens Hospital. The idea came from Allegheny County Coroner Doctor Cyril H. Wecht whose office received many calls from women distraught that their childââ¬â¢s remains may have been abandoned in the garage, said the Reverend Donald Green, executive director of Christian Associates of Southwestern Pennsylvania CASP, an organizer of the service. The remains, ranging in age from less than four months gestation to full term, resulted from miscarriages, abortions and stillbirths. ââ¬ÅOur prime concern was to help those who had wounds opened to bring closure, and also to deal with the fetuses in a dignified way,ââ¬Â Reverend Donald Green said. The service will be at 7:00 PM in the auditorium of St. Paul Seminary in Oakwood. Prayers will be offered by representatives of the Catholic, Protestant and Jewish traditions. Reverend Donald Green said he was still trying to enlist a Muslim. The participating traditions have a variety of understandings of fetal life and take differing stands on the legality of abortion. Great care has been taken to make the service pastoral, not political, Reverend Donald Green said. Some traditions have no official stance on the status of a miscarried child, and the response can vary from pastor to pastor even within the same denomination, he said. Reverend Donald Green, who belongs to the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, said that his denominationââ¬â¢s book of ââ¬Åoccasional servicesââ¬Â has prayers for when a child dies before birth, but not a full liturgy. But unofficial liturgies circulate informally, he said. Noting that he was speaking only for himself, he said what he would offer liturgically would depend on the length of the pregnancy. ââ¬ÅThe closer to birth, the more likely I would be to move toward more of a traditional burial, whether that was with a casket or cremains,ââ¬Â he said. Two Catholic Priests said they had occasionally done burials for fetuses that died in relatively early miscarriages. The Reverend Frank Almade, pastor of St. John Vianney parish in Allentown, recalled burying a fetus in a casket no longer than a cigar box, after obtaining permission from the cemetery to inter the child with its grandmother. ââ¬ÅIt was very important to the father. His wife couldnââ¬â¢t come because she was still in the hospital,ââ¬Â Almade said. The Reverend Samuel Esposito, pastor of Good Samaritan parish in Ambridge, has done similar burials. Prior to Vatican II, he said, miscarried fetuses were supposed to be baptized. Now, ââ¬Åwe donââ¬â¢t anoint or baptize if the person is deceased,ââ¬Â he said. After a miscarriage, ââ¬Åitââ¬â¢s prayers of comfort, and commending their soul to Godââ¬â¢s mercy.ââ¬Â The Roman Catholic Church has officially approved prayers for such occasions, said Reverend Samuel Esposito, a former hospital chaplain. In most cases, he noted, those who have suffered a miscarriage donââ¬â¢t ask for a burial, because they are too distraught to think of it, they donââ¬â¢t know one is possible or they donââ¬â¢t want one. According to Jewish Rabbinical Law, a child who dies fewer than 30 days after birth is not entitled to the official Jewish funeral rites. Nevertheless, rabbis in all traditions offer alternative rituals. Rabbi Alvin Berkun of Tree of Life, a conservative synagogue in Squirrel Hill, is a principal organizer and participant in Thursdayââ¬â¢s service. His own Conservative Movement has a formal liturgy with readings from the Bible, prayers and blessings. ââ¬ÅIf someone talks to me, as a clergyperson, about a miscarriage, it indicates that they should seek some help [from their religious tradition]. They need a kind of closure, if you will. This is a real trauma, a real grief,ââ¬Â Rabbi Alvin Berkun said. In Orthodox Judaism, burial is required, said Rabbi Yisroel Miller of Poale Zedeck Congregation in Squirrel Hill. If the fetus is male, a circumcision is performed if possible, he said. Although itââ¬â¢s not the same ritual used for an older infant or adult, ââ¬Åour tradition is that child had a Soul, that child is in Heaven. And at what the Prophets call the ââ¬Ëend of daysââ¬â¢ that child will be there to meet his or her family,ââ¬Â Rabbi Yisroel Miller said.