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  • Art & Culture,  Social Issues

    The Lampedusa Cross

    25th June 2021 / No Comments

    (4 minute read) The Lampedusa Cross in London’s British Museum is both a sign of contradiction and a sign of hope, as Jill Cook discovers.

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    Jill Cook

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    The Marvel-lous world of the family

    13th February 2020

    Frame by frame to Hollywood

    14th February 2020

    The Decameron and the power of stories

    29th April 2020
  • Art & Culture

    In praise of libraries

    19th April 2021 / No Comments

    (5 minute read) Don’t take for granted the treasure on your doorstep - as libraries in various countries are opening up again, Prakarsh Singh sings their praises.

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    Prakarsh Singh

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    Men like us: a review of The Two Popes film

    11th January 2020

    Edinburgh’s healing beauty

    14th January 2021

    A history of cold stones and warm breath

    21st November 2022
  • History

    Wisdom from the East (End)

    14th April 2021 / No Comments

    (7 minute read) The musings of a simple London woman about the arrival of television to post-war Britain teaches Adam Brocklehurst the folly of trying to hold onto the past.

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    Adam Brocklehurst

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    Never forget

    21st June 2022
    Nagorno-Karabakh army

    Clashes in the Caucasus

    21st January 2022

    Discovering feminism’s roots

    12th April 2021
  • History

    Discovering feminism’s roots

    12th April 2021 / No Comments

    (9 minute read) Jennifer E. Morel follows the trail of the feminist movement and is surprised to find herself journeying back to the ancient Greeks, the beginnings of Christianity and the Middle Ages.

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    Dr Jennifer E. Morel

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    It’s an ill virus that blows nobody any good

    25th August 2020

    Promising more than achieving? The French Revolution and today

    28th January 2020

    Toppling the truth: a monumental matter

    6th July 2020
  • Mental Health,  Social Issues,  Thought-provoking

    Preventing and healing childhood sexual abuse …

    6th April 2021 / 1 Comment

    (7 minute read) Tyler VanderWeele, Director of the Human Flourishing Program at Harvard University, offers grounds for hope.

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    Tyler VanderWeele

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    The ‘little joys’ challenge

    20th May 2021

    Healing Colombia’s conflict through art

    28th April 2022

    The sounds of silence

    1st April 2020
  • Lifestyle,  Thought-provoking

    Frankl and his shadow

    9th March 2021 / 2 Comments

    (6 minute read) John-Luke Harris urges us to examine the line that runs through our own hearts to find the source of good and evil in the world.

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    John-Luke Harris

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    man carrying child

    Men, you’re doing better than you think …

    28th June 2022

    All lives are worth living, but are some more worthy than others?

    14th June 2021
    christmas crib

    Stop trying to be happy if you want to find joy

    20th March 2021
  • History,  Thought-provoking

    Women who made a difference: the original Sisterhood

    8th March 2021 / 3 Comments

    (6 minute read) Maria Patricia Williams hails an Italian go-getter whose passion for the poor of New York City is still making an impact today.

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    Maria Patricia Williams

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    Illuminating the “Dark” Ages

    16th April 2020

    A French woman’s take on la Reine Elizabeth

    26th October 2022

    Life lessons from Roman splendour

    20th February 2021
  • History

    Paradise Lost: The world’s debt to Iraq

    23rd February 2021 / 1 Comment

    (10 minute read) Iraq is central to world civilisation and to the Bible and speaks to us of great journeys, exile, suffering and salvation. As he looks forward to Pope Francis’ visit to this country in March, Dr Emil Anton spares a thought for the many who have had to flee from it in modern times.

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    Emil Anton

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    Lost in golden times: how a 20th century literary masterpiece could help you cope with Covid woes

    31st March 2020

    Guarding the guardians: what constitutes ‘good’ religion?

    2nd October 2020

    The cross and the syringe

    25th January 2021
  • Art & Culture,  History

    Life lessons from Roman splendour

    20th February 2021 / No Comments

    (6 minute read) The fading glory of an Italian church teaches Adam Brocklehurst about suffering and compassion.

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    Adam Brocklehurst

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    The Leningrad Symphony – Shostakovich’s Seventh Symphony and how the Russians survived a siege

    30th March 2020

    “The human person is naturally sacred”

    30th March 2024

    “My poetry is an attempt to put a vertical beam in the horizontality of modern culture.”

    20th May 2024
  • COVID-19,  History,  Mental Health,  Thought-provoking

    Lessons for lockdown from a Holocaust survivor

    27th January 2021 / No Comments

    (7 minute read) Psychiatrist Viktor Frankl developed a unique approach to life which enabled him to survive various Nazi concentration camps. Clare Cooper explains how his approach could be adapted to lockdown.

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    Joseph Evans

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    “Anthropause”: can lockdown teach us to form a new relationship with creation?

    1st July 2020

    To jab or not to jab?

    6th July 2021

    The cross and the syringe

    25th January 2021
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