ITALY – Mount Etna volcano erupts, lighting up night sky
Roads close to the volcano were covered with volcanic stones and ash after Mount Etna erupted on Tuesday night (March 5).
Mount Etna, Europe’s highest active volcano sent plumes of ash and lava into the night sky on the island of Sicily.
Italy’s National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology has recently registered increased explosive activity by the volcano, Italy’s Civil Protection agency said.
There are several inhabited villages on the slopes of Mount Etna.
Eruptions are not infrequent, and Italian airliners sometimes have to alter their routes to avoid flying through ash clouds.
Tuesday’s eruption did not cause any interruption to air traffic at the airport serving the nearby town of Catania, according to reports.
MACEDONIA – Macedonia remembers Jewish community
SKOPJE | Macedonia on Monday (March 11) marked the 70th anniversary of the deportation of nearly its entire Jewish community to a Nazi death camp during World War II, while a U.S.-based diaspora group called on neighbor Bulgaria to apologize for its role in the Holocaust.
Culture Minister Elizabeta Milevska led the memorial to honor the 7,144 people who were deported. Only about 50 of them survived.
Macedonia was part of Yugoslavia until its independence in 1991, and most of its territory was occupied during the war by Bulgaria.
The Washington D.C.-based group Macedonian United Diaspora on Monday called on Bulgaria to make a public apology for the country’s role in the murder of Macedonian Jews, who were sent by train to the Treblinka concentration camp in occupied Poland.
There was no immediate reaction from officials in Bulgaria. But the country’s parliament acknowledged Friday that 11,343 Jews had been deported to Nazi concentration camps from areas under Bulgarian wartime control – in Greece and Yugoslavia.
BULGARIA – Bulgarians commemorate rescue of its Jews
SOFIA | Bulgarians on Sunday commemorated public protests that led to the rescue of more than 48,000 Jewish countrymen from deportation to Nazi death camps.
Ceremonies across the country marked the 70th anniversary of protests by Bulgarian clergymen, intellectuals, politicians and others that ultimately stopped the Nazis from deporting any Jews from Bulgaria.
Though an ally of Germany during the war, Bulgaria was the only Eastern European country that saved its Jews from the Holocaust. This act of salvation is a unique chapter in the history of the Holocaust, but its full story remained largely unknown until the fall of communism in Bulgaria in 1989.
Parliament, however, admitted for the first time on Friday that Jews were deported to Nazi concentration camps from areas under Bulgarian control during World War II [including from neighboring Macedonia].
‘‘The objective evaluation of the historic events cannot ignore the fact that 11,343 Jews were deported from northern Greece and the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, then under German jurisdiction,’’ legislators said in a declaration and expressed regrets that ‘‘the local Bulgarian administration had not been in a position to stop this act.’’
The Shalom Organization of Jews in Bulgaria had repeatedly demanded the state to take responsibility for the deportations.
‘‘The Bulgarian government must assume the moral responsibility for the Nazi death camp deportation of ethnic Jews from the regions of Thrace and Macedonia regardless of the fact that Bulgaria saved its almost 50,000 Jews,’’ the group’s chairman, Maxim Benvenisti, told The Associated Press before the declaration. …
At a ceremony in Brussels earlier this week, Israeli President Shimon Peres called the rescue ‘‘unique in Europe’’ adding that ‘‘no other country, no other people have shown this sort of courage that the Bulgarian people did.’’
He expressed, however, deep regret that what happened in Bulgaria had not been emulated in Greece and Macedonia ‘‘whose Jewish communities all but disappeared at the hands of the Nazis.’’
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(The news briefs above are from wire reports and staff reports posted at London’s Daily Telegraph on March 6 and Boston.com on March 11 and March 10.)
ITALY - MOUNT ETNA:
In the past, the Italian authorities have used explosives, concrete dams, and ditches to divert lava flows away from these settlements. (from wikipedia and the bbc)
MACEDONIA:
Macedonia, officially the Republic of Macedonia, is a country located in the central Balkan peninsula in Southeast Europe. It is one of the successor states of the former Yugoslavia, from which it declared independence in 1991. It became a member of the United Nations in 1993 but, as a result of a dispute with Greece over its name, it was admitted under the provisional reference of the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, sometimes abbreviated as FYROM. (from wikipedia)
BULGARIA:
The Bulgars, a Central Asian Turkic tribe, merged with the local Slavic inhabitants in the late 7th century to form the first Bulgarian state. In succeeding centuries, Bulgaria struggled with the Byzantine Empire to assert its place in the Balkans, but by the end of the 14th century the country was overrun by the Ottoman Turks. Northern Bulgaria attained autonomy in 1878 and all of Bulgaria became independent from the Ottoman Empire in 1908. Having fought on the losing side in both World Wars, Bulgaria fell within the Soviet sphere of influence and became a People's Republic in 1946. Communist domination ended in 1990, when Bulgaria held its first multiparty election since World War II and began the contentious process of moving toward political democracy and a market economy while combating inflation, unemployment, corruption, and crime. The country joined NATO in 2004 and the EU in 2007. (from the CIA World FactBook)