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tv   America Tonight  Al Jazeera  September 19, 2013 9:00pm-10:01pm EDT

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>> you're al jazeera. i'm jonathan betz. here are the stories we're following tonight. secretary of state john kerry wants the u.n. to act with urgency. kerry urgen urged the security l to meet within the week. and the deputy prime minister said that the war has reached a stalemate and will call a cease-fire. neither the armed opposition nor the regime is capable of of defeating the other side. and the syrian president will
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ask for a cease-fire and launching of a peaceful political process. and with less than two weeks to go before the government runs out of money, the house is set to vote on a republican bill that will fund the government but defund the healthcare law. even if it passes the house it is not expected to pass the senate. remember, you can always catch us online with the latest at www.aljazeera.com. have a great night. >> on "america tonight." troubled waters, colorado residents begin the long trip home. but environmentalists worry about the risks that are left
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behind. >> how does it feel to be this close to your house. >> surreal. that's what it is. it's dream-like, but not a good dream. >> reporter: also tonight, a religious revolution, the pope's surprising statements on homosexuality, contraception and even abortion. and acting on faith, the new york city church where the curtain rises every saturday night to both prayers in the pews. [♪ music ]
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>> hello, and welcome to america tonight. i'm joie chen. first the floods and then new fears. out in colorado residents have begun to pick their way back to water-logged flood-filled homes but there is another caution. and these images explain why folks are ready. the state warns residents to stay out of the water because of sewage and chemical releases in the water. officials are tracking ten sites where gas and oil has been released. water pollution used in fracking was a concern well before the floods. but images like this raise concern that waste water stored in tank and pits could have been released in water and soil. the state of colorado is home to 129,000 oil and gas
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wells. not all of them are active right now but many remain a concern. kathy proctor joins us to evening from denver, an she has been covering the aftermath on this. they are tracking a number of spills, how serious are they at this time. >> reporter: the damage assessment is still under way, but at noon the state agency that oversees the industry ten were considered minor. two were considered major, but as i say assessments are still under way. >> kathy, can you explain--we've seen a number of these pictures. the tank is turned over. is it clear if the tank is turned over that it is leaking something? >> that is not clear.
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tanks are designed to be air tight and watertight and that's what they do. they simply may have lifted off of where they're supposed to be and floated away. the force of the water as it came down was incredible. the two spills that the state is tracking of notable concern has spilled 19,000 gallons of oil. the company that owns these tanks say that is a light oil and as such it will evaporate fairly quickly. they did put boons in the water to gather what they can, but, quite honestly, the water is rushing so fast that it took the oil away from the site of the spill and on down the river. in terms of comparison it sounds like a lot, 19,000 gallons crude oil spilled in the river, but these floodwaters are rush something fast that is equivalent to two seconds of water running past the stream gains at this site.
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it scoured the streams. it has scoured a lot of things. the contaminants from the oil which are in the water are not alone. there is raw sawage from waste water treatment plants which have been wrecked. residents are under orders-- >> i want to ask you about that because residents were told not to touch the water in many places. is the concern about the chemicals or water-borne disease? >> it is concern about everything. the water, as it came rushing out of the canyons and in the foothills and now down on the plains swamped homes. and you know as i know in our homes we have chemicals, and they were washed out. that water has come in, taken what it wanted to and taken it
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down the stream. there is a lot of nasty stuff in the water, and yes, residents are warned to stay out of the water. several communities are under boil water orders to make sure its clean enough to drink. >> there has been a lot of concern about fracking, waste water open tanks in many places, not just here in colorado. but here because you have open tanks and flooding of this magnitude is there serious concern that the contaminants in that water supply might leech in other areas? >> the state regulators that i have spoken with say that they are still assessing the situation. the spills that they know about at this time, again the water has taken that crude oil down the river, and when things begin to settle up, that's when the concerns and honestly when they can start to tackle the problem. when it becomes standing water, not rushing water.
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>> with respect to the fracking water, that's part that has be been--that water that has been pushed through the fracking process, and there is a concern about that kind of water. >> i've heard those concerns. what i was told was there was no fracking going on at the time of the floods. the oil and gas industry, seeing the reports and seeing the water out of the mountains moved immediately to shut down wells that were in the path of the floodwaters. we had 2,000 wells shut down and 300 of those have been returned to service. they shut them down so that they could stay safe, so that they could lock down what they could, and now there is 600 personnel from the oil and gas companies who are going--some of them are using helicopters, some of them by boat, some by foot on to these w well sites, the check te
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damage there. we've had two spills and eight minor ones. >> thank you for being with us tonight. >> thank you, ma'am. >> colorado has seen more than its share of challenges. some communities and some families have faced much. we are introduced to linda and david as they begin the long trip home again. >> reporter: david doherty is starting his morning the way he always does. with a coffee run for linda, his wife, of 17 years. >> migraine all gone? >> reporter: the caffeine seems to ease linda out of her routine migraines, and this week especially there's plenty to
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worry about. >> well, i hope we get to stay here. >> i think we'll be able to stay here for a while. >> reporter: my bag, this one and this one are all from home. >> reporter: for now this is their new home. a few square feet i in the coors event center in boulder. it's one of 14 shoulders housing flood victims across the state. for linda and david, their third shelter in their one bleary-eyed week. iin a cruel twist of nature in the latest stop of an odyssey over the last three years. >> i cried quite a few times. i've been to the mental health worker quite a few times. >> reporter: what do you tell the mental health worker. >> the fire, her the three years, we spent with the fire used me up. >> used you up?
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>> i lost the will. not the will to live but the will to fight. >> reporter: it's been a fight. >> it's been a terrible fight 2347 linda and david are no strangers to natural disaster. in 2010 historic wildfires ravaged much of the state including the countryside of their dream hilltop house in colorado. they're still haunted by the memory. >> our mountain erupted like a match. i thought it was a jet engine. i looked around fo for a plane. it just--the top of our mountain, the firestorm really started on our mountain, and it was just--whoosh. >> reporter: the house was damaged and uninhabitable, but fortunately not destroyed. a blessing since years before they had spent more than a decade transforming the place. >> we built it. i mean, we literally built it.
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he picked out every single board. he looked at--how many boards did you look at before you picked one? >> probably ten. >> reporter: after the fire it took three long years before they had the money to repair their house and move back in. linda, a former high school teacher who suffers from a number of conditions is on disability. david is her primary caretaker. aided with relief funds they floated between rental properties before returning home. >> we had no hot water. >> witbut wedidn't care. >> and we had mattresses on the floor. >> but we didn't care. >> and boxes everywhere. >> it wasn't finished. >> but you were home. >> yes, we were home and we were very happy about that. >> reporter: that homecoming lastedded 14 days. and before long, their family, linda, david, their son jeremy,
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two dogs, two cats, found themselves trapped in the house as the roads surrounding their cabin were washed away. luckily they were spotted by a search and rescue team and airlifted out. >> there are chips and cookies and water. >> our cameras were there during the family's first night at the shelter. here they are served hot meals, offered medical services and cots to sleep on. for most people this life is anber ration. but for david and linda, the familiarity, it was too much to bear. >> i was crying because it's deja vu started again. >> each day linda visits her beloved chihuahuas. >> do you want to kiss mama. >> and they both had their hope renewed by the kindness of
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strangers. >> most people are sympathetic with what you're going through. >> absolutely. >> there was a gentleman last night at the last shelter that we were at that came up to us while we were eating dinner, slipped an envelope across the table and said, heard, i heard you've been having hard times. >> you have the envelope with you? >> i keep it with me. there is a couple of hundred dollars. he walked away and said, i hope this helps you. incredible. >> reporter: we asked david and linda to take us as close to their home as possible. but a fuel canyon away, some six miles short state troopers warned us the roads are so badly damaged, we would be risking our lives. >> once you leave that barricade you're on your own. that's why we ask you to minimize it to what is
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absolutely necessary. >> how does it feel to be this close to your house and clearly so far. >> surreal, that's what it is. it's like dream-like, but not a good dream. this is like a nightmare. it is. this is a nightmare. >> reporter: david believes he and linda won't be going home for another three to six months. the shelter they're living in is begin to go clear out. already down half its occupants since its hoped this week. he has no idea how soon they might have to move again or where. >> that report for america tonight. when we come back here more of mother nature's rage, but in mexico. almost 100 people died from flash flooding and more trouble may lie ahead. we'll get a report from mexico city next.
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>> every sunday night al jazeera america presents gripping films, from the worlds top documentary directors >> this is just the beginning of somthing much bigger... >> this sunday...the premier of "do the math" >> these companies are a rogue force... >> one environmentalist says fossil fuels equal disaster... will his movement add up add up to change? >> we will fight it together... al jazeera america presents... "do the math" premiers this sunday 9 eastern. >> mexico is still struggling to
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deal with the aftermath, the storms have devastated acapulco and the surrounding area. more than a million people have been effected, and mexican authorities raise the death toll to 97. thousands of tourists stranded in acapulco struggle to find clean water as they wait at the airport to leave. >> reporter: well, after a path of destruction in the southwestern part of the country, tropical storm manuel moved up to the southwest part of the country and hit down just a few days ago. the authorities are trying to take preventive measures. they've declared a red alert and suspended all classes. this is in advance of high winds and potentially heavy rainfall, but we have not seen the kind of destruction there yet. but we've seen in southern uta mexico. i was in acapulco on wednesday
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and tuesday, and saw the amounts of destruction there and saw tens of thousands of people who have been affected, people who were in shelters, who had come to shelters because they lost their houses and were desperate to know what the government was going to do for them in the coming months ahead. we also went to villages, remote villages where people haven't received much help yet, and people are still living in areas which are very close to the water. their house versus been flooded, and it's just a very difficult situation. now the authorities are trying to get assistance to these people, but it's very challenging to get it to them because of the infrastructure damage that has been done. >> is there an indication that the government is up to the task here. this is an operation that might require reaching out to other countries. is there any indication that they will need help? >> so far the government has not reached out to other countries. they're trying to do as much as
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they can here within mexico. earlier today we were down at in mexico city, and they managed to bring 30 tons of food, donations made by individuals, also by businesses. the plan is to fly these down to the most affected areas and deliver them out to the people. that said we also saw on wednesday thousands of people who had been waiting in lines to get on to military flights to get out of acapulco, which is basically cut off from the rest of mexico by a collapsed highway. they've been waiting for days in the hot sun, and people were starting to get angry. people were starting to get really frustrated and tired with the length of time it was taking to get them flown out. but it is a large, large mission. and from what we saw the government seems to be doing their best. >> what are you anticipating with the days to come with the weather in the north? >> well, that's a very good question. there is this tropical storm
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that has stumped down in northwest mexico. there is a tropical depression that is over the southeastern part of the country. and there is a forecast for 10 more tropical storms to hit mexico within the coming two months. that's how much time there is left in the hurricane season. so it looks like it could be a difficult couple of months that lie highway for mexico. >> dave mercer in mexico city for us, thank you very much, dave. >> reporter: thank you. >> and it appears things in mexico may get worse before they get better. al jazeera meteorologist dave warren joins us now from new york. what do you see happening? >> meteorologist: yes, well manuel is now a tropical depression, but that does not take away the danger. it made landfall this morning just after 5:00 p.m. pacific time. just 5:00 a.m. category-one. it was not the strength of the
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hurricane, it was this, the movement, northeast at 11 mph, a very slow-moving storm, and now it's weakened from a tropical storm now weakened to a depression. it is slow moving over the area. the winds died down, but still a lot of rain with this, and only moving 7 mph. this slow-moving storm has put a lot of rain in the same area. four to six, six to 12, and 20 inches estimated. that has led to flash flooding and mudslides. it's slowly pushing off to the northeast, and it will slowly move out. it will take the rain with it, and this storm, despite the fact that it's weakening poses a big danger there. we go to a weakening storm to one that is developing. it does not look to be intensifying all that much yet. over the next 48 hours it does pose a threat to intensify and it becomes a tropical storm and
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just sitting over the gulf there, and really it could dump a lot of rain over southern mexico. that would be the next main storm in the atlantic. >> all right, dave warren. thank you very much from our meteorology center. when we return, infant mortality. why is it impacting african-american babies more often. a certai search for answers tako cleveland. that's up next. b
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on august 20th,
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>> now a snapshot of stories making headlines on "america tonight." a brave turn to the washington navy yard two days after the massacre took place. 13 people including the gunman were killed. police say military in egypt arrested 65 suspected worshipers osupportersof mohamed morsi. they say they're looking for those who torched police stations after morsi was
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overthrown. the country's most innocent has started a new school year. the government insisted that children should go back to their classrooms even though classrooms have been damaged or are being used to shelter displaced families. the cdc reported one an unsettling fact, if the baby's mother is african-american, that baby is likely to die before it's very first baby. we go to cleveland, ohio, america's infant mortality capital, to find out why those babies are dying far too soon. >> reporter: it's monday morning in cleveland's metro north hospital.
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a newborn baby boy has just been rushed into the neonatal intensive care unit, known at nicu. weighing just over two pounds he's 14 weeks premature. that means he was in the womb less than six months. >> his blood pressure is really low. >> reporter: right now they're trying to get care to the baby who was born here, and getting respiration assistance. this is the kind of scenario that happens all the time on this ward. medical advances have dramatically improved the odds of survival for premature babies but they have not changed one aspect of this crisis. almost all of the babies in this ward are black. >> just under 40% of the babies born are african-american, but
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they contribute to 70% of the babies who die in the first year of life. so you have this huge, huge disparity, and that is business as usual. it's been going on for decades. >> reporter: this baby is just hours own but he's on a life support machine. the nurses are worried about his chances of survival. he's so premature he can't breathe without the machine purposing oxygen through his tiny lungs. it's an extreme measure for such a small baby. it puts him at high risk for infection and internal bleeding. >> he's helpless it seems like he got it from everywhere. >> reporter: for his mother it's
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an agonizing time. >> i really can't do anything but just stand by and watch and wait. it's a long wait. >> reporter: but lashay can't stay with him. a single mother with three other children, her earnings keep the family just above the poverty line. >> my doctors have put me on light duty, and my job didn't honor the light duty. welfare is not enough to support me and my children so i had to go back to work full duty. >> reporter: after working an overnight shift, finishing at 7:00 in the morning lashay stopped at halving contractions. she was rushed to the hospital and gave birth. but now she has to get back to work. >> i hate to say it this way, but i'm kind of glad he did come
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now, and that he's going to be in the hospital for the next couple of months so that i can work. >> so that's the oxygen being pushed in? >> reporter: even if a baby can be saved in the nicu, it's an out come and cost doctors say could be prevented. >> you're literally talking about several thousand dollars per day. so if you have a baby who has been in the hospital for eight months the math is pretty easy. you're closing in on a million dollars of care just to get that baby home. if you prevent one of those pre-mys, you saved the system hundreds of thousands of dollars. that's why access to care and prenatal care is so vital. >> if you have to have a baby born prematurely, united states
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is one of the best places in the world for that baby for born. our neonatal intensive care units are some of the best if not the best in the world. that's not the point. >> reporter: doctor arthur james is one of the leading mortality experts in the united states. he said that the heart of the problem lies outside of the hospitals. >> unfortunately in this country when we experience families who are in crisis, we generally throw everything in the kitchen sink to assist in help during that period of time. but we are not anywhere close being that vigilant about trying to practice preventive medicine, trying to keep families out of crisis. >> reporter: everywhere you look in cleveland it seems that those crises are playing out. in a corner of the city's public cemetery, 24-year-old lanaye
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smith is visiting the grave of her infant son jason. he died two weeks ago. the burial sites are marked with nothing more than wooden sticks, but each one represents a story of personal loss. >> it's just a numbness. and it's it's just a bunch of dirt. >> reporter: each year the death rate is growing while the city's population is diminishing. >> is this him? >> i just wished-- >> reporter: laney had give birth to twins who were more
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than three months premature. the twin died. laney said everything was normal until one night when jasion stopped breathing in his sleep. >> when i woke him up, it was like nothing. >> reporter: the doctors told lanay it was sudden infant syndrome, sids. >> my kids are my soul. my kids are my heart. >> heartbreaking. following up on sebastian walker's report. we turn to dr. richard davis who is director of neonatal care
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unit. doctor, you heard this report as well. when we hear 40% of babies born are african-american, but 70% don't make it, how can this be? is this a peculiar problem just to cleveland, or do you see this in chicago? >> every city, every state looked at has a large gap between birth outcomes between black and white infants. >> what do you attribute this to? where we live in a society where the medicare is so good, when babies have such a good chance of making it, how can this be? >> the problem is not what happens after the babies are born. the problem is that they're born so early and they need all that intensive care to survive, and many of them do survive, but more don't than we would like.
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so preventing prematurity is really the only way to solve this problem. >> is it clear that this is a racial divide? how do we know it's not a socio-economic question or environmental question, how do we know? >> i don't think it's either/or. i think it's a lot of things working at the same time. the disparity between black infants and white infants has existed and in fact, has widened. between 1950 and 2000 it increased considerably and steadily over the decades. but there's also another disparity. the affluent gap of those less affluent. >> do you see examples that a lower income white mother might face the same rates of infant
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mortality than a white woman of a higher economic status? >> yes and no. if you compare white high school dropouts to white college graduates the infant mortality rate for less educated and lower income women is about three times as high as the affluent white women. similarly, if you compare black women who have finished college to those who haven't, and lower economic status you see a gap as well. however, having said that, unfortunately, an african-american woman who is graduated from college still has a higher risk of an infant death than a white woman who has not finished high school. >> really, so you can't attribute it entirely to
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socio-economic factors? >> i would say you should look at socio-economic factors and race working together. >> in other words, a lot of education or prenatal care might not be enough to make the difference? >> not in one generation, probably. i think we have to understand that these disparities have very, very deep roots. for example, some research that we've done has shown that a woman who is stressed, who is carrying a female fetus, gives birth to a little girl who will grow up and herself will have a higher risk of a bad birth outcome. despite the fact that that little girl has grown up into a woman with a high income. if her mother was in a stressful situation when she was a fetus, it imparts a certain risk to her that other infants would not have. >> i guess it's a quick answer i'm asking for, but is there an
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easy resolution to this? >> i think the resolution is going to require very deep and profound social and political changes. the strategy that has been taken in this country to reduce infant more tanty has been very much focused on high technology. we're very good at that. i do it for a living. but the problem is the preventive measures as mentioned in the piece we just heard, have not been undertaken seriously. in fact, we seem to be going backwards. taking away food supports, employment supports housing, many things which would reduce the stress. >> yes, those women actually identified would make a difference in their own lives. dr. richard david, we appreciate you joining us tonight. >> glad to be her. >> sebastian walker full report on infant mortality will air on
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friday night at 9:30 eastern and again on sunday night at 7:00 eastern here on al jazeera america. coming up here pope francis' vision and his warning. why he says the catholic church may crumble if it fails to find balance in the modern world.
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>> coming up on "consider this"
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pope francis criticizes the church's focus on gays and abortion. but is he widening the clock or disenfranchising the devout. anti-bullying programs in school can promote bullying. we get ready for the primetime emmy awards. we'll see you at the top. >> he has already shown himself to be a very different leader of the catholic church, but pope francis' first lengthily interviewed released today contained surprising and stunning statements. he spoke to the jesuit, his own order and said the church has become too obsessed on issues
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like gay marriage, contraceptives and abortion, and he said that the catholic church might fall like a house of cards if it doesn't become a more welcoming place for life of all. he did not, however, suggest any changes in church doctrine. we appreciate you being here, why is the hope making headlines in secular media? how big of a revolution is what he was saying? >> i think there is something relatable about pope franchise, and i think his desire to drill down into the foundations of christianity does release thi te energies that maybe there is something radical that he has to say or revolutionary that he has to say. >> let's take a look at some of his comments. this one was about women.
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he said the feminine genius is needed. whenever we make an important decision, the challenge is to think about the specific place of women and where the authority of church is exercised for various areas of this church, is he indicating that he's thinking about a different role for women in the church, a more official role, women as priests? >> i don't think he wants to say that women can priest, and he highlights john ii who highlights the women of genius, the complimentary between men and women and the function of roles. he wants to say the dignity of women is such that their genius is required at every decision making level of the church. >> that would be different in and of itself. >> it would be a call, i think, for theologians, for lay people to continually ask questions about what new roles and
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functions women could have in making decisions in the leadership of the church. >> let's go to another comment that he made will homosexuality. "a person once asked me in a provocative manner if i approved of homosexuality. i told him, when god looks at a gay person, does he look at this person with love or does he reject this important. of course he said this in italian, so there was translation involved, but he made another comment about homosexuality earlier this year. >> yes, when he came back from rio he made this distinction between which we heard about last time. but i think what he wants to do is something, once again, similar to john pa john paul iio
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opened his papacy about the prodigal son. he doesn't care about the sin. he cares about his son coming back to me. in this quote here he wants to emphasize that god loves the person, and that is something to be differentiated from sinful facts, and i think that is already a challenge to the notion that one is gay by nature rather than one has same sex desires which one acts upon. there is a sense of which we can misread pope francis as the liberal that we want him to be. >> so maybe not as revolutionary as the secular media is holding him out. >> at least to that kind of revolution would mean, yes. >> there is another comment that he said. he said it's not necessary to talk about these issues all the time. that comment struck me as a statement about all these things, about homosexuality, abortion, about the role of women.
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we don't need to talk about these things all the time. what does that significantfyify to you. >> that's the most important thing that he felt he said, that the church is a field hospital and the church is understood as a place for healing. if the church is understood as a place of healing of many wounds, we don't focus on every one of them. we focus on the message that the church is a place of love and healing. >> which does refer to that last screen, the thing the church needs more today is the availability to heal wounds. >> exactly. and it can be distracting and distorted if all you're ever looking at is the one sin rather than healing for it. >> so a new view for the pope and his papacy. he makes a lot of headlines in the secular media. thank you for being with us. >> thank you for having me.
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>> the palm oil industry boon in mmalaysia is having a deadly effects on the pigmy elephant. the small elmans ar elephants at an alarming rate. >> take away the people and she's alone. so far the only pigmy elephant at the rescue sanctuary. the expectation is there will be as many 50 injured elephants joining her. lucky for her, but that demand is a worrying threat to the wildlife. the sanctuary was opened by governor. >> you're involved in this, your guilty conscious made you part of it. >> definitely not.
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that's a realization that we cannot live in isolation. i think it's a realization that we should be part of the overall effort. >> reporter: it is still possible tha to see striking wildlife down the river although the chance of seeing an elman is highly unlikely. there are thought to be 200 left. no one knows how muc how many te was. >> for kilometer after kilometer, after kilometer. this is all you see, palm oil trees. it's fruit and seeds are crushed in process, and it's in thousands of product. >> in the air you see the scale. at ground level the trucks rumble buy at relentless predictability.
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sometimes animals are not rushed out, but hurt. and these elephants are thought to have ate bait meant for smaller animals to keep them out of the plantations. there are other threats, too. >> trunks get hurt by hunting senators and they cause horrible injuries. so this sanctuary is for this group of animals. >> reporter: financial support for the sanctuary is welcomed. but eve even those in the palm l industry say in the past they've been part of the problem. >> that report from al jazeera's andrew thomas. coming up next here a new york church takes center stage. where broadway's goes to peace and answers after the curtain call. millions who need assistance now.
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we appreciate you spending time with us tonight. up next is the golden age of hollywood going golden but elsewhere. why l.a.'s mayor has declared a state of emergency for the entertainment industry there. next. ç]
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>> we end this night with a look at the catholic community closer to home. if you're in times square late on saturday night you may see a
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few actors bolting were broadway to a religious mission. some are headed to church, the actor's chapel. likely the only church in the world where a stuntman changes a life and a choir with residents could deliver the faithful the best seats in the house. >> we visited a church in new york city and met some folks you might already know. >> dear father, it is hard for me to put into works what st. malikis meantimes to me. it is where i first took my children to mass. where i would go often between matinee and eave performances, and when i would meet fellow actors i can't imagine broadway without st. maliky.
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god bless. florence henderson. >> it's called the actor's chapel because we're in the midst of the theater community. it had settled around here where a church had already been established. and once it had come here the parish priest responded to the new need, and started servicing the theatrical community. >> i wouldn't actually call it the entertainment chapel because it involved everyone in the industry. >> reporter: times square in 1977 was a disaster. when roger moore arrived here in 1977 he realized he could not keep the church open if the neighborhood didn't change. he would talk to the drawing dealers, the prostitutes, everybody. he talked to everybody and
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worked against the negative element. he said when he first got here the catholic church saved time square. >> you may find at different point of the week the bells play a tune you may be familiar. [♪ music ] >> well with, i moved into the neighborhood back in '82, and i got an apartment down the street. one summer night i heard these bells playing "there is no business like show business." i asked the land lady, i heard bells playing "there is no business like show business." i said what theater is near here. she said no, it's the church down the street. >> you find it ironic that we're playing a show tune at a catholic church. but it's a church where everyone would feel comfortable to walk in to.
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>> a lot of actors are famous for coming here. chris farley used to come here. antonio banderas. >> bob hope was here. >> i'm matt gumley. i was in "mary poppins," beauty and the beast. i've done some tv. >> you might know me from being ed on disney's the lion king. >> i'm luke mannikus, and i've been matilda the musical on broaded way. >> we're the only church in new york and probably anywhere in the world that has 11:00 o'clock mass for performers. >> it satisfies your sunday obligation to attend mass. >> i don't want to get up on sunday morning, no.
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[ laughing ] >> did you get a lot of laughs? >> on saturday night trying to get to the chapel is very stressful. >> i finish the show. i've done this great show. >> are you getting autographs? >> i made a lot of people hopefully very happy in their experience. >> everyone is talking about the show that they saw, and they're, like, this person was amazing, and the show is amazing. >> and people are out having a good time. some of them maybe had one too many drinks. >> clowns to the right of me. jokers to the right. >> yes, we get that the show was amazing, but you should get to where your destination is, and then talk about it. >> just don't get run over. >> crowds everywhere. you just trying to get to church. you're dodging, you're scurrying. >> there are tourists like, click, click. >> we got to go. we got a break. >> that's what i find interesting. it's the trying, it's the trying to get there.
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it's my spiritual struggle. >> my wife is currently in her second battle with cancer. so it's really--it's amazing. what something like this can bring to your life. it's sort of a thing where you don't--you're not aware of it until these times. but i'm keenly aware of it now. >> i pray that everybody who's sick and hopeles homeless, thatt what they need. and everybody who wants to try to be in this show biz, they try their hardest. even if they don't get something, it doesn't mean that they're not good. it just means that they have to
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keep working. >> i think the actor will pray for success in their craft. they're willing to sacrifice so much, and i've seen it. the struggle an actor will be engaged in trying to keep life normal just to be able to pursue this craft is incredible. the dedication. it's impressive. >> there are a lot of people who would say that there is a conflict between the values of the catholic church and what is traditionalcally perceived as the heedennistic lifestyle of show business the old days of actors being considered salacious rum pots is really far gone. most actors in my experience are just real, good, honest, hard working. a lot of them are very spiritual, very religious. >> you have to understand that an actor is involved in a position that john paul ii said
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the actor and the artist were those who best emulate god in his activity of creation. where god took nothing and made it something. so, too, an actor or artist. they seem to create out of nothing something that seems to be their own work. therefore it is quite appropriate that the actor would come to a place of worship. >> and that is america tonight. remember, if you would like comment on any stories you have seen tonight. log on to www.aljazeera.com/america tonight. we'll see you tomorrow.
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>> you're watching al jazeera. i'm jonathan betz. here are our top stories tonight. the time to act on syria is now. that's the singling of secretary of state john kerry in a news conference he emphasize the council should act swiftly on a deal to eliminate syria's chemical weapons. meanwhile, the war has reached a stalemate and the government will call for a cease-fire with rebels. good news mor for mexico, tropical storm manuel has redu reduced to a severe storm.

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