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Feeding the multitudes.


London

(ENI)--John Sentamu, Britain's first black archbishop, chose to offer refreshment to the whole congregation, instead of providing a hot meal for a few notables, following his enthronement scheduled at York Minster Coordinates:

York Minster is the largest Gothic cathedral in northern Europe and is situated in the city of York in Northern England.
 for Nov. 30.

The Anglican archbishop's spokesperson Martin Shepherd told Ecumenical News International that "snackpacks" had been ordered from clothes and food retailer Marks and Spencer, for up to 3,000 people after the service.

Mr. Shepherd noted: "It is the tradition to provide a lunch or dinner for a few invited guests after an enthronement. The archbishop wanted to continue this tradition of providing hospitality, but to extend it to everybody rather than the select few."

The appointment of the Uganda-born Archbishop Sentamu, 86, to the second most senior post in the Church of England Church of England: see England, Church of. , has provoked some racist abuse. He told an interviewer on BBC's Today program that he had received hate mail, some smeared smear  
v. smeared, smear·ing, smears

v.tr.
1.
a. To spread or daub with a sticky, greasy, or dirty substance.

b.
 in excrement excrement /ex·cre·ment/ (eks´kri-mint)
1. feces.

2. excretion (2).


ex·cre·ment
n.
Waste matter or any excretion cast out of the body, especially feces.
. While he found this distressing, he realized that it came from a tiny minority for whom he now prayed. He had also received countless letters of support.

Archbishop Sentamu went to Britain to study theology in 1974 after it became impossible for him to function as a High Court judge in Uganda following a 1971 coup that brought Idi Amin to power as a military dictator dictator, originally a Roman magistrate appointed to rule the state in times of emergency; in modern usage, an absolutist or autocratic ruler who assumes extraconstitutional powers. From 501 B.C. until the abolition of the office in 44 B.C., Rome had 88 dictators. .
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Title Annotation:WORLD BRIEF
Publication:Anglican Journal
Date:Dec 1, 2005
Words:218
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