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Religion in the media: A look at recent books and magazines

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  • Religion in the media: A look at recent books and magazines

    The Dallas Morning News
    December 29, 2004, Wednesday

    Religion in the media: A look at recent books and magazines



    [parts omitted]

    Reader's Digest (December)
    --------------------------
    Four touching stories, all tied to the holiday season, are retold in
    "Real People, Real Miracles."

    In "An Unlikely Santa," Marc Howard Wilson tells of his depression
    after leaving a rabbinate in South Carolina and facing long-term
    unemployment.

    He regained his sanity after playing Santa for homeless children.
    "Stumbling across customs and religious boundaries did not concern
    me," and from the experience he realized that "these children were
    God's most fragile gifts to a cold world."

    Another miracle involves an American woman in Paris at Christmas.
    Natalie Garibian Peters, missing her family back home, went to an
    Armenian church. There, she gave up her seat to an older woman. As
    Ms. Peters stood nearby, she was drawn to the woman.

    After the service, they introduced themselves and discovered they
    were related. The older woman was her aunt, part of the Armenian
    diaspora and only temporarily in Paris.

    "Auntie" Arev Kasparian cried that she had "been looking for your
    father for 30 years. I knew you were someone special. I knew it in
    your face." Ms. Peters said: "I thought I was in France to discover
    who I was" but instead, because of "an angel from the past," her
    family was reunited.

    _ Robert Plocheck
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