16 Articles
16 Articles
After an amok run at a Graz Gymnasium, representatives from church and politics came to the Vienna Cathedral for a memorial service on Thursday evening. The official state mourning ended with this, but the wounds would remain, it was said in the sermon
With a memorial service in Vienna's St. Stephen's Cathedral, the three-day state storm came to an end in Austria after the rampage of Graz.
Three days after the rampage at a high school in Graz with ten fatalities, representatives from the church and politics came to St. Stephen's Cathedral on Thursday evening for a memorial service. Josef Grünwidl, the administrator of the archdiocese of Vienna, donated the words of welcome. Although the state storm ended on Thursday after the one-hour Mass, "but the wounds that the terrible rampage [...] ripped remain," Grünwidl said at the beginn…
The Vienna Philharmonic's Summer Night Concert is usually a lighthearted and cheerful affair. The weather on Friday would have been perfect, thanks to mild temperatures and a cloudless sky. This year, however, a shadow hung over the evening, as the classical music event was still noticeably and audibly affected by the Graz massacre.
With a funeral service in Vienna's St. Stephen's Cathedral, Austria honored the victims of the Graz massacre on June 12, ending three days of national mourning. The service was led by Archbishop Franz Lackner, president of the Austrian Bishops' Conference. He was joined in prayer by Bishop Wilhelm Krautwaschl of Graz, Evangelical Bishop Michael Chalupka, Orthodox Metropolitan Arsenius (Kardamakis), and President of the Islamic Community Ümit Vur…
With a wreath laying and the prayer of mourning in the Graz mosque, representatives of the Islamic community commemorated the amok victims. And: The other funerals.
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