Xmas mass only for church members - German lawmakers
BERLIN (Reuters) - Some senior German politicians have caused a stir by suggesting that only citizens who pay church tax should be allowed to attend Midnight Mass on Christmas Eve.
Worried that regular churchgoers cannot find a seat due to the popularity of the traditional Christmas service, Thomas Volk, a top member of Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives in Baden-Wuerttemberg, said the church should be selective.
"I support the idea of church services on Dec. 24 being open only to those people who pay church tax," Volk, from the predominantly Catholic southern state, told top-selling Bild newspaper this week.
Martin Lindner, a member of the liberal Free Democrats (FDP) in Berlin, also expressed alarm at the lack of places in church and told Bild that parish members should get tickets entitling them to the best seats.
Germany's Catholic and Protestant churches get most of their funding from revenues collected by the tax office. Germans who officially leave their church are exempt from the church tax.
But the idea hit a storm of protest from church figures.
"The idea that only parish members should get a place in the church on Christmas Eve and that other people should be excluded is absurd," the head of Germany's EKD Protestant Church, Wolfgang Huber, told the Hannoversche Allgemeine Zeitung.
© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved
One Year Later
Mumbai's police paraded past some of the city's landmarks in a show of strength as the city marked the first anniversary of militant raids that killed 166 people Slideshow | Full Coverage
Liberhan Commission Report
The government published a long awaited report, recently leaked, accusing BJP leaders of a role in the 1992 destruction of the Babri mosque in Ayodhya. Full Article











