Stormkhan
Disturbingly familiar
- Joined
- May 28, 2003
- Messages
- 8,687
I'd assume the HSE would have to attend and investigate because of the seriousness of the accident.No, it's guess when the HSE are going to turn up?
I'd assume the HSE would have to attend and investigate because of the seriousness of the accident.No, it's guess when the HSE are going to turn up?
It is extremely rare for the HSE to rock up following such an incident. If there is a fatality they will always be there, but like a lot of government bodies they are under resourced and rarely have the time to turn up even when a member of the public is injured.I'd assume the HSE would have to attend and investigate because of the seriousness of the accident.
"The priest tried to protect the nuns of the convent when embers lit up in the basin that was used [for the fire] and that ultimately caused his death. Apparently a flammable substance had been used to start the fire. [The Easter Vigil] was held inside the convent," a source told El Heraldo de Aragón.
The well-loved clergyman - who was known as the "rock priest" for his love of guitar-driven music - was presiding over the "blessing of the fire". The ritual is usually held during the Holy Saturday Mass and includes the lighting of the paschal candle. The candle then remains lit for 50 days until the celebration of Pentecost, which marks the descent of the Holy Spirit on the Apostles.
The "rock priest", who served at the Clinical Hospital of Zaragosa in addition to his parish, had composed a number of songs and released three albums over the course of his career. One of his songs "A tu aire" sparked controversey when it was released in 2015 due to a video clip showing him weaing angel wings, shouldering a guitar - the only thing covering his genitals. He was also a talk show host on television.
Tributes have lit up social media since the tragedy. One friend wrote: "He was a very vital and very loved person." The local archbishop released a statement saying: "'It is with pain that we communicate that this morning the priest Javi Sánchez has died. We pray for his eternal rest."
Awful incident. I've always wondered why, given the flammable nature of flames, churches have not set people on fire before or burned down more regularly.Catholic priest burns to death after spark ignites robes in Easter candle ceremony
Javier Sánchez, known locally as the 'rock priest' for his love of music, erupted in flames when a bowl containing embers set his vestments alight at a convent in the Spanish city of Zaragoza
A simple candle spark then made contact with his vestment and the blaze spread rapidly, leaving him with 50 per cents burns all over his body. He spent four days in intensive care before tragically passing away from multiple organ failure.
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I've been much more wary (when cooking for eg) after this incident;Awful incident. I've always wondered why, given the flammable nature of flames, churches have not set people on fire before or burned down more regularly.
I'm much more wary about life in general as my age advances and my faculties decline. Still I manage to burn my fingers when doing hobby related stuff. Flames and hot stuff (not of the female variety - although I'm still not sure in that regard) are just too dangerous to meddle with, I've decided.I've been much more wary (when cooking for eg) after this incident;
https://forums.forteana.org/index.p...ng-today-just-now.57514/page-469#post-2267069
Yup, there are always candles burning. This church also had an ember bowl which to over-cautious old me sounds like an accident waiting to happen.Awful incident. I've always wondered why, given the flammable nature of flames, churches have not set people on fire before or burned down more regularly.
St Thomas Becket Catholic Primary School was found guilty of health and safety failings by a jury at Southwark Crown Court earlier in June.
In December 2019 the boy, then aged seven, had been in a line of pupils each holding a lit candle in Our Lady of the Annunciation Church in Bingham Road, Croydon, when his homemade sheep costume caught fire, the court heard.
Yes we do but churches in particular seem to get left alone.And yet -
We get many stories about 'Health and Safety Gone Mad' in the tabloids when questions are asked about common sense safety issues.
Not really. The most obvious sign is the amount of churchyards that have removed all their tombstones or laid them flat. Another, less obvious, sign are tenebrae services that no longer end in near complete darkness.Yes we do but churches in particular seem to get left alone.
I'm thinking more of the flammable issue and all the trip hazards.Not really. The most obvious sign is the amount of churchyards that have removed all their tombstones or laid them flat. Another, less obvious, sign are tenebrae services that no longer end in near complete darkness.
The minimum height for a step is 4''/100mm (although I wouldn't put one in less than 5'') and I quite often see them lower, especially when going into shops on high streets that are on a slope (as one side is much lower than the other).I'm thinking more of the flammable issue and all the trip hazards.
Charities won't even accept soft furniture if it isn't labelled appropriately and you can see why. I'm also glad that the days of the chip pan are long gone, the dire consequences of the misuse of such I had to see many times, including what was the shadow of a pair of young twins (who hid in a cupboard when the chip pan caught fire), and suffocated.Here in the UK all children's clothing, including fancy dress, and all furnishing and bedding fabrics on sale must be flame-resistant. This means the items won't easily catch alight. People shouldn't be dying in flames.
One assumes the same doesn't apply to Spanish ecclesiastical wear. Even with the possibility of exposure to church candles and ember bowls.
There's a scene in The Sopranos where one of the Boss's mistresses wears a nylon kimono while cooking. It catches fire and she runs round the kitchen screaming.
I've done similar, brr, luckily coming to no harm. Scary.
Chip pans, yup. The ex tried to kill us all several times with those.Charities won't even accept soft furniture if it isn't labelled appropriately and you can see why. I'm also glad that the days of the chip pan are long gone, the dire consequences of the misuse of such I had to see many times, including what was the shadow of a pair of young twins (who hid in a cupboard when the chip pan caught fire), and suffocated.