Religion news in brief
Supporters of fired Atlanta fire chief rally in state Capitol
ATLANTA (AP) - Supporters of fired Atlanta Fire Chief Kelvin Cochran packed Georgia's Capitol Rotunda to protest what they consider unjust persecution he has suffered for expressing his religious beliefs.
Mayor Kasim Reed (kah-SEEM') suspended and then fired Cochran after learning he had self-published a book that described homosexuality as a perversion.
At Tuesday's rally, Cochran said his termination sent a message to Bible-believing Christians that "you'd better keep your mouth shut or you'll be fired."
Cochran said he was given approval to publish his book by the city's ethics officer, but Mayor Reed has said the officer never granted the approval. Reed said Cochran was fired for poor judgment, not for his faith, and for leaving the city vulnerable to discrimination lawsuits.
Cochran told supporters he didn't discriminate against anyone.
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Dexter King: Ownership of Bible, peace prize is only issue
ATLANTA (AP) - One of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s sons has declined to say whether his father's 1964 Nobel Peace Prize and traveling Bible would be sold if an Atlanta judge rules they belong to the civil rights icon's estate.
Dexter Scott King spoke to reporters after a hearing in a legal dispute that has pitted King's two sons against his daughter.
King's estate includes Martin Luther King III and Bernice King. The two brothers voted last year to ask a judge to order their sister to surrender the Bible and Nobel Peace Prize so it can be sold to a private buyer.
Bernice said in February that her brothers' plan to sell two of their father's most cherished items was unthinkable.
Dexter said Tuesday that the goal of the lawsuit is to transfer the items to the estate's possession, and that their fate would be decided later.
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Pope backs search for wartime truth in Sri Lanka
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) - Pope Francis has repeated his calls for reconciliation and justice to Sri Lanka.
As he did upon arrival, Francis reiterated at a Mass on Wednesday that the Indian Ocean island nation can't fully heal from a quarter-century of brutal civil war without pursuing the truth about abuses that were committed.
At the rally, Francis canonized Sri Lanka's first saint. The Rev. Joseph Vaz was a 17th century Indian missionary who revived the faith in Sri Lanka during a time of anti-Catholic persecution by Dutch colonists, who were Protestant Calvinists
Some 70 percent of Sri Lankans are Buddhist, another 13 percent are Hindu and some 10 percent are Muslim. Catholics make up less than 7 percent of the population.
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Pakistan cleric offers prayers for Charlie Hebdo attackers
PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) - A hard-line cleric in northwest Pakistan has led a memorial service for the two brothers who attacked the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo in Paris, praising their assault.
Pir Mohammad Chishti, who runs a religious seminary in the city of Peshawar (peh-SHAH'-wahr), led the prayers Tuesday. About 40 people attended, with some carrying banners condemning the magazine. They chanted praise for Said Kouachi (sah-EED' koo-AH'-shee) and Cherif Kouachi (sheh-REEF' koo-AH'-shee), who massacred 12 people in the newspaper attack last week and were later killed by police.
Charlie Hebdo often lampooned religions, including Islam by drawing cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad. Such depictions are considered blasphemous by many Muslims.
Chishti told reporters at the prayer ceremony that anyone who commits blasphemy should be killed.
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Massachusetts doctor who beat Ebola heading back to Liberia
WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) - The Massachusetts doctor who beat Ebola says he'll return this Thursday to Liberia, where he contracted the deadly virus.
Dr. Rick Sacra (SAY'-krah) says he'll spend several weeks helping overworked colleagues in the missionary hospital where he worked for years, and then return to the U.S. next month.
The 52-year-old Sacra expects to mostly treat patients with malaria and health issues like high blood pressure and diabetes at ELWA, a hospital in the Liberian capital of Monrovia that is run by Serving In Mission, a North Carolina-based Christian organization.
Sacra says he won't be working directly with Ebola patients but might be asked to help from time to time, since doctors say he's now immune.
Sacra told reporters, "Thank God I'm through it." But he said he has no interest in testing his immunity and promised to follow all the necessary Ebola safety protocols.