You are viewing a single comment's thread.

view the rest of the comments →

cantsleepawink ago

The Sisters of Mercy - Dominion Mother Russia


Sisters of Mercy

Constitution

The Sisters of Mercy are constituted as religious and charitable organizations in a number of countries. Mercy International Association is a registered charity in the Republic of Ireland.[5] In the United Kingdom, The Union of the Sisters of Mercy of Great Britain is a registered charity, and in 2006–2007 had a gross income of £5.5 million.

Controversies

On May 20, 2009, the institute was condemned in an Irish government report known as the Ryan Report, the work of the Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse. The Sisters of Mercy were named as the chief among the institutes under whose care girls "endured frequent assaults and humiliation designed to make them feel worthless ... personal and family denigration was widespread"

Related:

On London Goth music scene, allegations of satanism, and more synchronicities - weird occult stuff

cantsleepawink ago

Did you notice the Arab and Isis references in that video? Okay...

Temple of Love (extended) [HQ] Sisters of Mercy


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sisters_of_Mercy

Under the insistence of the record company the band re-recorded their early single "Temple of Love" with Ofra Haza on additional vocals

Ofra Haza

Bat-Sheva Ofra Haza-Ashkenazi was an Israeli singer, actress and Grammy Award-nominee recording artist, commonly known as "The Israeli Madonna",[1] or "Madonna of the East".

Ofra Haza died on February 23, 2000, at the age of 42, of AIDS-related pneumonia.

her husband believed Haza became infected because of a blood transfusion she received in a hospital following a miscarriage.

Can you read between the lines ? >>>

Ofra Haza: Madonna of the dark soul

Ten years after her death, do her final recordings answer any questions?

The day Ofra Haza died was actually the second time Israel had been plunged into a state of mourning for her.

For many Israelis, it was hard to detect "God's will" in the manner of Haza's eventual passing. Ten years ago, the news that she had died, aged 42, as a result of Aids-related illness, belied everything Israel thought it knew about her. Throughout the 1980s and 90s, she was almost a wholesome mirror image of the kind of star Madonna was in the west. "She kept a clean image," remembers Isthar Ashdoth, a producer and musician who worked with her. "You never saw a picture of her with a man or any dirty gossip. For her, it was all about the voice."

While Israel scratched its head, visiting British pirate DJ Grant Goddard happened upon one of Haza's new songs and proceeded to set off a remarkable domino effect. Over at the offices of the London indie label GlobeStyle, Ben Mandelson heard the song and set about finding out more. "We contacted her label in Israel and said this is an amazing record. Can we release it? And they said, 'Are you sure? But what about all the Eurovision stuff, all the great pop stuff?' And we said, 'No thank you. We'd like the Yemenite one, please.'"


On October 5th : Goth legends The Sisters of Mercy return to Israel for an October concert