Ronnie Wood, guitarist for The Rolling Stones, seen visiting the Western Wall in Jerusalem's Old City on Tuesday, June 3, 2014, a day before the band's concert in Tel Aviv. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash 90
Chuck Leavell, keyboard player touring with the Rolling Stones, is photographed while placing a note in the Western Wall in Jerusalem's Old City on Tuesday, June 3, 2014, a day before the band's concert in Tel Aviv. Photo by Hadas Parush/Flash 90
Charlie Watts, drummer for The Rolling Stones, seen visiting the Western Wall in Jerusalem's Old City on Tuesday, June 3, 2014, a day before the band's concert in Tel Aviv. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash 90
Charlie Watts with Avishai Nemirovsky (left) and Ziv Shorkend at the Western Wall (photo credit: Avishai Nemirovsky)
Ronnie Wood, guitarist for The Rolling Stones, seen visiting the Western Wall in Jerusalem's Old City on Tuesday, June 3, 2014, a day before the band's concert in Tel Aviv (Photo credit: Yonatan Sindel/Flash 90)
Ronnie Wood, guitarist for The Rolling Stones, seen visiting the Western Wall in Jerusalem's Old City on Tuesday, June 3, 2014, a day before the band's concert in Tel Aviv (Photo credit: Yonatan Sindel/Flash 90)
Charlie Watts, drummer for The Rolling Stones, seen visiting the Western Wall in Jerusalem's Old City on Tuesday, June 3, 2014, a day before the band's concert in Tel Aviv (Photo credit: Yonatan Sindel/Flash 90)
Chuck Leavell, keyboard player touring with the Rolling Stones, seen visiting the Western Wall in Jerusalem's Old City on Tuesday, June 3, 2014, a day before the band's concert in Tel Aviv (Photo credit: Hadas Parush/Flash 90)
With their gig in Tel Aviv less than a day away, some of the members of the Rolling Stones took some time off Tuesday afternoon to visit that essential landmark for any foreign visitor — Jerusalem’s Western Wall.
Guitarist Ronnie Wood, drummer Charlie Watts and touring keyboard player Chuck Leavell were all at hand to witness Judaism’s most sacred spot; Leavell was even photographed wearing a kipa and placing a note at the Kotel — as is customary.
Mick Jagger evidently took a jaunt along Israel’s Mediterranean coast, paying a visit to the Roman ruins at Caesarea. Jagger posted a photo standing among the ruins with the Caesarea power plant in the background.
Jagger (who should know his concert halls) calls the ancient Herodian theater at the Roman-era port an amphitheater — a term which classically refers to a fully circular venue like the one Pink Floyd performed at live in Pompeii in 1972. (Traditional classical theaters, like the one at Caesarea, are semicircular; we’ll forgive him.)
The Stones touched down in Israel Monday night aboard their private plane, festooned with the band’s name and logo. The visit marks the band’s first in Israel, ahead of a much-anticipated concert for 50,000 fans Wednesday night at Tel Aviv’s Yarkon Park.
The band arrived with a 70-person entourage, at least 100 more technical and other staff, and some 1,000 tourists who flew in Monday to attend the Wednesday concert. The arrivals were dubbed the Rolling Stones “airlift” by Israeli television news anchors.
Tickets were still available for the concert Tuesday, at NIS 700 apiece. At least 46,000 tickets had been sold so far. Doors are set to open on Wednesday at 5:45 p.m., with the band onstage at 9:15 p.m.
Nací en Madrid en el año 1.948. Estudié durante nueve años en los colegios de la Compañía de Jesús de Areneros y del Recuerdo de Madrid.
Licenciado en derecho por la Facultad de Derecho de la Universidad Complutense de Madrid, estudié también los dos primeros cursos de Ingeniero de Minas del plan 1964 en la E.T.S.I. de Minas de Madrid.
Además de mi lengua materna, el castellano, leo fluentemente el portugués, francés, italiano, y latín. Tengo nociones de inglés, griego y hebreo bíblico.
Desde muy joven ingresé en la Familia de Almas fundada por el Prof. Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira, habiendo sido fundador y presidente de la Sociedad Cultural Covadonga – TFP.
Como miembro de la Familia de Almas fundada por el Prof. Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira, asumo totalmente el análisis filosófico-histórico de su obra cumbre: el libro Revolución y Contra-Revolución, síntesis de su pensamiento en esta área, y punto de partida para el apostolado lego del Prof. Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira y de toda la Familia de Almas por él fundada. Con sus propias palabras diremos: «Revolução e Contra-Revolução não é senão uma aplicação da Doutrina Católica a certas situações históricas». En la médula de su pensamiento están: El Magisterio Tradicional de la Iglesia y Santo Tomás: «Sou tomista convicto. O aspecto da Filosofia pelo qual mais me interesso é a Filosofia da História. Em função deste encontro o ponto de junção entre os dois gêneros de atividade em que me venho dividindo ao longo de minha vida: o estudo e a ação. O ensaio em que condenso o essencial de meu pensamento explica o sentido de minha atuação ideológica. Trata-se do livro Revolução e Contra-Revolução» (cfr. Auto-retrato filosófico de Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira. Revista “Catolicismo” (http://www.catolicismo.com.br), outubro de 1996, N° 550. Editora Padre Belchior de Pontes Ltda. Sáo Paulo – Brasil. Cfr. También en el sitehttp://www.pliniocorreadeoliveira.info/).
Este Blog «Las Españas», que considero una forma de apostolado lego, copia las noticias de modo indicativo, no exhaustivo, que señalan en qué estado está España, por eso prácticamente el noticiario seleccionado se dedica a España, aunque a menudo reproducimos noticias que no son de España, pero que conforme el caso pueden afectar al rumbo histórico de España.
¿Por qué «Las Españas»? Fue el título de nuestros Reyes, Reyes de todas Las Españas, desde los Reyes Católicos hasta el Rey Carlos II último rey de la Casa de Austria. Representa el respeto a la diversidad regional.
Finalmente diremos que ese apostolado tiene como ideal el enunciado por San Luis María Grignion de Montfort en su «Tratado de la Verdadera Devoción a la Santíssima Virgen». «Ut adveniat regnum tuum, adveniat regnum Mariae» (op. cit., Vozes, Petrópolis, 1984, 13ª ed., no 217, pp. 210-211).
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