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1/1/13

Life after the (non) end of the world

21 December 2012 Last updated at 01:56 GMT By Jon Kelly BBC News Magazine, Washington DC Man in gasmask holding "End of the world 2012" sign Despite all the predictions of Mayan apocalypse, the world will probably not end by Saturday morning. How will the believers cope when life carries on?

The clock strikes midnight, the hallowed date arrives and, once again, the apocalypse fails to turn up on schedule.

For such a cataclysmic event, the projected end of the world has come around with surprising regularity throughout history.

Each time a group of believers has been left bewildered at the absence of all-consuming death and devastation.

If they've taking the warnings seriously enough, they will have sold their homes, abandoned earthly civilisation's material trappings and braced themselves for the arrival of a new era.

The latest date to herald widespread alarm is 21 December, which marks the conclusion of the 5,125-year "Long Count" Mayan calendar.

Around the world, precautions are being taken.

Farmer Liu Qiyuan with survival pods that he created and dubbed Noah's Arc in the village of Qiantun, Hebei province, south of Beijing Survival pods built for 21 December in Hebei province, China

Panic-buying of candles has been reported in China's Sichuan province. In Russia, where sales of tinned goods and matches have surged, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev has urged his countryfolk to remain calm.

Dr Geoffrey Braswell University of California, San Diego

The 2012 phenomenon is essentially an accounting problem; a misinterpretation of some very ancient book keeping.

It is based on the Maya calendar, which counts the days since a date in the mythical past. This count reset after the last creation (on or about 11 August, 3114BC). On 21 December, we will reach that same number of days once again, and many now are concerned that a calendrical reset the following day will mean the end of the world.

But it is not even clear that the Maya themselves agreed on this book-keeping issue. Two ancient inscriptions emphasise the importance of the date. But a third focuses on 13 October 4772, the end of an even bigger cycle that cannot happen if a reset occurs in 2012.

This more detailed text predicts that, at an even later date, the great king K'inich Janaab' Pakal will return to Palenque to rule. If this Maya prophesy is true, then the world will not end in 2012 or even 4772, no matter how the ancient calendar functioned.

Authorities in the French Pyrenees are preparing for an influx of believers to the mountain Pic de Bugarach, where rumours have spread that UFOs will rescue human gatherers.

And one doesn't have to belong to a sect to find these predictions compelling. Humankind's ongoing fascination with the apocalypse is evident in mainstream popular culture.

Films like 2012, Armageddon and The Day After Tomorrow all packed out multiplexes by depicting threats of global catastrophe. The Left Behind novels about a "post-rapture" world have reportedly sold more than 70 million copies.

If precedent is any guide, however, 21 December is likely to prove an anti-climax. Since the dawn of civilisation, humans have often been gripped by certainty that the world was about to end.

The Romans panicked at predictions their city would be destroyed in 634 BC. Millennial fears gripped Europe ahead of the year 1000 AD. During the English Civil War, groups like the Fifth Monarchists believed the end was nigh.

More recent apocalypses have panned out in much the same way. Followers of Nostradamus braced themselves for the arrival of the "King of Terror" in "1999 and seven months". US television evangelist Pat Robertson forecast that "something like" a nuclear attack would occur in late 2007.

The California radio preacher Harold Camping set a date for the end of the world no fewer than six times, settling on 22 October 2011 - a day which, historians may recall, was distinguished by an absence of fire and brimstone.

Followers of Harold Camping hand out "end of the world" leaflets Harold Camping revised his predicted date for Judgement Day numerous times

For those who paid heed to their dire warnings, learning that life will in fact carry on as normal might be expected to be a deeply traumatic experience.

Surprisingly, however, groups which predict the end of the world have quite a good record of carrying on after the world is supposed to have ended, says Lorne Dawson, an expert in the sociology of religion at the University of Waterloo.

"The vast majority seem to shrug off the failure of prophecy fairly well," he says.

Of 75 groups identified by Dawson which predicted the apocalypse, all but six remained intact after catastrophe failed to materialise.

Indeed, many have gone on to flourish. Jehovah's Witnesses are viewed as having predicted some form of end several times and yet still have more than seven million followers.

The Seventh Day Adventists, who have an estimated 17 million members, grew out of the Millerites, whose failed apocalyptic forecast in 1844 became known as the Great Disappointment.

William Miller, a Baptist preacher in the US, believed Jesus would return to Earth in 1844He drew on prophecies in the Book of Daniel (especially chapter 8:14 "Unto two thousand and three hundred days; then shall the sanctuary be cleansed")Tens of thousands of followers waited in vain on 22 October 1844 - some having given away their money and possessions"It was a bitter disappointment that fell upon the little flock whose faith had been so strong and whose hope had been so high," wrote follower Ellen West, "but we were surprised that we felt so free in the Lord, and were so strongly sustained by His strength and grace"The seminal study into this phenomenon came in the 1956 text When Prophecy Fails, in which psychologist Leon Festinger recounted how he and his students infiltrated a group who believed the world was about to end with members being rescued by a flying saucer.

When both the apocalypse and the UFO failed to materialise, Festinger found, the leader declared that the small circle of believers had "spread so much light" that God had spared the planet. Her followers responded by proselytising the good news among non-believers in what Festinger saw as a classic case of cognitive dissonance.

In a similar exercise, psychiatrist Simon Dein spent time with a small community of Lubavitch Hassidic Jews in Stamford Hill, north London. For years many Lubavitchers had believed their spiritual leader Menechem Mendel Schneerson, known as the rebbe, was the messiah.

According to their theology, he would herald the end of civilisation and usher in a new age. Their faith was tested, however, when the rebbe passed away in New York in 1994.

"I was there at the time he died," says Dein. "They were crying. They were mourning. There was a great sense of denial - he couldn't die. Would he reveal himself?"

But, Dein says, these Lubavitchers did not give up their belief system. Very quickly, they took up the idea he was still alive and could not be seen, or that he would somehow rise from the dead.

"There are very heated tensions between those who believe he's alive and those who believe he's dead, but his death doesn't seem to have diminished the number of people in the group," Dein says.

Lubavitch Hassidic Jews in New York light candles on the anniversary of the death of their leader A candle in memory of Menechem Mendel Schneerson

According to Dawson, the 200 Lubavitcher families in Stamford Hill had the most crucial trait necessary to keep a group together after a failed apocalypse - a strong sense of community.

"If the group itself has been pretty cohesive, it's been free of schism and dissent, they can get through," he says.

"In 1988 there was a really big apocalyptic scenario. I was 14 and in my freshman year at high school in Amarillo, Texas," says Jason Boylett, author of Pocket Guide to the Apocalypse.

"A former Nasa scientist and mathematician called Edgar Whisenant had predicted the world was going to end in September based on calculations from the Bible. He sent his pamphlets out to hundreds of thousands of churches. My Southern Baptist pastor talked about it from the pulpit.

"I spent that summer really pretty scared, because people who had authority our our lives said this is something that might happen in September. I was afraid this was going to be my last summer. When the dates came round I went to bed thinking this is going to be the last time I see my parents.

"Afterwards, obviously, I was relieved. But it really disillusioned me. I knew then I couldn't always trust my pastor.

"I'm still a practicing Christian and I'm not walking around psychologically wounded. But since then my religious belief has been marked with a lot of questioning, a lot of doubt and a lot of cynicism."

Also important, he believes, is the presence of a decisive leadership who can offer a swift explanation.

"If rationalisation comes quickly, the group can withstand ridicule from outside," he adds.

Some leaders, such as Camping on several occasions, simply offer a new date for the apocalypse. Others apologise to their members for getting the scheduling wrong.

Tragically, some take more drastic action. The bodies of 39 members of the Heaven's Gate cult were found in 1997. They had taken their own lives in the belief they would reach a UFO following the Hale-Bopp comet.

Most, however, find a peaceful way to adjust.

"When you have invested so much in a belief, you have a very strong interest in salvaging something from it," says Philip Jenkins, a historian of religion at Baylor University in Texas.

For Jenkins, the appeal of leaders preaching the impending apocalypse down the ages has always been about far more than the specifics of their prophecies.

"It's a kind of rejection of the order of the world as it is," he says. "It's to do with imagining something far better. After it becomes apparent that the new order isn't going to come, there are ways of adjusting the message."

For true believers, the saga is only just beginning when the clock hands reach 12.

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27/12/12

Two dead after head-on road crash

24 December 2012 Last updated at 07:29 GMT A man and woman have died and two people have been injured after a two-car crash in the Scottish Borders on Sunday afternoon.

The collision happened on the A697 at Carfraemill at about 14.55.

A man and woman in their 50s were rescued from one of the cars but the woman died at the scene and the man died later in hospital.

A man and woman in their 40s escaped from the other car and were taken to hospital with multiple injuries.


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25/12/12

Travel disruption after heavy rain

21 December 2012 Last updated at 13:21 GMT Landslip between Gleneagles and Perth Trains were affected by a landslip between Gleneagles and Perth Heavy rain has caused flooding and travel disruption in parts of Scotland, with Tayside and Fife the worst affected areas.

There are currently 19 flood warnings in force across the country.

Police said numerous roads were closed in the Tayside area, including the A92 eastbound from Dundee to Arbroath.

Train services have also been disrupted between between Gleneagles and Perth following a landslip. ScotRail said engineers were assessing the situation.

All trains between Edinburgh and Perth will now end their journey at Ladybank, with buses operating between there and Perth.

Services between Edinburgh and Inverness are being diverted via Dundee, adding extra time to journeys.

Serco NorthLink Ferries said that sailings between the Northern Isles and Aberdeen had been cancelled due to adverse weather conditions, possibly until Sunday.

Fife Fire and Rescue said it had received calls, mainly from the north east of the area, asking for help to stop flood water getting into houses and to rescue people from trapped cars.

At about 03:00 a taxi driver was rescued from his cab on the A923 in Coupar Angus, when flood water had reached his doorsills.

Get frequent travel updates on BBC Radio Scotland - 92 to 95 FM and 810 MWDo you know of a problem? Call the travel hotline on 08000 929588 (call only if it is safe to do so)A number of rivers have also burst their banks, including the river Eden in Cupar and the Leet in Coldstream, in the Borders.

The Met Office has issued an amber warning for heavy and persistent rain for Stirlingshire, Perthshire and Angus - and a yellow warning for parts of central and eastern Scotland.

Portmoak Primary in Perth and Kinross has been closed. The school itself is unaffected, but several access roads have been flooded.

Angus Council has distributed sand bags and flood barriers to residents living alongside the South Esk River in Brechin.

At its peak, the river was about 5in from breaking its banks, but it is understood that the level has since dropped.

The authority said there had also been flooding to the playgrounds, car park and entrances at Glamis Primary school, but the school is open.

Dundee City Council said it had received a number of reports of flooding and had supplied sandbags where requested. It has been working with Tayside Police and has provided signage for road closures.

Car in flooding at Strachan near Banchory Flooding at Strachan, near Banchory, was among the problems motorists faced on Friday

It is the second day of heavy rain, with up to 55mm falling in some places on Thursday.

Fire crews had to pump water from the main A9 route to and from the Highlands on Thursday after heavy rain running off the hills closed the road for several hours.

The weather also led to ferry cancellations to the Northern Isles.

BBC Scotland weather presenter Judith Ralston said there had been persistent rain across eastern areas.

"Atlantic weather systems would normally sweep across the country fairy quickly and clear," she explained.

"However, at the moment there is a stationary area of high pressure over Scandinavia which is preventing bands of rain from clearing from Scotland.

"Instead, it is slowing them up across eastern areas, where they are becoming static, taking much longer to pass by."

She added that the next weather system was due to sweep in later on Friday night and during Saturday.

var timeObject = new Object();timeObject.strDayName = 'Friday';timeObject.strHour = '13';timeObject.strMinute = '58';timeObject.strDoM = '21';timeObject.strMoY = '12';timeObject.strYear = '2012';timeObject.strShow = ""; To access more information, from your mobile, visit the BBC Weather and BBC Travel News sites.


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20/12/12

India unveils measures after rape

19 December 2012 Last updated at 08:01 GMT Anti-rape protests in Delhi on Tuesday 18 Dec 2012 Protests have been held in Delhi over the attack, which has caused outrage The Indian government has announced a series of measures to make the capital safer for women after Sunday night's gang rape of a 23-year-old student.

Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde said there would be more police night patrols, and all bus drivers and their assistants would be subject to checks.

There has been outrage in India after the student and a male friend were attacked on a bus.

The woman remains in a critical condition, doctors say.

Four people, including the bus driver, have been arrested. Police say they are looking for two more people.

On Tuesday night, the chief of the ruling Congress party, Sonia Gandhi, visited the hospital where the student is fighting for her life.

Ms Gandhi later said that the "strictest possible measures" should be taken to prevent such incidents.

Mr Shinde was forced by angry MPs in the Rajya Sabha, the upper house of parliament, to make a statement for the second time in as many days on Wednesday morning.

"Private buses, when not in use, must be parked with their owners and the photo identification of the driver and staff of every bus would have to be displayed, and the police would enforce this," he said.

The bus which was used for Sunday night's crime had dark tinted glass. Mr Shinde said "buses with dark windows and curtains would be impounded".

Earlier in the day, Mr Shinde held a meeting with the top officials of the Delhi police.

Protests continue

Meanwhile, protests have continued for the second day in Delhi, with many accusing the government of not doing enough to stop crimes against women.

Women MPs from the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) held a demonstration outside parliament while hundreds of activists and students shouted slogans outside the Delhi police headquarters.

Police used water canons to disperse a large group of protesters outside Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit's home.

The police were also criticised by the Delhi High Court, which asked them to give a report on the incident in two days.

"How did the bus cross five police check points without anybody stopping it?" the judges asked. "Those responsible have to be punished," they warned.

The incident has caused outrage across the country and lawmakers from all parties have expressed their horror.

Angry MPs have demanded the death penalty for the rapists, and protests and candlelight vigils have been held in the capital.

The woman and her friend boarded the bus in Munirka area and were on their way to Dwarka in south-west Delhi.

They were returning after watching a film in a shopping centre in south Delhi, police said.


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