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Pope Francis ‘on the right track’

Pope Francis greets the faithful as he leaves St. Peter's square at the end of his weekly audience on April 10.

Pope Francis greets the faithful as he leaves St. Peter’s square at the end of his weekly audience on April 10.

Editor’s note: Michael D’Antonio is the author of “Mortal Sins, Sex, Crime and the Era of Catholic Scandal.” He is a former religion writer for Newsday.

(CNN) — Thirty days of signs and signals have revealed to the world in Francis I, a pope who seems eager to earn the title pontiff, or bridge-builder. Beginning with his choice of a name, which evokes the beloved image of St. Francis of Assisi, the former cardinal of Buenos Aires, Jorge Mario Bergoglio, put the world on notice that change was afoot by forgoing the fancy red slippers and ermine stole favored by other popes.

Since then he has shown a remarkable common touch in his encounters with the public and greater sensitivity to others than the man who came before him.

Michael D'Antonio

Michael D’Antonio

Try as he did, Francis’ immediate predecessor, Benedict XVI, never looked comfortable in his own skin, let alone in pastoral contact with others. Clad in his ornate robes, he seemed to keep the world at arm’s length in a way that betrayed his long service as Rome’s “Rottweiler” (a nickname he received from the press) in charge of disciplining those who deviated from doctrine.

While personally warmer, the pope before Benedict, John Paul II, was stern when it came to religious matters and approached the world with an Us vs. Them mindset. As the church was rocked by a seemingly endless number of sex abuse scandals — thousands of child victims and systematic cover-ups by the hierarchy — he blamed secular society, especially the media, and capitalistic materialism.

Pope Francis tasks cardinals with studying reform of Catholic Church

In contrast with John Paul and Benedict, Francis doesn’t seem capable of greeting anyone without a big, sincere smile and whenever given the choice between clerical privilege and everyday human experience, he opts for the human.

This was demonstrated most clearly as he visited a jail during Holy Week to symbolically wash the feet of a dozen people who represented the apostles. Among them were two women and two Muslims. Their presence, and Francis’s ease with them, dismayed traditionalists who recoiled at the sight of females and non-Catholics being included in the ritual. It thrilled those who hunger for a more accessible and inclusive church.

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The survivors of clerical abuse, who I have come to know during three years of writing my book “Mortal Sins,” hope that Francis will bring real change. However, they have been discouraged by 30 years of church evasions and counterattacks and are understandably wary.

Tough-minded evaluators, they criticize Francis’ record on abuse in Argentina. There he was among many of the world’s Catholic bishops — fully 25% — who failed to meet a deadline for establishing policies to deal with complaints and priests who were accused, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Victims also wait for Francis to demonstrate that he will discipline offenders and reveal their records. “We don’t think statements make kids any safer,” SNAP leader Barbara Blaine told me this week. “Unless he makes kids safer, he’s not doing his job.”

Blaine’s “show-me” attitude is echoed by her SNAP colleague Peter Isely, who was sexually abused when he attended a Catholic boarding school in Wisconsin. Isely said he admires the new man’s style and sees, in his personality, reason for hope.

Vatican seeks to rebrand its relationship with science

“St. Francis was the single greatest reformer in the history of the Catholic Church,”‘ noted Isely. “My favorite quote by St. Francis is, `Start by doing what’s necessary; then do what’s possible; and suddenly you are doing the impossible.’ Confronting and reforming the church’s global system of child sex abuse and cover-up, that is doing what is necessary. If Pope Francis does that, who knows what’s possible? Better yet, what’s impossible.”

Jeffrey Anderson, the attorney most responsible for the waves of litigation that have revealed the church’s secrets on abusive priests, is even more optimistic. Regarded by some as the most dreaded enemy of institutional Catholicism, Anderson told me, “This pope has already demonstrated in action and words a humility we haven’t seen before. I see that as revolutionary and it is in direct contrast with the hubris that was the source of the abuse crisis. It gives me hope that he can, if he chooses to, go against the power structure and fundamentally change things. For today I have hope like I never had.”

Although I am also skeptical of church leaders and well aware of the hierarchy’s long-standing failure on the abuse issue, Francis’ first 30 days have led me to agree with Anderson when it comes to the new pope’s personality. This is a shift for me, and I make it tentatively, because like all Catholics and former Catholics, I know we are susceptible to the influence of church stagecraft. We want to believe, and that desire has been exploited too often in the past.

If Francis makes the changes that the church must make to end the sex abuse crisis, it will happen because he grasps and wields the power of his office. As a cardinal, he was bound by his oath of obedience to “go along.” As pope, he is the one who makes the rules and requires others to obey. What if one of those requirements included an open, transparent and serious program to make children safe and heal the trauma of the past 30 years?

Pope to Vatican: ‘Act decisively’ on sex abuse cases

Many of history’s transformational figures have been men who, when they finally achieved power, used it in surprising ways.

Theodore Roosevelt, son of wealth and privilege, became the trust-busting enemy of corporate monopolists. Southerner Lyndon Johnson used his considerable skills to champion civil rights. Richard Nixon, Republican friend of industrialists, created the Environmental Protection Agency.

Francis has his chance now.

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The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Michael D’Antonio.

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Pope Francis ‘on the right track’

Fraport Traffic Figures 1st Quarter & March 2013 / Quarterly Figures Affected by Weather and Strike-Related Flight Cancellations – Cargo Segment…

Frankfurt (ots) – During the January-to-March 2013 period, Fraport’s five majority-owned airports welcomed a total of 17.8 million passengers (up 1.6 percent) and handled 555,737 metric tons of cargo, an increase of 1.7 percent. Aircraft movements decreased in the first quarter by 2.2 percent to 162,058 takeoffs and landings. Serving about 3.6 million passengers Peru’s Lima Airport continued to grow briskly with a gain of 12.9 percent year-on-year. Turkey’s Antalya Airport registered a noticeable 2.2 million passengers (up 4.9 percent). The Bulgarian airports of Burgas and Varna together greeted nearly 88,500 passengers.

At Fraport’s Frankfurt Airport home base, traffic results were negatively impacted by the capacity consolidation of some airlines and, in particular, by weather and strike-related cancellations during the first three months of the year. In the first quarter of 2013, about 11.9 million passengers used Frankfurt Airport – two percent fewer passengers than in the same period last year. About half of this decline can be attributed to strikes and adverse weather conditions. The domestic segment, down six percent, accounted for the majority of this drop. In contrast, intercontinental traffic continued to expand by one percent, despite the difficult business environment.

Cargo traffic figures show that Frankfurt Airport has emerged from the cyclical trough. For the first time since 2011, Germany’s largest aviation hub reported a cargo gain of 1.1 percent and quarterly growth – with some 502,051 metric tons handled from January to March 2013.

In the current reporting month of March 2013, a total of 6.7 million passengers used the Fraport Group’s five majority-owned airports of Frankfurt (FRA), Antalya (AYT), Burgas (BOJ), Varna (VAR) and Lima (LIM). This represents a 3.2 percent jump compared to the same month of last year.

Like with the first quarter results, Frankfurt’s March 2013 traffic figures experienced a slight decline characterized by special effects and the base-year effect. Approximately 4.5 million passengers used FRA during the reporting month, representing a 1.1 percent drop year-on-year. However, without the flight disruptions registered in March 2013 FRA would have concluded the winter season with growth in passenger figures.

FRA’s 7.9 percent decline in aircraft movements to 37,228 takeoffs and landings is primarily due to the approximately 1,400 weather and strike-related flight cancellations in the reporting month. The thinning out of high-traffic continental routes was further compounded by the early occurrence of Easter holidays and start of the spring school vacation in March 2013.

FRA’s cargo volume grew by 4.4 percent to 195,590 metric tons in March 2013 due to many airlines expanding their cargo business – new freight connections and increased flight frequencies – and using larger aircraft. In addition to a slight improvement in the global economy – especially in Asia, North America and the BRICS countries – Germany benefits from an overall robust export industry supported by FRA for the continuous flow of airfreight-dependent goods.

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+49 69.690.78547; E-mail: r.payne@fraport.de; Internet: 
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Fraport Traffic Figures 1st Quarter & March 2013 / Quarterly Figures Affected by Weather and Strike-Related Flight Cancellations – Cargo Segment…

Futures flat with S&P near all-time high

Stock index futures were flat on Monday, with investors looking for reasons to keep pushing shares higher after the S&P 500 closed at a new all-time high. Equities have been on a tear in 2013, with stocks …

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Futures flat with S&P near all-time high

Happy World Backup Day! Go Backup Your Stuff! Seriously.

Hard drive backups are like the socks of gifts you give yourself. They’re initially about as unexciting as gifts can get, only to become the best gift ever in a pinch. Got a meeting in 20 minutes and your normal sock reserve is empty? Thanks for the bag-o-socks, Uncle Steve!

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Happy World Backup Day! Go Backup Your Stuff! Seriously.

Pope Francis calls for peace in war-torn countries


Francis calls for peace in war-torn countries on his first Easter as pope

By Holly Yan and Laura Smith-Spark, CNN

March 31, 2013 — Updated 1137 GMT (1937 HKT)

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • NEW: The pope asks for peace in the Middle East, Asia and Africa
  • Catholics from around the world pack St. Peter’s Square for Pope Francis’ first Easter Mass
  • In his few weeks as pope, Francis has veered from tradition several times
  • Some questioned Francis’ decision to wash the feet of two females during Holy Week

(CNN) — Dressed in white, Pope Francis greeted a sea of Catholics carrying flags from around the world Sunday in his first Easter Mass as pope.

Shortly after the Mass at St. Peter’s Square, Francis delivered his Urbi et Orbi — “to the city and the world” — blessing from his papal balcony in the Vatican.

The pope asked “the risen Jesus, who turns death into life,” for peace in beleaguered parts of the world.

He asked for peace in the Middle East, particularly between Israelis and Palestinians “who struggle to find the road of agreement … to end a conflict that has lasted all too long.”

He also called for peace for Syrians — both those devastated by violence in the country and refugees in need of help — and asked for harmony in Mali, the Central African Republic and on the Korean Peninsula.

The pope was elected almost three weeks ago, succeeding Benedict XVI. A former Argentine cardinal, he became the first non-European pope of the modern era, the first from Latin America, the first Jesuit and the first to assume the name Francis.

Already, Francis has repeatedly veered from tradition. Three days ago, on Holy Thursday, he went to a youth detention center in Rome — rather than the city’s chief cathedral — and washed the feet of a dozen young detainees.

Among the group at the Casal del Marmo were two females and two Muslims.

The pontiff poured water over the young offenders’ feet, wiped them with a white towel and kissed them. In his homily, given to about 50 young offenders, he said everyone should help one another.

“As a priest and as a bishop, I should be at your service. It is a duty that comes from my heart,” he said.

The act of foot-washing is part of the Christian tradition that mirrors Jesus’ washing of his disciples’ feet.

Francis’ decision to include two females — an Italian and an Eastern European — in the ceremony disturbed some traditionalists, who believe the 12 people should reflect the 12 male Apostles.

The Vatican Press Office responded Friday to “questions and concerns” related to the pope’s washing the young offenders’ feet, calling it a “simple and spontaneous gesture of love, affection, forgiveness and mercy.”

“When Jesus washed the feet of those who were with him on the first Holy Thursday, he desired to teach all a lesson about the meaning of service, using a gesture that included all members of the community,” the office said in a statement. “… To have excluded the young women from the ritual washing of feet … would have detracted our attention from the essence of the Holy Thursday gospel, and the very beautiful and simple gesture of a father who desired to embrace those who were on the fringes of society.”

5 things to know about Pope Francis

CNN’s Jim Bittermann contributed to this report.

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Pope Francis calls for peace in war-torn countries

Luxury apartment shunned

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Pope Francis has declined to move into the palatial papal apartment
  • He’s happy to stay for now in a suite at the Vatican hotel, says a Vatican spokesman
  • The new pope has adopted a more simple, personal style than his predecessors

Rome (CNN)Pope Francis has decided not to move into the papal apartment used by Benedict XVI and others before him, preferring instead to stay in a simple suite at a Vatican hotel, a Vatican spokesman said.

The papal apartment on the top floor of the Apostolic Palace is ready for the new pontiff to move into, the Rev. Federico Lombardi told CNN on Tuesday.

However, he has decided to stay at the Casa Santa Marta, the residence where he’s been staying since the papal election two weeks ago, for the time being, Lombardi said.

He’s given no date for when he might move out of the two-room suite, Lombardi added.

His presence at Casa Santa Marta, the residence near St. Peter’s Basilica where all the cardinals stayed during the conclave, means Francis will continue to meet his fellow priests for Mass and other communal activities.

New pope, old pope meet for lunch

Although he’s not moved in to the apartment, Francis is using the Apostolic Palace, including offices in his papal apartments, to carry out his papal duties, such as holding meetings and audiences, Lombardi said.

Francis, the first Jesuit to assume the papacy, has become widely known for his embrace of simplicity and humility since he became pope.

He’s spoken of his desire to see the Roman Catholic Church be a “poor church, for the poor,” and his sermons have focused on the need to look after the needy and sick, as well as the natural world.

Break with tradition

The pope’s decision to remain in Casa Santa Marta, at least for now, is in keeping with his track record.

While serving as archbishop in Buenos Aires, he declined to live in the archbishop’s palace, choosing instead to live in a simple apartment. He also passed on a chauffeured limousine, preferring to take the bus with ordinary people, and he cooked his own meals.

He’s also bringing this approach to the events of Holy Week, leading up to Easter.

Behind closed doors, pope supported civil unions in Argentina

On Thursday, Francis will break with tradition by celebrating the Mass of the Lord’s Supper, which includes the gesture of the washing of feet, at the Casal del Marmo youth detention center, the Vatican said last week.

The service has in past years been held at the grand Basilica of St. John Lateran, the official seat of the bishop of Rome.

“In his ministry as Archbishop of Buenos Aires, Cardinal Bergoglio used to celebrate the Mass in a prison or hospital or hospice for the poor and marginalized,” the Vatican said in a statement, using the name Francis used before he became pope.

“With this celebration at Casal del Marmo, Pope Francis will continue his custom, which is characterized by its humble context.”

5 things to know about the new pope

CNN’s Hada Messia reported from Rome and Laura Smith-Spark wrote in London.

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Luxury apartment shunned

Nelson Mandela "comfortable", treated for pneumonia

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) – South Africa’s anti-apartheid hero Nelson Mandela is comfortable and able to breathe without problems as he continues to respond to treatment in hospital for a recurrence of pneumonia, President Jacob Zuma’s office said on Saturday.

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Nelson Mandela "comfortable", treated for pneumonia

Pope’s gestures strike fire in hearts

Pope Francis kisses the foot of a prisoner at the Casal Del Marmo Youth Detention Center during the Mass of the Lord's Supper on Thursday, March 28 in Rome.Pope Francis kisses the foot of a prisoner at the Casal Del Marmo Youth Detention Center during the Mass of the Lord’s Supper on Thursday, March 28 in Rome.

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Editor’s note: Steven M. Avella is a priest of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee and a professor of history at Marquette University.

(CNN) — Franklin D. Roosevelt had his Hundred Days.

Papa Francesco has had a little less than a month. Yet, like FDR, he has used bold gestures to alert the world that things in the Catholic Church would not be returning to business as usual.

For Catholics, images conveyed in a genuine way can be symbols of deeper realities. We are a sacramental church. God speaks to us through his word, but that word is often accompanied by ritual, gesture and symbol.

Pope Francis really believes in simplicity. So far, he has waved off any vestige of opulence (gold pectoral crosses and ermine lined mantles), walks rather than rides in a chauffeured limo, and for now at least refuses to live in the Apostolic Palace (a complex oxymoron, what apostle ever lived in a palace?). He chooses to live in a less pretentious guest house.

He invokes the patron saint of evangelical poverty, St. Francis, but this also comes from his Jesuit formation. The vow of poverty and the commitment to the poor is taken seriously among the Sons of Loyola—at least the ones I know. Forming young people to be “men and women for others” is not an idle slogan for a lamppost banner. Jesuits really do it and do it well.

This may seem to the cynical a mere show or public relations, and a few of those cynics are in the church. But something tells me this is the real thing. This is how he lived in Buenos Aires. He could have had a palace and all the accoutrements of fine living, and yet he chose something else—something simple, and closer to the people he wished to serve.

On Thursday, he washed the feet of young juvenile offenders at a detention center in Rome. Among them were two women; one of them was a Muslim. Let Catholics around the world take note. I can only marvel at this generous and loving gesture.

But in Catholic life, rituals are usually accompanied by words. Sometimes the words are difficult to understand or are prayed in flat and boring tones as though the celebrant doesn’t believe them. But when word and ritual come together in the best way, it can strike fire in human hearts.

Pope Francis has uttered some marvelous words to accompany his actions. To his frail predecessor, “We are brothers.” To the gardeners and janitors of the Vatican, “If we have a closed heart, we have a heart of stone.” To priests, an exhortation to “pray over the realities of the everyday lives” of their parishioners, and “their troubles, their joys, their burdens and their hopes.” To the young people at the prison, “Help one another. This is what Jesus teaches us. This is what I do and I do it with my heart.”

Simple, direct words from the heart of a pastor—words people can and will remember because they are accompanied by actions.

Eventually, the novelty of all this will fade, but the tasks ahead for the Catholic Church will not. Repairing its shattered credibility, especially with the young, will be awaiting Pope Francis each morning with his coffee.

Who will advise him? What kinds of men will he choose as bishops? How strong will he be in the face of certain opposition within and outside the church? We will see. “Francis, rebuild my church,” said the Lord to the Poverello of Assisi. Pope Francis I’m sure also hears this same, “small, still, voice.”

But perhaps we are in for even more surprises. The new pontiff has yet to complete the ritual of taking possession of his four basilicas in Rome. These highly ritualized events are accompanied by droves of cardinals and other clerics and offer the pope an occasion to say a few words to mark the occasion.

It was during one such ceremony in January 1959, at St. Paul Outside the Walls, that Pope John XXIII shocked the world by calling for an ecumenical council.

Could Pope Francis do the same? If he did, another Roosevelt –Teddy–might say, “Bully! ” So would I.

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The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Steven Avella.

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Pope’s gestures strike fire in hearts

Pope Francis washes youths’ feet

Pope Francis wipes the foot of a young offender after washing it with water in a tradition that mirrors Jesus' washing of his disciples' feet.

Pope Francis wipes the foot of a young offender after washing it with water in a tradition that mirrors Jesus’ washing of his disciples’ feet.

(CNN)Pope Francis washed the feet of a dozen prisoners, including young women, at a youth detention center in Rome as part of a Holy Thursday Mass ahead of Easter.

The pontiff poured water over the young offenders’ feet, wiped them with a white towel and kissed them.

The act of foot-washing at the Mass of the Lord’s Supper is part of the Christian tradition that mirrors Jesus’ washing of his disciples’ feet.

Francis’ decision to celebrate the Mass with young offenders at the Casal del Marmo center represents a break with tradition but is in step with his record in embracing simplicity and humility.

Read: Pope Francis to shun luxury papal apartment

The service has in past years been held at the grand Basilica of St. John Lateran, the official seat of the bishop of Rome.

This time, the Mass “will be, by his express desire, very simple,” the Vatican said before the service.

The young offenders were expected to give the pope a wooden crucifix and kneeler, which they made themselves in the detention center’s workshop.

In return, Francis was to bring Easter eggs and colomba, traditional Italian Easter cake in the shape of a dove, for all, the Vatican had said.

The Casal del Marmo center houses close to 50 inmates, who range in age from 14 to 21. Those who had their feet washed were chosen from different nationalities and diverse religious backgrounds. Two young women were included in the rite.

Why is the pope washing prisoners’ feet?

More than 2,000 cardinals, archbishops, bishops and priests, as well as more than 10,000 of the Roman Catholic faithful, joined the pope in celebrating Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica on Thursday morning.

Francis urged the priests to be close to their congregations and listen to their everyday concerns, even if those concerns sometimes appear material or mundane.

The priests should be “shepherds who have the smell of their sheep,” he said.

Read: Pope Francis’ humble superiority

Reaching out to the ‘forgotten’

Francis was installed as pope 10 days ago, having been elected to fill the shoes of Benedict XVI.

Since taking on the role, he has focused on a message of helping the poor and needy.

In his first general audience Wednesday, before crowds gathered in St. Peter’s Square, he spoke of how following Christ “means learning to come out of ourselves … in order to meet others, in order to go toward the edges of our existence, to take the first steps towards our brothers and sisters, especially those who are farthest from us, those who are forgotten, those who need understanding, consolation and assistance.”

He also called for an end to the violence in the Central African Republic, where a coalition of rebels ousted President Francois Bozize this week.

All those suffering in the African nation are in his prayers, he said.

“I call for an immediate halt to the violence and looting, and that a political solution to the crisis may be reached as soon as possible so that peace and harmony may be restored in that dear country, which has, for too long, been marked by conflict and division,” he said.

The Holy Week services will culminate on Easter Sunday with the pope’s first “Urbi et Orbi” blessing, directed to the city of Rome and to the world.

Read: Bergoglio’s journey to top of the church

Journalist Livia Borghese contributed to this report.

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Pope Francis washes youths’ feet

Traumfrau gesucht: Das große Finale / Deutsche Männer suchen in Osteuropa und Brasilien nach der großen Liebe / Letzte Folge am Montag, 1. April…

In der letzten Folge von “Traumfrau gesucht”: Immobilienmakler Dennis (24) sitzt zwischen den Stühlen. In Rio de Janeiro lernt er gleich zwei Frauen kennen, die ihm sehr gefallen: die schwarzhaarige Cristiane und die blonde Vania (beide 32). Jetzt muss sich der Schlagerfan entscheiden. © RTL II – Recht zum Abdruck/Darstellung zeitlich/sachlich beschränkt auf die Berichterstattung zur Sendung Die Verwendung dieses Bildes ist für redaktionelle …

RTL II: Traumfrau gesucht: Das große Finale / Deutsche Männer suchen in Osteuropa und Brasilien nach der großen Liebe / Letzte Folge am Montag, 1. April 2013, um 21:15 Uhr bei RTL II (BILD)


Traumfrau gesucht: Das groe Finale
Deutsche Mnner suchen in Osteuropa und Brasilien nach der groen Liebe
Letzte Folge am Montag, 1. April 2013, um 21:15 Uhr bei RTL II (BILD)

Mnchen (ots) – Walther, Dennis und Elvis suchen seit Jahren vergeblich nach einer passenden Partnerin. Trotzdem haben sie den Traum von der groen Liebe noch nicht aufgegeben. Jetzt wollen die ganz unterschiedlichen Mnner ihr Glck in Osteuropa und Brasilien finden. Auch die Singlemnner Gottlob und Dirk mchten nicht mehr allein durchs Leben gehen. Was stellen die Mnner alles an, um sich als begehrenswerte Partner frs Leben zu prsentieren? Und wer wird tatschlich die groe Liebe finden?

In Moskau sind Transportunternehmer Gottlob (47) und Motivationstrainer Dirk (50) weiterhin gemeinsam auf Frauenfang. Bei einem Doppeldate in einer Karaoke-Bar versuchen die Mnner, mit ihrer Sangeskunst zu berzeugen. Leider kommt ihr Balzgesang nur mig an.

Immobilienmakler Dennis (24) sitzt zwischen den Sthlen. In Rio de Janeiro lernt er gleich zwei Frauen kennen, die ihm sehr gefallen: Die schwarzhaarige Cristiane und die blonde Vania (beide 32). Jetzt muss sich der Schlagerfan entscheiden.

Whrenddessen trifft Reiseverkehrskaufmann Walther (53) auf seine Favoritin Alina. Fr sie hat der Wahlberliner etwas ganz Besonderes organisiert: Er erwartet Alina in einer Sternwarte und will ihr dort die Sterne vom Himmel holen. So viel Romantik kommt bei der brasilianischen Verkuferin durchaus an. Ob Walther jetzt seine Traumfrau gefunden hat?

“Traumfrau gesucht”: Das groe Finale am Montag, 1. April 2013, um 21:15 Uhr bei RTL II

ber das Format: Sie suchen seit Jahren vergeblich nach einer passenden Partnerin und haben den Traum von der groen Liebe noch nicht aufgegeben: Ganz unterschiedliche deutsche Mnner im besten Alter versuchen jetzt ihr Glck in Osteuropa und Brasilien. Mit Hilfe von Vermittlungsagenturen nehmen die liebeshungrigen Mnner an arrangierten Dates teil, die in den Heimatlndern der heiratswilligen Frauen stattfinden. Werden sie jetzt die Liebe frs Leben finden?

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Traumfrau gesucht: Das große Finale / Deutsche Männer suchen in Osteuropa und Brasilien nach der großen Liebe / Letzte Folge am Montag, 1. April…