Thursday, January 23, 2014

1,000 years on, girls sing at Canterbury Cathedral

In this Wednesday, Jan. 22 2014 photo, choristers Poppy Braddy, centre, Chloe Chawner, right, and Abby Cox sing during an interview with the Associated Press in Canterbury Cathedral, Canterbury, England, as the first all female choir at the cathedral rehearses prior to their debut on Jan. 25. The pure, high voices of the choir soar toward the vaulted ceiling of Canterbury Cathedral as they have for more than 1,000 years. Just one thing is different - these young choristers in their purple cassocks are girls, and their public debut at Evensong on Saturday will end centuries of all-male tradition. Canterbury is not the first British cathedral to set up a girls' choir, but as mother church of the 80 million-strong Anglican Communion - one struggling with the role of women in its ranks - its move has special resonance. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant) CANTERBURY, England (AP) — The pure, high voices of the choir soar toward the vaulted ceiling of Canterbury Cathedral as they have for more than 1,000 years. Just one thing is different — these young choristers in their purple cassocks are girls.








via Entertainment News Headlines — Yahoo! News

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