Friday, January 29, 2010

Polish priest checks fingerprints for mass attendance

WARSAW (Reuters) - A Polish priest has installed an electronic reader in his church for schoolchildren to leave their fingerprints in order to monitor their attendance at mass, the Gazeta Wyborcza daily said on Friday.

The pupils will mark their fingerprints every time they go to church over three years and if they attend 200 masses they will be freed from the obligation of having to pass an exam prior to their confirmation, the paper said.

The pupils in the southern town of Gryfow Slaski told the daily they liked the idea and also the priest, Grzegorz Sowa, who invented it.

"This is comfortable. We don't have to stand in a line to get the priest's signature (confirming our presence at the mass) in our confirmation notebooks," said one pupil, who gave her name as Karolina.

Poland is perhaps the most devoutly Roman Catholic country in Europe today and churches are regularly packed on Sundays.

3 Comments:

At 11:08 PM, Blogger Jan said...

Lol! If I were those kids, I'd just scan my thumb and leave. Like what I do in school. Hehe.

 
At 11:31 PM, Blogger Samuel said...

looks like churches need to become more tech-savvy to keep up with this world...lol

 
At 12:44 AM, Blogger cr3ap said...

So high tech these days.

Regards from cr3ap
http://cr3ap85.blogspot.com/

 

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