Sunday Tribune

EDITOR’S NOTE

Lessons of faith and history

- Annie Dorasamy

IF YOU believed the story that Aussie cricket cheat David Warner was set to join the KZN Dolphins (page 1), then the joke is on you. Warner was suspended for ball tampering and is to spend the next season on the sidelines. On the subject of sinners, Jesus said to a crowd about to kill a prostitute: He who is without sin should cast the first stone. His comment has as much relevance today as it did back then. See Page 6.

Our Ambassador to France, Rapu Molekane, talks about lessons that leaders in Europe are still learning from SA. Page 7.

Parents of young children will be inspired by umhlanga father Phillip Carlisle’s garden structures that encourage kids to have fun the old fashion way. Page 8.

In a Greek myth, a Cypriot sculptor’s statue of a woman came to life after he kissed it. Now

2 500 years later, artificial intelligen­ce is changing the world. Who would have though that Arnold Schwarzene­gger movie

The Terminator was streaks ahead of its time. Yep, we are in midst of an exciting, but equally perilous Fourth Industrial Revolution.

As the late Stephen Hawking said, artificial intelligen­ce will be the best or worst thing to happen to humanity. We don’t yet know which. Read the report by Fred Kockott on Page 11.

On Page 17, Malusi Mpumlwana, general secretary of the South African Council of Churches, writes on the celebratio­n of Easter and its practices and whether they relate to the South African reality. A good time for introspect­ion.

Don’t forget to download the IOL app on your smartphone to experience AR (augmented reality). It brings storytelli­ng to life with bonus videos and pictures. Scan and watch.

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