Vatican City, 4 October 2014 (VIS) –
THE HOLY FATHER HAS SENT A VIDEO MESSAGE to the International Centre
of the Focolare Movement in Loppiano, Italy, on the fiftieth
anniversary of its foundation by Chiara Lubich. The Pope remarked
that Loppiano “inspired by the Gospel of fraternity … lives in
the service of the Church and the world”, and offers a “living
and effective witness of communion among persons of different
nations, cultures and vocations” and maintaining, above all, mutual
and continual charity in everyday life.
NO MORE WAR OR HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS,
affirm the papal representatives in the Middle East at the end of
their meeting in the Vatican from 2 to 4 October, during which they
discussed the situation faced by Christians in the region. They
expressed their serious concerns regarding the actions of various
extremist groups, in particular the “Islamic State”, before whose
violence and abuses it is impossible to remain indifferent. The
international community cannot remain inert, they remarked, when
faced with massacres carried out on the pretext of religious belief
or ethnic origin or the exodus of thousands of people and the
destruction of their places of worship. The participants in the
meeting emphasised that it is acceptable to stop an unjust aggressor,
always with respect for international law. However, the problem
cannot be entrusted solely to the usual military response, but must
be faced in more depth, starting from the root causes that are
exploited by fundamentalist ideology. An important role can be played
by religious leaders, Christian and Muslim, collaborating to promote
dialogue and education in mutual understanding, and clearly
denouncing the abuse of religion to justify violence. Faced with the
crisis of so many people forced to leave their homes in a brutal
fashion, the participants highlighted the need to recognise the
rights of Christians and other ethnic and religious groups to be able
to remain in their homelands and, should it be necessary for them to
leave, to return in suitable conditions of safety, with the
possibility of living and working in freedom and with prospects for
the future. In the current circumstances this requires commitment on
the part of the governments involved and the international community
as a whole. Finally, they stressed that we cannot resign ourselves to
imagining a Middle East without Christians, who for two thousand
years have confessed the name of Jesus Christ there.
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