Pope, in Assisi,
says religious leaders want to help end terrorism
More than 200 religious
leaders attend pope's prayer meeting for peace
ASSISI,
Italy (CNS) Saying religious leaders wanted to do their part to
fend off "the dark clouds of terrorism, hatred (and) armed conflict,"
Pope John Paul II led an interreligious pilgrimage to Assisi, birthplace
of St. Francis.
The winter sky above
Assisi was leaden with thick clouds Jan. 24, but the pope and more than
200 religious leaders were protected from the cold wind and the afternoon
rain by a huge tarp and plastic sheeting that turned lower St. Francis
Square into a tent.
"Violence never
again," the pope said at the end of the afternoon meeting.
"War never
again. Terrorism never again," he said.
"In the name
of God, may every religion bring upon the earth justice and peace, forgiveness
and life, love," the 81-year-old pope said before his guests set
lighted glass and terracotta oil lamps on a large table as a sign of hope.
During the brief
afternoon service, 10 religious leaders, reading in 10 different languages,
recited 10 commitments they all promised to fulfill to help bring peace
to the world.
The Rev. Konrad
Raiser, secretary-general of the World Council of Churches, read the first
pledge in German: "We commit ourselves to proclaiming our firm commitment
that violence and terrorism are incompatible with the authentic spirit
of religion and, as we condemn every recourse to violence and war in the
name of God or religion, we commit ourselves to doing everything possible
to eliminate the root causes of terrorism."
The leaders also
promised to educate their faithful to respect others, to foster dialogue,
to defend each person's right to live a decent life, to value differences,
to be voices for the poor and defenseless and to promote friendship among
peoples.
Orthodox Bishop
Vasilios of Trimithus on the divided island of Crete read another pledge:
"We commit ourselves to forgiving one another for past and present
errors and prejudices ... and to learn from the past that peace without
justice is no true peace."
At the morning gathering,
Pope John Paul said he and other leaders of the world's religions share
the anxiety of many of their faithful, but they also share a firm belief
that God can grant the world peace.
"In times of
greater anxiety about the fate of the world, we sense more clearly than
ever the duty to commit ourselves personally to the defense and promotion
of the fundamental good which is peace," he said, welcoming the leaders
to Assisi.
The pope and his
guests arrived in Assisi after a two-hour pilgrimage by train, a journey
that began with an "all aboard" at the Vatican's seldom-used
train station.
Ecumenical Orthodox
Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople, spiritual leader of the world's
Orthodox, as well as two other Orthodox patriarchs, representatives from
14 other Christian denominations and 11 other religions, accepted the
pope's invitation to come to Assisi.
Pope John Paul offered
a special greeting to Cardinal Edward M. Egan of New York, "the city
so terribly affected by the tragic events of Sept. 11."
The cardinal told
reporters on the train that the Assisi meeting was the pope's attempt
"to bring various faiths together in order to alert the world to
the need to put an end to the conflict that is troubling us right now."
In his morning address,
the pope said, "We are here as representatives of different religions
to examine ourselves before God concerning our commitment to peace, to
ask him for this gift, to bear witness to our shared longing for a world
of greater justice and solidarity."
Listening to one
another is the first step in peacemaking, he said, because it "serves
to scatter the shadows of suspicion and misunderstanding."
Pope John Paul and
the other leaders who spoke at the morning session in Assisi repeatedly
underlined the need for justice and the respect of human rights in building
peace.
"It cannot
be forgotten that situations of oppression and exclusion are often at
the source of violence and terrorism," he said.
But religious leaders
also know that forgiveness is part of peacemaking because it "heals
the wounds of the heart and fully restores damaged human relations,"
the pope said.
Pope John Paul also
said it was essential that the religious leaders clearly proclaim their
common conviction that "whoever uses religion to foment violence
contradicts religion's deepest and truest inspiration."
Patriarch Bartholomew,
the first of 11 religious leaders to speak, told the gathering, "Today,
once more, following horrendous holocausts and the slaughter of so many
innocent victims, it is our duty to acknowledge the spiritual conditions
for peace on earth, and not merely economic or other factors.
"These conditions
include righteousness and respect for the sacredness of the human person,
for one's neighbor and for his freedom and dignity," the patriarch
said.
"We must repent
and turn back to God in full awareness of his holy will and in obedience
to it. Only then will God hear our prayers and grant us and all mankind
true peace on earth," he said.
Chief Amadou Gasseto,
who described himself as the high priest of followers of Avelekete Voodoo
in Benin, echoed the patriarch's point about personal behavior and its
decisive role in creating peace or conflict.
"We must begin
by achieving mastery over ourselves so as not to speak words which lead
to feelings of opposition, exclusion or violence," he said.
Rabbi Israel Singer,
secretary general of the World Jewish Congress, followed little of his
prepared text, instead telling Pope John Paul, "Only you can make
this happen," and telling the other leaders that only by fostering
commitments to peace among their faithful can religions turn their potential
for peacemaking into a concrete reality.
"You should
tell your people and we should tell ours, all of us all of us
to question whether land or places are more important than people's lives
and, until we learn to do that, there will be no peace," the rabbi
said.
History, he said,
has shown that despite beautiful religious exhortations to be a force
of peace, "the reality has been that, in practice, religions have
served to foment scores of horrendous and bloody wars.
"We must remember
that in no religion are we commanded to kill indiscriminately, and those
who have taught otherwise have done so by hijacking and distorting the
religions in whose name they speak," he said.
Sheikh Mohammed
Tantawi of al-Azhar University in Egypt and spiritual leader of the world's
Sunni Muslims sent a message to the gathering thanking the pope for his
initiative and explaining Islam's fidelity to God, its precept of respect
for "all monotheistic religions revealed by God" and its emphasis
on moral values.
"All the monotheistic
religions preach that the human being should support law and justice,
restoring the legitimate proprietors to their rights," he said, making
his reference to tensions in the Holy Land obvious by thanking the Vatican
for its "honorable support of the Palestinian people."
After sharing the
"testimonies for peace," Pope John Paul and Patriarch Bartholomew
led the Christians from 17 Orthodox churches and 14 Anglican and Protestant
communities into the lower basilica for an ecumenical prayer service.
Franciscan friars
escorted members of the 11 other religions into their huge convent complex
where, in separate places around the cloistered courtyard, each faith
held its own prayer service: the Zoroastrians lighting a fire in the courtyard;
the Muslims kneeling on rugs in the annex to the Friar Elijah Chapel,
built in 1230.
The Franciscans
had removed crucifixes and everything else from the vaulted rooms, except
for a large wood sculpture of the Nativity firmly attached to the wall
of the room used by the Buddhists.
Hundreds of people,
mainly Italian religious and lay people, filled the back of the tent to
pray with the leaders. Some waved huge rainbow-colored banners that read,
"Peace!" and chanted in Italian, "John Paul!"
Standing at the
edge of the crowd, a priest from majority-Muslim Sudan watched the enthusiasm
with a somber expression on his face.
"This shows
the possibility of bringing different religions together," Father
Romeo Todo said, "but it is a far cry from the reality on the ground."
Father Todo, a priest
from Khartoum who studies in Rome, said relations with Muslims in his
country were good "at the level of words," but in the government's
treatment of Christians "there is a lot of force that pushes toward
Islam."
He said he hoped
the "academic" interreligious commitment of the Assisi gathering
eventually would filter down to local realities.
"It may take
time, and it won't be perfection right away, but I am optimistic,"
the priest said.
Contributing to
this story was John Norton in Assisi.
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