Pope Francis has called on atheists to unite with believers of all religions across the world in the quest for peace globally.
The pope, who was celebrating his first Christmas as Roman Catholic
leader, wove his first “Urbi et Orbi” (to the city and world) message
around the theme of peace.
“Peace is a daily commitment. It is a homemade peace,” he said. “I
invite even non-believers to desire peace. (Join us) with your desire, a
desire that widens the heart. Let us all unite, either with prayer or
with desire, but everyone, for peace.
“God is peace: let us ask him to help us to be peacemakers each day,
in our life, in our families, in our cities and nations, in the whole
world.”
Speaking to about 70,000 people from the central balcony of St.
Peter’s Basilica, the same spot where he emerged to the world as pope
when he was elected on March 13, called for “social harmony in South
Sudan, where current tensions have already caused numerous victims and
are threatening peaceful coexistence in that young state”.
Thousands are believed to have died in violence divided along ethnic
lines between the Nuer and Dinka tribes in the country, which seceded
from Sudan in 2011 after decades of war.
The pontiff also called for dialogue to end the conflicts in Syria,
Nigeria, Democratic Republic of Congo and Iraq, and prayed for a
“favourable outcome” to the peace process between Israelis and
Palestinians.
“Wars shatter and hurt so many lives,” he said, saying the most
vulnerable victims were children, elderly, battered women and the sick.
The pope asked God to “look upon the many children who are kidnapped,
wounded and killed in armed conflicts, and all those who are robbed of
their childhood and forced to become soldiers”.
He also called for a “dignified life” for migrants, praying tragedies
such as one in which hundreds died in a shipwreck off the coast of the
Italian island of Lampedusa are never repeated, and made a particular
appeal against human trafficking, which he called a “crime against
humanity”.
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