The Daily Courier

Pope embraces victims, ex-fighters in peace bid

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VILLAVICEN­CIO, Colombia — Pope Francis brought together thousands of victims of Colombia’s half-century-long conflict with their former victimizer­s, presiding over a prayer for reconcilia­tion on Friday in hopes of solidifyin­g the country’s peace process and healing stillfresh wounds.

In the highlight of his Colombia pilgrimage, Francis flew into an area once besieged by leftist rebels to pray with victims and urge them to overcome their grief by forgiving their assailants.

And he urged the ex-fighters to have the courage to seek that forgivenes­s, saying peace will fail unless both sides reconcile.

Looming large over the ceremony in the central city of Villavicen­cio was a poignant symbol of the conflict: a mutilated statue of Christ rescued from a church that was destroyed in a 2002 rebel mortar attack in the impoverish­ed town of Bojaya. The battle-scarred torso, missing its arms and legs, was front and centre onstage as a tangible reminder of one of the war’s worst massacres.

“As we look at it, we remember not only what happened on that day but also the immense suffering, the many deaths and broken lives and all the blood spilled in Colombia these past decades,” Francis said at the foot of the statue.

He told the crowd he wanted to come to Villavicen­cio to pray with them and weep with them, and help them to forgive. He embraced victims and perpetrato­rs alike. He called for truth and justice, saying families deserve to know the fates of missing relatives and children recruited to fight. But he also called for mercy, saying truth should never lead to revenge.

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