The Asian Age

Pope appeals to Buddhist clergy to overcome ‘ prejudice & hatred’

- SALLY MAIRS, RICHARD SARGENT

Pope Francis called on Myanmar’s top Buddhist monks to conquer “prejudice and hatred” in a country ravaged by communal divisions, after holding the nation’s first- ever papal mass attended by 150,000 Catholics on Wednesday.

The pontiff ’ s four- day visit has so far been marked by his avoidance in public of the crisis in northern Rakhine state and Myanmar’s treatment of its Rohingya Muslim community.

Francis has previously spoken out strongly in defence of the Muslim group, whom the UN and US say are victims of an ethnic cleansing campaign by Myanmar’s military that has driven 620,000 of them into Bangladesh since late August.

“If we are to be united, as is our purpose, we need to surmount all forms of misunderst­anding, intoleranc­e, prejudice and hatred,” the pope told the orange- robed monks of Myanmar’s highest Buddhist body, called the Sangha Maha Nayka.

Radical monks have played a key role in fanning Islamaphob­ia in Myanmar and hardening attitudes towards the Rohingya.

In recent months the Sangha has moved to rein them in, especially in banning sermons by Wirathu - — a monk whose vitriolic rants were widely disseminat­ed via social media.

Welcoming the pope Sangha chairman, Kumarabhiv­amsa, who oversees Myanmar’s estimated 600,000 monks, expressed sadness at “extremism and terrorism” conducted in the name of religion.

Earlier on Wednesday the pope delivered a message of forgivenes­s in an open- air mass before a sea of Catholics in Yangon, many wearing colourful costumes from the country’s myriad ethnic groups. “I never dreamed I would see him in my lifetime,” said Meo, an 81year- old from the Akha minority in Shan state. A choir of Myanmar nuns sang in Latin, accompanie­d by organ music, as Francis delivered a homily urging compassion opening his speech with “minglabar”, Burmese for “hello”.

“I can see that the Church here is alive,” he said of a Catholic community numbering around 700,000 — a tiny fraction of the country’s 51 million people.

The pontiff noted that many Myanmar people “bear the wounds of violence, wounds both visible and invisible”.

But he urged his audience to forgo anger and respond with “forgivenes­s and compassion”.

His visit has been as much political as religious in a country on the defensive after the global outrage over the plight of the Rohingya.

If we are to be united, as is our purpose, we need to surmount all forms of misunderst­anding, intoleranc­e, prejudice and hatred — Pope

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