The Jerusalem Post

Pope faces a decision: Whether to say ‘Rohingya’ in visit to Myanmar

- • By SHASHANK BENGALI

BANGKOK (Los Angeles Times/TNS) – In August, responding to the first reports of Rohingya Muslims fleeing an army-led crackdown in Myanmar, Pope Francis called for prayers for “our Rohingya brethren.”

“Let all of us ask the Lord to save them, and to raise up men and women of goodwill to help them, who shall give them their full rights,” Francis told a gathering of pilgrims at Vatican City’s St. Peter’s Square.

As the pope begins a visit to Myanmar Monday, the Rohingyas’ plight has spiraled into one of the world’s gravest humanitari­an crises. More than 600,000 people have fled to Bangladesh to escape a systematic campaign of killing, rape and arson that United Nations officials and internatio­nal human-rights groups have described as ethnic cleansing.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson echoed that assessment Wednesday after a visit to Myanmar, saying that “no provocatio­n can justify the horrendous atrocities” carried out by security forces and Buddhist vigilantes against the Rohingya.

Francis, an Argentine Jesuit, has portrayed himself as a champion of the downtrodde­n and of interfaith dialogue, and has repeatedly voiced concern for the Rohingya. He faces perhaps the most delicate diplomatic task of his four-year papacy in overwhelmi­ngly Buddhist Myanmar, where the powerful military establishm­ent and a civilian government led by Aung San Suu Kyi refuse to list the Rohingya among the country’s 135 ethnic groups, claiming that they migrated illegally from Bangladesh.

While in Myanmar, Cardinal Charles Maung Bo, the Catholic archbishop of the largest city, Yangon, has advised the pope not to utter the word “Rohingya,” a term that Suu Kyi and the generals do not acknowledg­e.

But human-rights groups are urging Francis – both in his public sermons and private meetings with Suu Kyi and the commander of the military, Gen. Min Aung Hlaing – to use the term to show solidarity with a group that Myanmar has denied citizenshi­p and methodical­ly stripped of basic rights, including the freedom to move, work and marry.

In a video message, Francis said: “I wish to visit the nation in a spirit of respect and encouragem­ent for every effort to build harmony and cooperatio­n in the service of the common good.”

Before the military crackdown, an estimated 1 million Rohingya lived in the western state of Rakhine, many confined to displaceme­nt camps patrolled by security forces.

“He should use the word Rohingya, and he should use it publicly because the Rohingya have very little left besides their identity,” said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director for Human Rights Watch. “Part of the dispossess­ion they’ve faced has solidified their identity because when you have very little else to grab onto, that self-identifica­tion is very important.”

Francis will follow his threeday visit to Myanmar with two days in Bangladesh, where the Vatican said he would meet with a small group of Rohingya refugees in the capital, Dhaka.

The Vatican announced the first apostolic visit to Myanmar – where an estimated 700,000 Roman Catholics make up slightly more than 1% of the population – just as the extent of the military campaign against the Rohingya was becoming clear. The trip initially was intended to endorse the country’s fitful transition to democracy after a half-century of military rule.

Despite the election of the first civilian government in 2015, led by Nobel Peace Prize winner Suu Kyi, the army retains total control over security matters and wields tremendous influence behind the scenes. An adviser to Suu Kyi who sought to curtail the military’s powers was shot dead this year under mysterious circumstan­ces.

Suu Kyi, who became an icon for leading the opposition to military rule, has sided with the army against the Rohingya, damaging her image worldwide. But many Myanmar citizens believe the army crackdown was justified after a Rohingya militant group carried out deadly attacks against security forces.

Local Catholic leaders said they hoped the pope would highlight the country’s progress and preach reconcilia­tion with an array of ethnic minorities agitating for greater rights in Myanmar, not only the Rohingya.

“I think he will not single out any one particular group, but in general, he might say that for all the different races, the government should continue to make peace with them as you are trying to do now,” said Archbishop Paul Zinghtung Grawng, the archbishop emeritus in Mandalay, Myanmar’s second-largest city. “It’s not to point out the defects or what is lacking in the country but rather to encourage and affirm the positive steps that are being taken at the moment.”

 ?? (Jack Kurtz/Zuma Press/TNS) ?? A WOMAN PRAYS in a shrine at the Botataung Pagoda in Yangon, Myanmar, last week. Pope Francis is making his first visit to the overwhelmi­ngly Buddhist country this week.
(Jack Kurtz/Zuma Press/TNS) A WOMAN PRAYS in a shrine at the Botataung Pagoda in Yangon, Myanmar, last week. Pope Francis is making his first visit to the overwhelmi­ngly Buddhist country this week.

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