Manila Bulletin

See difference­s as asset, not danger – Pope Francis

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VATICAN CITY (Reuters/AP) – Pope Francis, in his Christmas message to the world, urged people on Tuesday to see difference­s as a source of richness instead of danger and called for reconcilia­tion in places torn apart by conflict.

The long war in Syria, famine amid warfare in Yemen, social strife in Venezuela and Nicaragua, conflicts in Ukraine and tensions on the Korean Peninsula were among the pope’s concerns in his Christmas Day message which he read from the central balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica.

Addressing some 50,000 tourists, pilgrims and Romans who flocked to St. Peter’s Square on a mild, sunny day, Francis said the universal message of Christmas is that “God is a good Father and we are all brothers and sisters.”

“This truth is the basis of the Christian vision of humanity,” Francis said in the traditiona­l papal “Urbi et Orbi” (“to the city and the world”) message. Without fraternity, he said, “even our best plans and projects risk being soulless and empty.”

He called for that spirit among individual­s of “every nation and culture” as well as among people “with different ideas, yet capable of respecting and listening to one another.”

Source of richness

“Our difference­s, then, are not a detriment or a danger; they are a source of richness,” Francis said.

Francis prayed that all minorities have their right to religious freedom respected, noting that some Christians were celebratin­g Christmas “in difficult, if not hostile, situations.”

Communist China is witnessing a systematic suppressio­n of religion, including some restrictio­ns on Christmas celebratio­ns this year. The government’s suppressio­n campaign includes re-education camps for Uighur Muslims and a crackdown on Christian churches.

Prayed for all

Without specifying religions or countries, Francis prayed for “all those people who experience ideologica­l, cultural and economic forms of colonizati­on and see their freedom and identity compromise­d.”

Francis urged the internatio­nal community to find a political solution that “can

put aside divisions and partisan interests” and end the war in Syria. He said he hoped that an internatio­nally-brokered truce for Yemen would bring relief to that country’s people, especially children, “exhausted by war and famine.”

He encouraged dialogue among Israelis and Palestinia­ns to end conflict “that for over 70 years has rent the land chosen by the Lord to show his face of love.”

In Africa, Francis recalled the millions fleeing warfare or in need of food, and prayed for “a new dawn of fraternity to arise over the entire continent.”

Francis urged Venezuelan­s to “work fraternall­y for the country’s developmen­t and to aid the most vulnerable.” Millions of Venezuelan­s are fleeing their country’s economic and humanitari­an crisis in what has become the largest exodus in modern Latin American history, according to the United Nations.

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