At UN, Pope Francis calls on international community for 'examination of conscience' about suffering of innocents
Friday, September 25, 2015
Human beings are easily discarded when our only response is to draw up lists of problems, strategies and disagreements.
… [HARD EVIDENCE] is not lacking of the
negative effects of military and political interventions which are not
coordinated between members of the international community. For this reason,
while regretting to have to do so, I must renew my repeated appeals regarding
to the painful situation of the entire Middle East, North Africa and other
African countries, where Christians, together with other cultural or ethnic
groups, and even members of the majority religion who have no desire to be
caught up in hatred and folly, have been forced to witness the destruction of their
places of worship, their cultural and religious heritage, their houses and
property, and have faced the alternative either of fleeing or of paying for
their adhesion to good and to peace by their own lives, or by enslavement.

These realities should serve as a grave
summons to an examination of conscience on the part of those charged with the
conduct of international affairs. Not only in cases of religious or cultural
persecution, but in every situation of conflict, as in Ukraine, Syria, Iraq,
Libya, South Sudan and the Great Lakes region, real human beings take
precedence over partisan interests, however legitimate the latter may be. In
wars and conflicts there are individual persons, our brothers and sisters, men
and women, young and old, boys and girls who weep, suffer and die. Human beings
are easily discarded when our only response is to draw up lists of problems,
strategies and disagreements.
As I wrote in my letter to the
Secretary-General of the United Nations on 9 August 2014, “the most basic understanding
of human dignity compels the international community, particularly through the
norms and mechanisms of international law, to do all that it can to stop and to
prevent further systematic violence against ethnic and religious minorities”
and to protect innocent peoples.
This is an excerpt from an address Pope Francis delivered to the UN General Assembly on Sept. 25, 2015
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