Vatican challenges Muslims to condemn persecution
Vatican challenges Muslims to condemn persecution
Iraq atrocities prompt unprecedented bold response
The degeneration of the turmoil afflicting Iraq has led Pope
Francis and his staff to an unprecedented move that marks a new
qualitative leap in relations between the Holy See and representatives
of Islam.
The Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, the Vatican
department responsible for maintaining relations with Islam and other
non-Christian faiths, just published a statement demanding "a clear and
courageous stand by religious leaders, including Muslims."
That Pontifical Council, led by the former "minister" of Foreign Affairs
under Pope St. John Paul II, the French Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, has
been extremely careful in recent years to avoid offending the
sensibilities of Islamic religious leaders.
Cardinal Tauran, who was appointed by Pope Benedict XVI for that office
in 2007 after the huge crisis created by interpretations of his speech
at the German University of Regensburg, now uses a language that is
totally unusual in the Vatican (Cf. Statement of Pontifical Council for
Interreligious Dialogue, August 12, 2014).
The document is part of the campaign that Pope Francis is leading to
confront the atrocities committed against Christians, Yazidi communities
and other minorities by the self-styled Islamic State of Iraq and the
Levant (ISIL, or ISIS).
In addition, the Vatican has just published the Pope's letter to Ban
Ki-moon, Secretary General of the United Nations to demand an immediate
reaction from the international community and UN agencies to prevent the
humanitarian catastrophe taking place in the north of Iraq.
As this article was published, Cardinal Fernando Filoni was packing to
travel to Iraq to bring Pope Francis' personal closeness to the people,
along with all the knowledge of the country that he accumulated as a
nuncio for John Paul II, since he was one of the few diplomats who did
not leave the country during the Second War Gulf in 2003.
The Vatican letter sent by the Pontifical Council for Interreligious
Dialogue calls on Muslim religious leaders to condemn "the execrable
practice of beheading, crucifixion and hanging corpses in public
places."
It also requires that they oppose the choice that the Islamic State is
placing before Christians and Yazidis: "Conversion to Islam, payment of a
tax (jizya), or exodus."
It calls for a reaction from Islamic religious leaders against "the
abduction of girls and women from the Yazidis and Christian communities
as war booty," "the imposition of the barbaric practice of
infibulation," and "the destruction of Christian and Muslim places of
worship and mausoleums."
"No cause can justify such barbarism, much less a religious one,"
explains the Vatican. This is an extremely serious offense against
humanity and God, who is the Creator," the Pontifical Council says,
explicitly quoting Pope Francis.
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