APOSTOLIC VISIT OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO MYANMAR
Address to Government Authorities, Civil Societies and the Diplomatic Corps
Address to Government Authorities, Civil Societies and the Diplomatic Corps
Myanmar International Convention Center, Nay Pyi
Taw,
Tuesday, 28 November 2017
Madam State Counsellor,
Honourable Government and Civil Authorities,
Your Eminence, My Brother Bishops,
Distinguished Members of the Diplomatic Corps,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I am grateful for the kind invitation to visit
Myanmar and I thank you, Madam State Counsellor, for your kind words. I am very
grateful to all who have worked so hard to make this visit possible. I have
come, above all, to pray with the nation’s small but fervent Catholic
community, to confirm them in their faith, and to encourage them in their
efforts to contribute to the good of the nation. I am most grateful that my
visit comes soon after the establishment of formal diplomatic relations between
Myanmar and the Holy See.
I would like to see this decision as a sign of the
nation’s commitment to pursuing dialogue and constructive cooperation within
the greater international community, even as it strives to renew the fabric of
civil society.
I would also like my visit to embrace the entire
population of Myanmar and to offer a word of encouragement to all those who are
working to build a just, reconciled and inclusive social order.
Myanmar has been blessed with great natural beauty
and resources, yetits greatest treasure is its people, who have suffered
greatly, and continue to suffer, from civil conflict and hostilities that have
lasted all too long and created deep divisions. As the nation now works to
restore peace, the healing of those wounds must be a paramount political and
spiritual priority. I can only express appreciation for the efforts of the
Government to take up this challenge, especially through the Panglong Peace
Conference, which brings together representatives of the various groups in an
attempt to end violence, to build trust and to ensure respect for the rights of
all who call this land their home.
Indeed, the arduous process of peacebuilding and
national reconciliationcan only advance through a commitment to justice and
respect for human rights. The wisdom of the ancients defined justice precisely
as a steadfast will to give each person his due, while the prophets of old saw
justice as the basis of all true and lasting peace. These insights, confirmed
by the tragic experience of two world wars, led to the establishment of the
United Nations and the universal declaration of human rights as the basis for
the international community’s efforts to promote justice, peace and human
development worldwide, and to resolve conflicts through dialogue, not the use
of force.
In this sense, the presence of the diplomatic corps
in our midst testifies not only to Myanmar’s place in the concert of nations,
but also to the country’s commitment to uphold and pursue those foundational
principles. The future of Myanmar must be peace, a peace based on respect for
the dignity and rights of each member of society, respect for each ethnic group
and its identity, respect for the rule of law, and respect for a democratic
order that enables each individual and every group – none excluded – to offer
its legitimate contribution to the common good.
In the great work of national reconciliation and
integration, Myanmar’s religious communities have a privileged role to play.
Religious differences need not be a source of division and distrust, but rather
a force for unity, forgiveness, tolerance and wise nation building. The
religions can play a significant role in repairing the emotional, spiritual and
psychological wounds of those who have suffered in the years of conflict.
Drawing on deeply-heldvalues, they can help to uproot the causes of conflict,
build bridges of dialogue, seek justice and be a prophetic voice for all who
suffer.
It is a great sign of hope that leaders of the
various religious traditions in this country are making efforts to work
together, in a spirit of harmony and mutual respect, for peace, for helping the
poor and for educating in authentic religious and human values.
In seeking to build a culture of encounter and
solidarity, they contribute to the common good and to laying the indispensable
moral foundations for a future of hope and prosperity for coming generations.
That future is even now in the hands of the nation’s
young people.
The young are a gift to be cherished and encouraged,
an investment that will yield a rich return if only they are given real
opportunities for employment and quality education. This is an urgent
requirement of intergenerational justice.
The future of Myanmar in a rapidly changing and
interconnected world will depend on the training of its young, not only in
technical fields, but above all in the ethical values of honesty, integrity and
human solidarity that can ensure the consolidation of democracy and the growth
of unity and peace at every level of society.
Intergenerational justice likewise demands that
future generations inherit a natural environment unspoilt by human greed and
depredation. It is essential that our young not be robbed of hope and of the
chance to employ their idealism and talents in shaping the future of their
country and, indeed, our entire human family.
Madam State Counsellor, dear friends:
In these days, I wish to encourage my Catholic
brothers and sisters to persevere in their faith and to continue to express its
message of reconciliation and brotherhoodthrough charitable and humanitarian
works that benefit society as a whole.
It is my hope that, in respectful cooperation with
the followers of other religions, and all men and women of good will, they will
help to open a new era of concord and progress for the people of this beloved
nation.
“Long live Myanmar!”
I thank you for your attention, and with prayerful
good wishes for your service to the common good, I invoke upon all of you the
divine blessings of wisdom, strength and peace.
Ref; The Global New Light of Myanmar
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