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Peacemaking
38. At
the end of the twentieth century the world is still threatened by forces which
generate conflicts and wars, and Asia is certainly not exempt from these. Among
these forces are intolerance and marginalization of all kinds—social, cultural,
political, and even religious. Day by day fresh violence is inflicted upon
individuals and entire peoples, and the culture of death takes hold in the
unjustifiable recourse to violence to resolve tensions. Given the appalling
situation of conflict in so many parts of the world, the Church is called to be
deeply involved in international and interreligious efforts to bring about
peace, justice and reconciliation. She continues to insist on the negotiated
and non-military resolution of conflicts, and she looks to the day when nations
will abandon war as a way of vindicating claims or a means of resolving
differences. She is convinced that war creates more problems than it ever
solves, that dialogue is the only just and noble path to agreement and
reconciliation, and that the patient and wise art of peacemaking is especially
blessed by God.
Especially
troubling in Asia is the continual race to acquire weapons of mass destruction,
an immoral and wasteful expenditure in national budgets, which in some cases
cannot even satisfy people's basic needs. The Synod Fathers also spoke of the
vast number of landmines in Asia, which have maimed or killed hundreds of
thousands of innocent people, while despoiling fertile land which could
otherwise be used for food production. 190 It is the responsibility of
all, especially of those who govern nations, to work more energetically for
disarmament. The Synod called for a stop to the manufacture, sale and use of
nuclear, chemical and biological arms and urged those who have set landmines to
assist in the work of rehabilitation and restoration. 191 Above all the
Synod Fathers prayed to God, who knows the depths of every human conscience, to
put sentiments of peace in the hearts of those tempted to follow the ways of
violence so that the biblical vision will become a reality: "they shall
beat their swords into ploughshares, and their spears into pruning hooks;
nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any
more" (Is 2:4).
The Synod
heard many testimonies concerning the sufferings of the people of Iraq, and
about the fact that many Iraqis, especially children, have died because of the
lack of medicines and other basic commodities deriving from the continuing
embargo. With the Synod Fathers, I wish to express once again my solidarity
with the Iraqi people, and I am particularly close in prayer and hope to the
sons and daughters of the Church in that country. The Synod prayed that God
will enlighten the minds and hearts of all those who bear responsibility for
bringing about a just solution to the crisis, in order that an already sorely
tried people may be spared further suffering and sorrow. 192
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