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Acknowledgment: Catholic World News Service | |||
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VATICAN (CWNews.com) -- In his annual Urbi et Orbi address,
delivered on Easter Sunday, Pope John Paul II expressed the hope
that the "message of peace" of "the risen Christ" will enlighten the
hearts of world leaders in the Middle East, especially in the city of
Jerusalem, where he observed that the peace is now in danger. The
Pope also called for an end to ethnic rivalries which have caused
"fratricidal wars and massacres," especially in Africa but also in
Europe.
Vatican sources indicated that the Pope's references to fratricidal
wars were intended to apply to Bosnia and Kosovo-- where tensions
are running high and violence is never far from the surface-- as well
as to the Great Lakes region of Africa, where massacres continue to
occur in Rwanda and Burundi.
The Pope addressed his Easter message in part to "all those who are
living through a Calvary that is apparently without end." For them,
too, he recalled the message of the risen Christ, and noted that how
many people over the centuries-- and in this century-- have borne
witness to Christ's message of peace. "Some have been witnesses
even to the shedding of their blood," he pointed out, and their
witness has inspired the Church to endure the harshest persecutions.
Hoping that the horrors of this century will not recur "for the
humanity which is entering the third millennium," the Holy Father
urged the faithful to take courage in the Easter message, and to work
to build a world of peace.
Pope John Paul concluded his Easter address to the world by saying,
"Happy Easter, in the joy and peace of the risen Christ"-- a message
he repeated in 57 different languages.
Acknowledgment: To subscribe to Catholic World News Service, available daily by e-mail, click the CWN icon to the right.
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