"Give Peace a Chance, World
Religions
Say"
(Reuters, January 19, 2003)
Leaders of world religions appealed to believers in all
faiths to
work to avert a conflict in Iraq as anti-war protests gathered pace around
the
world.
``As conflicts divide neighbors and nations and the threat of
war
hangs over us like a shadow, too many people see and employ religion as a
force
of divisiveness and violence, rather than a force for unity and peace,''
the
representatives said in a concluding statement issued Saturday at the end
of a
symposium.
The Vatican-sponsored meeting was attended by representatives
of
Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Zoroastrianism
and
Sikhism.
It concluded as demonstrators staged one of the biggest waves
of
global anti-war protests since the United States and close ally Britain
began
pouring warplanes, ships and tens of thousands of troops into the Gulf
region.
``As conflicts divide neighbors and nations and the threat of
war
hangs over us like a shadow, too many people see and employ religion as a
force
of divisiveness and violence, rather than a force of unity and peace,''
the
concluding statement said.
The 38 leaders from 15 countries who attended the three-day
meeting appealed for diplomacy and persuasion to correct injustices and
respond
to international threats.
``Opting for peace does not mean a passive acquiescence to
evil or
compromise of principle. It demands an active struggle against hatred,
oppression and disunity, but not by using methods of violence. Building
peace
requires creative and courageous action,'' the statement
said.
The United States has threatened a war on Iraq to force
Baghdad to
come clean on its alleged nuclear, chemical and biological weapons
programs.
Iraq denies that it has any.
Pope John Paul has put the Vatican on a diplomatic collision
course with the United States by condemning the possibility of a war,
saying it
was avoidable and would be a ``defeat for humanity.''
In an address to diplomats last week, the leader of the
world's
one billion Roman Catholics said conflict always had to be considered the
very
last option.
IRAQ WAR NOT SEEN AS 'JUST'
Days later, a Vatican-sanctioned journal attacked the United
States, saying that Washington was motivated by economics and that a war
would
spark a wave of terrorism and destabilize the Middle
East.
The Pope and other Christian leaders have made clear they
would
not consider an attack on Iraq a ``just war,'' which in Christianity means
that
use of military force meets rigorous conditions of moral
legitimacy.
To be considered a ``just war'' by these leaders, all other
means
must be exhausted and found ineffective and the type of force used must be
proportionate to the wrong it tries to rectify.
Cardinal Theodore McCarrick of Washington D.C. told the
gathering
that lasting peace will never be achieved until the world addresses the
``root
causes of war and conflict.''
He listed these as the rich-poor chasm, oppression of
minorities
and the ``social evils of globalisation.''
The last day was marred by the absence of Patriarch Michel
Sabbah,
the highest-ranking Catholic in the Holy Land.
Sabbah, who is Palestinian and has often criticized Israel,
decided not to leave for Rome after security checks at Tel Aviv's airport
that
he said were excessive for a diplomat.
The Vatican newspaper accused Israeli security officials of
not
respecting a Vatican diplomatic passport.
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