| I appeal for greater solidarity and
political will
Your situation shows urgent
need for just solution to underlying causes of the problem
On Wednesday afternoon, 22 March, the Holy Father visited
the Dheisheh Refugee Camp, one of the many camps administered by the UN
Relief and Works Agency for the estimated three to four million
Palestinian refugees and displaced persons in the Middle East. During his
brief visit the Pope gave the following address in English.
Here is the text.
Dear Friends,
1. It is important to me that my pilgrimage to the birthplace of Jesus
Christ, on this the two thousandth anniversary of that extraordinary event
includes this visit to Dheisheh. It is deeply significant that here, close
to Bethlehem, I am meeting you, refugees and displaced persons, and
representatives of the organizations and agencies involved in a true
mission of mercy. Throughout my pontificate I have felt close to the
Palestinian people in their sufferings.
I greet each one of you, and I hope and pray that my visit will bring
some comfort in your difficult situation. Please God it will help to draw
attention to your continuing plight. You have been deprived of many things
which represent basic needs of the human person: proper housing, health
care, education and work. Above all you bear the sad memory of what you
were forced to leave behind, not just material possessions, but your
freedom, the closeness of relatives, and the familial surroundings and
cultural traditions which nourished your personal and family life. It is
true that much is being done here in Dheisheh and in other camps to
respond to your needs, especially through the United Nations Relief and
Works Agency. I am particularly pleased at the effectiveness of the
presence of the Pontifical Mission for Palestine and many other
Catholic organizations. But there is still much to be done.
2. The degrading conditions in which refugees often have to live; the
continuation over long periods of situations that are barely tolerable in
emergencies or for a brief time of transit; the fact that displaced
persons are obliged to remain for years in settlement camps: these are the
measure of the urgent need for a just solution to the underlying causes of
the problem. Only a resolute effort on the part of leaders in the Middle
East and in the international community as a whole—inspired by a higher
vision of politics as service of the common good—can remove the causes
of your present situation. My appeal is for greater international
solidarity and the political will to meet this challenge. I plead with all
who are sincerely working for justice and peace not to lose heart. I
appeal to political leaders to implement agreements already arrived at,
and to go forward towards the peace for which all reasonable men and women
yearn, to the justice to which they have an inalienable right.
3. Dear young people, continue to strive through education to take your
rightful place in society, despite the difficulties and handicaps that you
have to face because of your refugee status. The Catholic Church is
particularly happy to serve the noble cause of education through the
extremely valuable work of Bethlehem University, founded as a sequel to
the visit of my predecessor Pope Paul VI in 1964.
Dear refugees, do not think that your present condition makes you any
less important in God's eyes! Never forget your dignity as his children!
Here at Bethlehem the Divine Child was laid in a manger in a stable;
shepherds from the nearby fields were the first to receive the heavenly
message of peace and hope for the world. God’s design was fulfilled in
the midst of humility and poverty.
Dear aid workers and volunteers, believe in the task that you are
fulfilling! Genuine and practical solidarity with those in need is not a
favour conceded, it is a demand of our shared humanity and a recognition
of the dignity of every human being.
Let us all turn with confidence to the Lord, asking him to inspire
those in a position of responsibility to promote justice, security and
peace, without delay and in an eminently practical way.
The Church, through her social and charitable organizations, will
continue to be at your side and to plead your cause before the world.
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