Full
text of Pope Francis' address to the Diplomatic Corps
(Vatican Radio) On Monday, Pope Francis gave his traditional
address to the members of the Diplomatic Corps attached to the Holy See.
Below, please find the
full text of the Holy Father's address to the members of the Diplomatic
Corps:
ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
TO THE MEMBERS OF THE DIPLOMATIC CORPS
TO THE MEMBERS OF THE DIPLOMATIC CORPS
12 January 2015
Your Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I thank you for your
presence at this traditional meeting, which allows me at the beginning of each
new year to offer to you, your families, and the peoples you represent, my
cordial greetings and best wishes. I am especially grateful to your Dean,
Ambassador Jean-Claude Michel, for the kind words which he addressed to me in
the name of all, and I thank each of you for your constant efforts to foster in
a spirit of mutual cooperation the relations between the countries and
international organizations which you represent and the Holy See. In the course
of the past year too, these relations were consolidated by an increase in the
presence of ambassadors resident in Rome and by the signing of new bilateral
Accords, both general, like that concluded last January with Cameroon, and
specific, like those signed with Malta and Serbia.
Today I wish to repeat
a word quite dear to us: peace! It comes to us from the angelic hosts who
proclaimed it on Christmas night (cf. Lk 2:14) as a precious gift of God, while
at the same time as a personal and social responsibility which calls for our
commitment and concern. But together with peace, the image of the Christmas
crèche speaks to us another tragic reality: that of rejection. In some
iconographic representations, both in the West and in the East – I think for
example of the splendid Nativity icon of Andrej Rublev – the Child Jesus is
shown not lying in a manger, but in a tomb. The image, which is meant to
connect the two principal Christian feasts of Christmas and Easter, shows that
the joyful acceptance of this new birth is inseparable from the entire drama of
Jesus’ life, his humiliation and rejection, even to death on the cross.
The Christmas stories
themselves show us the hardened heart of a humanity which finds it difficult to
accept the Child. From the very start, he is cast aside, left out in the cold,
forced to be born in a stable since there was no room in the inn (cf. Lk 2:7).
If this is how the Son of God was treated, how much more so is it the case with
so many of our brothers and sisters! Rejection is an attitude we all share; it
makes us see our neighbour not as a brother or sister to be accepted, but as
unworthy of our attention, a rival, or someone to be bent to our will. This is
the mind-set which fosters that “throwaway culture” which spares nothing and no
one: nature, human beings, even God himself. It gives rise to a humanity filled
with pain and constantly torn by tensions and conflicts of every sort.
Emblematic of this, in
the Gospel infancy narratives, is King Herod. Feeling his authority threatened
by the Child Jesus, he orders all the children of Bethlehem to be killed. We
think immediately of Pakistan, where a month ago, more than a hundred children
were slaughtered with unspeakable brutality. To their families I wish to renew
my personal condolences and the assurance of my continued prayers for the many
innocents who lost their lives.
The personal dimension
of rejection is inevitably accompanied by a social dimension, a culture of
rejection which severs the deepest and most authentic human bonds, leading to
the breakdown of society and spawning violence and death. We see painful
evidence of this in the events reported daily in the news, not least the tragic
slayings which took place in Paris a few days ago. Other people “are no longer
regarded as beings of equal dignity, as brothers or sisters sharing a common
humanity, but rather as objects” (Message for the 2015 World Day of Peace, 8
December 2014, 4). Losing their freedom, people become enslaved, whether to the
latest fads, or to power, money, or even deviant forms of religion. These are
dangers which I pointed out in my recent Message for the World Day of Peace,
which dealt with the issue of today’s multiple forms of enslavement. All of
them are born of a corrupt heart, a heart incapable of recognizing and doing
good, of pursuing peace.
It saddens us to see
the tragic consequences of this mentality of rejection and this “culture of
enslavement” (ibid., 2) in the never-ending spread of conflicts. Like a true
world war fought piecemeal, they affect, albeit in different forms and degrees
of intensity, a number of areas in our world, beginning with nearby Ukraine,
which has become a dramatic theatre of combat. It is my hope that through
dialogue the efforts presently being made to end the hostilities will be
consolidated, and that the parties involved will embark as quickly as possible,
in a renewed spirit of respect for international law, upon the path of mutual
trust and fraternal reconciliation, with the aim of bringing an end to the
present crisis.
My thoughts turn above
all to the Middle East, beginning with the beloved land of Jesus which I had
the joy of visiting last May, and for whose peace we constantly pray. We did
this with extraordinary intensity, together with the then President of Israel,
Shimon Peres, and the President of Palestine, Mahmoud Abbas, inspired by a
confident hope that negotiations between the two parties will once more resume,
for the sake of ending violence and reaching a solution which can enable
Palestinians and Israelis alike to live at last in peace within clearly
established and internationally recognized borders, thus implementing the “two
state solution”.
The Middle East is
tragically embroiled in other conflicts which have lasted far too long, with
chilling repercussions, due also to the spread of fundamentalist terrorism in
Syria and in Iraq. This phenomenon is a consequence of the throwaway culture
being applied to God. Religious fundamentalism, even before it eliminates human
beings by perpetrating horrendous killings, eliminates God himself, turning him
into a mere ideological pretext. In the face of such unjust aggression, which
also strikes Christians and other ethnic and religious groups in the region, a
unanimous response is needed, one which, within the framework of international
law, can end the spread of acts of violence, restore harmony and heal the deep
wounds which the ongoing conflicts have caused. Here, in your presence, I
appeal to the entire international community, as I do to the respective
governments involved, to take concrete steps to bring about peace and to
protect all those who are victims of war and persecution, driven from their
homes and their homeland. In a letter written shortly before Christmas, I
sought to express my personal closeness and the promise of my prayers to all
the Christian communities of the Middle East. Theirs is a precious testimony of
faith and courage, for they play a fundamental role as artisans of peace,
reconciliation and development in the civil societies of which they are a part.
A Middle East without Christians would be a marred and mutilated Middle East!
In urging the international community not to remain indifferent in the face of
this situation, I express my hope that religious, political and intellectual
leaders, especially those of the Muslim community, will condemn all
fundamentalist and extremist interpretations of religion which attempt to
justify such acts of violence.
Sadly, comparable acts
of brutality, which not infrequently reap victims from among the poor and the
most vulnerable, are found in other parts of the world as well. I think in
particular of Nigeria where acts of violence continue to strike
indiscriminately and there is a constant increase in the tragic phenomenon of
kidnappings, often of young girls carried off to be made objects of
trafficking. This is an abominable trade which must not continue! It is a
scourge which needs to be eradicated, since it strikes all of us, from
individual families to the entire international community (cf. Address to Newly
Accredited Ambassadors to the Holy See, 12 December 2013).
I also look with
concern to the many civil conflicts taking place in other parts of Africa,
beginning with Libya, ravaged by a drawn-out internecine war which has caused
unspeakable suffering among its people, with grave repercussions for the
delicate balances in the region. I think of the dramatic situation in the
Central African Republic, in which, sad to say, the good will inspiring the
efforts of those seeking to build a future of peace, security and prosperity,
has encountered resistance and selfish partisan interests. These risk frustrating
the hopes of a people which has endured so much and which now longs to shape
its future in freedom. Of particular concern, too, is the situation in South
Sudan and in some areas of Sudan, the Horn of Africa and the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, where civilian casualties are on the rise and thousands
of persons, including many women and children, are being forced to flee and to
endure conditions of extreme distress. I voice my hope for a common commitment
on the part of individual governments and the international community to end
every form of fighting, hatred and violence, and to pursue reconciliation,
peace and the defence of the transcendent dignity of the person.
Nor can we overlook
the fact that wars involve another horrendous crime, the crime of rape. This is
a most grave offense against the dignity of women, who are not only violated in
body but also in spirit, resulting in a trauma hard to erase and with effects
on society as well. Sadly, even apart from situations of war, all too many women
even today are victims of violence.
Every conflict and war
is emblematic of the throwaway culture, since people’s lives are deliberately
crushed by those in power. Yet that culture is also fuelled by more subtle and
insidious forms of rejection. I think in the first place of the way the sick
are treated; often they are cast aside and marginalized like the lepers in the
Gospel. Among the lepers of our own day we can count the victims of the new and
terrible outbreak of Ebola which, especially in Liberia, Sierra Leone and
Guinea, has already taken over six thousand lives. Today I wish publicly to
praise and thank those healthcare workers who, alongside men and women
religious and volunteers, are caring in every way possible for the sick and
their families, especially orphaned children. At the same time I renew my
appeal to the entire international community to provide adequate humanitarian
assistance to patients and to make concerted efforts to combat the disease.
Together with lives
thrown away because of war and disease, there are those of numerous refugees
and displaced persons. Once again, the reality can be appreciated by reflecting
on the childhood of Jesus, which sheds light on another form of the throwaway
culture which harms relationships and causes the breakdown of society. Indeed,
because of Herod’s brutality, the Holy Family was forced to flee to Egypt, and
was only able to return several years later (cf. Mt 2:13-15). One consequence
of the situations of conflict just described is the flight of thousands of
persons from their homeland. At times they leave not so much in search of a
better future, but any future at all, since remaining at home can mean certain
death. How many persons lose their lives during these cruel journeys, the
victims of unscrupulous and greedy thugs? I raised this issue during my recent
visit to the European Parliament, where I insisted that “we cannot allow the
Mediterranean to become a vast cemetery” (Address to the European Parliament,
Strasbourg, 25 November 2014). Then too there is the alarming fact that many
immigrants, especially in the Americas, are unaccompanied children, all the
more at risk and in need of greater care, attention and protection.
Often coming without
documents to strange lands whose language they do not speak, migrants find it
difficult to be accepted and to find work. In addition to the uncertainties of
their flight, they have to face the drama of rejection. A change of attitude is
needed on our part, moving from indifference and fear to genuine acceptance of
others. This of course calls for “enacting adequate legislation to protect the
rights of… citizens and to ensure the acceptance of immigrants” (ibid.). I
thank all those who, even at the cost of their lives, are working to assist
refugees and immigrants, and I urge states and international organizations to
make every effort to resolve these grave humanitarian problems and to provide
the immigrants’ countries of origin with forms of aid which can help promote
their social and political development and settle their internal conflicts,
which are the chief cause of this phenomenon. “We need to take action against
the causes and not only the effects” (ibid.). This will also enable immigrants
to return at some point to their own country and to contribute to its growth
and development.
Together with
immigrants, displaced people and refugees, there are many other “hidden exiles”
(Angelus, 29 December 2013) living in our homes and in our families. I think
especially of the elderly, the handicapped and young people. The elderly
encounter rejection when they are considered a “burdensome presence” (ibid.),
while the young are thrown away when they are denied concrete prospects of
employment to build their future. Indeed, there is no poverty worse than that
which takes away work and the dignity of work (cf. Address to Participants in
the World Meeting of Popular Movements, 28 October 2014), or which turns work
into a form of enslavement. This is what I sought to stress during my recent
meeting with popular movements working to finding adequate solutions to some of
today’s problems, including the scourge of rising unemployment among the young,
illegal labour, and the dramatic situation of so many workers, especially
children, who are exploited out of greed. All this is contrary to human dignity
and the fruit of a mentality which is centred on money, benefits and economic
profit, to the detriment of our fellow man.
Then too, the family
itself is not infrequently considered disposable, thanks to the spread of an
individualistic and self-centred culture which severs human bonds and leads to
a dramatic fall in birth rates, as well as legislation which benefits various
forms of cohabitation rather than adequately supporting the family for the
welfare of society as a whole.
Among the causes of
these realities is a model of globalization which levels out differences and
even discards cultures, cutting them off from those factors which shape each
people’s identity and constitute a legacy essential to their sound social
development. In a drab, anonymous world, it is easy to understand the
difficulties and the discouragement felt by many people who have literally lost
the sense of being alive. This tragic situation is aggravated by the continuing
economic crisis, which fosters pessimism and social conflict. I have been able
to see its effects here in Rome, where I meet many people in trying situations,
and in the various journeys I have made in Italy.
To the beloved Italian
nation, then, I would like to express my hope that in the continuing climate of
social, political and economic uncertainty the Italian people will not yield to
apathy or dissension, but will rediscover those values of shared concern and
solidarity which are at the basis of their culture and civic life, and are a
reason for confidence both now and in the future, especially for the young.
Speaking of the young,
I wish to mention my journey to Korea, where last August I met thousands of young
people assembled for the Sixth Asian Youth Day. There I spoke of the need to
treasure our young, “seeking to pass on the legacy of the past and to apply it
to the challenges of the present” (Meeting with Authorities, 14 August 2014).
This demands that we reflect on “how well we are transmitting our values to the
next generation and on the kind of world and society we are preparing to hand
on to them” (ibid.).
This evening I will
have the joy of setting off once more for Asia, to visit Sri Lanka and the
Philippines as a sign of my interest and pastoral concern for the people of
that vast continent. To them and to their governments I wish to voice yet again
the desire of the Holy See to offer its own contribution of service to the
common good, to harmony and social concord. In particular, I express my hope
for a resumption of dialogue between the two Koreas, sister countries which
speak the same language.
Your Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
At the beginning of a
new year, though, we do not wish our outlook to be dominated by pessimism, or
the defects and deficiencies of the present time. We also want to thank God for
the gifts and blessings he has bestowed upon us, for the occasions of dialogue
and encounter which he has granted us, and for the fruits of peace which he has
enabled us to savour.
I experienced an
eloquent sign that the culture of encounter is possible during my visit to
Albania, a nation full of young people who represent hope for the future.
Despite the painful events of its recent history, the country is marked by the
“peaceful coexistence and collaboration that exists among followers of
different religions” (Address to Authorities, Tirana, 21 September 2014), in an
atmosphere of respect and mutual trust between Catholics, Orthodox and Muslims.
This is an important sign that sincere faith in God makes one open to others,
generates dialogue and works for the good, whereas violence is always the
product of a falsification of religion, its use as a pretext for ideological
schemes whose only goal is power over others. Similarly, in my recent journey
to Turkey, a historic bridge between East and West, I was able to see the
fruits of ecumenical and interreligious dialogue, as well as efforts made to
assist refugees from other countries of the Middle East. I also encountered
this spirit of openness in Jordan, which I visited at the beginning of my
pilgrimage to the Holy Land, and in the testimonies which come from Lebanon, a
country which I pray will overcome its current political problems.
One example close to
my heart of how dialogue can build bridges comes from the recent decision of
the United States of America and Cuba to end a lack of communication which has
endured for more than half a century, and to initiate a rapprochement for the
benefit of their respective citizens. Here I think too of the people of Burkina
Faso, who are experiencing a period of significant political and institutional
change, with the hope that a renewed spirit of cooperation will contribute to
the growth of a more just and fraternal society. I also note with pleasure that
last March an agreement was signed to end long years of tension in the
Philippines. I wish to encourage the efforts made to ensure a stable peace in
Colombia, as well as the initiatives taken to restore political and social
harmony in Venezuela. At the same time, I express my hope that a definitive
agreement may soon be reached between Iran and the 5+1 Group regarding the use
of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes, and my appreciation of the efforts already
made in this regard. I note with satisfaction the intention of the United
States to close the Guantanamo detention facilities, while acknowledging the
generous willingness of several countries to receive the detainees. Finally, I
would like to express my appreciation and encouragement to those countries
actively engaged in promoting human development, political stability and civil
coexistence between their citizens.
Your Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
On 6 August 1945,
humanity witnessed one of the most horrendous catastrophes in its history. For
the first time, in a new and unprecedented way, the world experienced the full
potential of man’s destructive power. From the ashes of that immense tragedy
which was the Second World War, there arose among the nations a new will for
dialogue and encounter which inspired the United Nations Organization, whose
seventieth anniversary we will celebrate this year. In his visit to the
UN headquarters fifty years ago, my predecessor, Pope Paul VI, noted that “the
blood of millions, countless unheard-of sufferings, useless massacres and
frightening ruins have sanctioned the agreement that unites you with an oath
that ought to change the future of the world: never again war, never again war!
It is peace, peace, that has to guide the destiny of the nations of all
mankind” (Address to the United Nations, New York, 4 October 1965).
This is likewise my
own hope-filled prayer for this new year, which, for that matter, will see the
continuation of two significant processes: the drawing up of the Post-2015
Development Agenda, with the adoption of Sustainable Development Goals, and the
drafting of a new Climate Change Agreement. The indispensable presupposition of
all these is peace, which, even more than an end to all wars, is the fruit of
heartfelt conversion.
With these sentiments,
I once more offer to each of you, to your families and your peoples, my
prayerful good wishes that this new year of 2015 will be one of hope and peace.

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