Pope receives book about 1657 battle involving Papal
fleet
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis
on Wednesday received a copy of the book La Squadra Pontificia ai
Dardanelli 1657 / İlk Çanakkale Zaferі 1657 from the author, Rinaldo
Marmara.
The book is an Italian and
Turkish transliteration of a manuscript from the Chigi collection of the
Vatican Apostolic Library that is an account of the Papal fleet that
participated in the Second Battle of the Dardanelles in 1657, which took place
during the Cretan War, also called the Fifth Ottoman–Venetian War.
During a presentation of the
book on Tuesday evening, the author said that his objective was to make
important archival material from the Vatican Archives and Vatican Library
accessible to Turkish historians and researchers.
The Ottomans won the Battle
of the Dardanelles, and later conquered the island of Crete.
The following Press
Release was issued on Wednesday morning
This morning, at the
conclusion of the General Audience, Mr Rinaldo Marmara presented to His
Holiness Pope Francis a copy of his book La Squadra Pontificia ai Dardanelli
1657 / İlk Çanakkale Zaferі 1657. This volume is an Italian and Turkish
transliteration of a manuscript from the Chigi collection of the Vatican
Apostolic Library that is an account of the papal fleet that participated in
the Second Battle of the Dardanelles in 1657. During a presentation of the book
last evening, the author stated that his objective was to make important
archival material from the Vatican Archives and Vatican Library accessible to
Turkish historians and researchers. The book, notwithstanding the painful
memories of history, illustrates the importance of scholarly research and
opening up archives to historical investigation in the service of truth and
building bridges of cooperation and mutual understanding.
In light of this, the repeated
commitment of Turkey to make its archives available to historians and
researchers of interested parties in order to arrive jointly at a better
understanding of historical events and the pain and suffering endured by all
parties, regardless of their religious or ethnic identity, caught up in war and
conflict, including the tragic events of 1915, is noted and appreciated. The
painful events of history should not be forgotten; instead they require careful
examination and reflection so that they may lead to the healing and
purification of memory so necessary for reconciliation and forgiveness for
individuals and peoples (Cf. Pope John Paul II, Message on the occasion of the
commemorative Convention on Pope Leo XIII and the historical studies promoted
by the Pontifical Committee for Historical Sciences, 28 October 2003).
The memory of the suffering
and pain of both the distant and the more recent past, as in the case of the
assassination of Taha Carım, Ambassador of Turkey to the Holy See, in June
1977, at the hands of a terrorist group, urges us also to acknowledge the
suffering of the present and to condemn all acts of violence and terrorism,
which continue to cause victims today.
Particularly heinous and
offensive is violence and terrorism committed in the name of God or religion.
As His Holiness Pope Francis stated during his visit to the Central African
Republic: “Christians and Muslims are brothers and sisters...Together, we must
say no to hatred, no to revenge and no to violence, particularly that violence
which is perpetrated in the name of a religion or of God himself” (Pope
Francis, Address to the Muslim Community, Central Mosque of Koudoukou, Bangui,
Central African Republic, 30 November 2015). May these words inspire all people
of goodwill to remember and affirm their brotherhood, solidarity, compassion
and shared humanity and to reiterate their common stand against all violence.
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