Archbishop of Juba: The Pope told me he wants to visit
South Sudan
(Vatican
Radio) The Catholic Archbishop of Juba said on Thursday that Pope
Francis told him that he would like to visit South Sudan,
a nation wracked by a bitter civil war. Archbishop Paolino Lukudu Loro said the
dire situation in his homeland was described to the Pope during an earlier
audience between the Holy Father and a delegation of Christian religious
leaders from South Sudan. In addition to Archbishop Loro, the delegation
included the Archbishop and Primate of the Episcopal Church of Sudan,
the Rev. Daniel Deng Bul, and the Moderator of the Presbyterian Church
of Sudan, the Rev. Peter Gai Lual Marrow.
South
Sudan, the world’s youngest country, has seen in recent months the resurgence
of a brutal civil war between government troops loyal to President Salva Kiir
and opposition forces following former deputy Reik Machar.
Archbishop
Lukudu Loro said all the religious leaders spoke during the papal audience
about South Sudan’s war, the killings, the refugees and the prevailing fear and
appealed to the Pope to come and visit their homeland. He said the Pope replied
by saying he was close to them in their sufferings and repeated twice that he
wanted to visit South Sudan.
Archbishop
Lukudu Loro also told Vatican Radio’s Christopher Wells that the country is in
dire need of humanitarian assistance and of the attention and care of the
international community, and that he hopes the Pope and other Christian leaders
will help raise awareness of the critical situation facing the people of South
Sudan:
Below,
please find the English translation of the Communiqué of the Holy See Press
Office on Pope Francis’ meeting with religious leaders of South Sudan:
Today
in the Vatican Apostolic Palace the Holy Father Francis received in audience
the principal Christian religious leaders of South Sudan: Archbishop
Paulino Lukudu Loro, mccj, of Juba, Rev. Daniel Deng Bul Yak, Archbishop
of the Province of the Episcopal Church of South Sudan & Sudan, and
Rev. Peter Gai Lual Marrow, Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of South
Sudan.
In
the context of the tensions that divide the population to the detriment of
coexistence in the country, during the meeting with the Holy Father it was
acknowledged that good and fruitful collaboration exists among the Christian
Churches, who wish primarily to offer their contribution to promoting the
common good, protecting the dignity of the person, protecting the helpless and
implementing initiatives for dialogue and reconciliation. In the light of the
Year of Mercy in progress in the Catholic Church, it was underlined that the
fundamental experience of forgiveness and acceptance of the other is the
privileged path to building peace and to human and social development. In this
regard, it was confirmed that the various Christian Churches are committed, in
a spirit of communion and unity, to service to the population, promoting the
spread of a culture of encounter and sharing.
Finally,
all parties reiterated their willingness to journey together and to work with
renewed hope and mutual trust, in the conviction that, drawing from the
positive values inherent in their respective religious traditions, they may
show the way to respond effectively to the deepest aspirations of the
population, which keenly thirsts for a secure life and a better future.
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