Pope Francis calls for respect
for the rights of the Yazidis
Pope Francis addresses representatives of the Yazidi community exiled in Germany.(Vatican Media) |
Before the General Audience on Wednesday morning Pope
Francis received a group of representatives of the persecuted Yazidi
communities from Syria and Iraq who have found shelter in Germany and spoke of
the rights of all minorities to be able to profess their faith and maintain
their identity.
By Linda Bordoni
Pope Francis has raised his voice in favour
of Yazidi rights describing the persecuted community as
“innocent victims of a senseless and inhumane barbarity.
He was speaking to a group of Yazidi refugees from Iraq and
Syria whom he received in the Vatican before the Wednesday
General Audience.
The right to profess one’s faith
Saying that it is unacceptable that human beings continue to
be persecuted and killed because of their religious affiliation, the Pope
called for the recognition, protection and respect for persecuted minorities
and said that every person has the right to freely profess his or her own faith
without limitations.
No one has the right to obliterate a religious group
“Once again, he said, I raise my voice in favour of Yazidi
rights, above all for the right to exist as a religious community: no one can
claim the power to obliterate a religious group because it is not tolerated.
To those present the Pope said “Your history, rich in
spirituality and culture, has unfortunately been marked by unspeakable
violations of the fundamental rights of the human person: abductions, slavery,
torture, forced conversions, killings. Your sanctuaries and places of worship have
been destroyed. The luckiest among you have been able to escape, leaving behind
everything you had, even the dearest and most sacred things”.
In his address Francis also recalled that “in many parts of
the world” there are still religious and ethnic minorities, including
Christians, who are persecuted because of their faith.
The Holy See's position
He said the Holy See never tires of intervening to denounce
these situations or of demanding recognition, protection and respect while
exhorting “dialogue and reconciliation to heal every wound”.
Man capable of planning annihilation of the other
“The darkest forces can be unleashed from the heart of man”,
the Pope continued, making him capable of planning “the annihilation of his
brother, of considering him an enemy, an adversary, or even an individual
without his same human dignity”.
He appealed to all not to forget community members who are
still in the hands of terrorists and expressed his hope that everything
possible will be done to save them, to trace those who are missing and to give
identity and a worthy burial to those who have been killed.
“The international community cannot remain a silent and
unresponsive spectator in the face of your tragedy” he said.
The return of refugees
Pope Francis concluded his address encouraging institutions
and people of good will who belong to other communities to contribute “to the
reconstruction of homes and of places of worship” without neglecting to push
forward concrete efforts and create the conditions for the return of the
refugees to their homes and the preservation of their identity.
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