The Church grieves the
passing of Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran
Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran with Pope Saint John Paul II.(Vatican Media) |
The President of the Pontifical Council for Inter-religious
Dialogue died on Thursday afternoon aged 75. He had been suffering from
Parkinson’s disease.
Created and proclaimed Cardinal by St. John Paul II in the
Consistory of 21 October 2003, Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran was
known to the world for his tireless work to promote peace through
inter-religious dialogue. He became a familiar figure also for having announced
to the world the election of Pope Francis on 13 March 2013 from the Central
Lodge of St. Peter’s Basilica.
Tauran, who was currently President of the
Pontifical Council for Inter-religious Dialogue and Camerlengo
of the Holy Roman Church, died in the United States where he was receiving
treatment for Parkinson’s disease which had afflicted him for many years.
The Cardinal, who kept active throughout his illness,
undertook an important journey to Saudi Arabia in April 2018 in the
conviction that we are threatened “not by the clash of civilizations, but by
the clash between ignorance and radicalism”. The future, he affirmed during
that visit, “consists in education” and teaching people that Christians
are not to be considered second-class citizens.
In an interview last November following the attack on the
Rawda Mosque in Sinai, which he described as “a new step towards the abyss”, he
launched an appeal to all men and women of good will to continue to work for
dialogue, peace and freedom. An appeal he reiterated last May in his Message to
Muslims for Ramadan.
In last October's message to
the Hindu community entitled “Christians and Hindus: Going beyond tolerance”
for the Deepavali holidays, Card. Tauran highlighted the challenge against
intolerance, which, he continued to emphasize, is a cause of violence in many
parts of the world.
Addressing Buddhists in his message of
good wishes for Vesakh last April, he urged them to work together against
corruption for a culture of legality and transparency.
Tauran was born on 5 April 1943 in Bordeaux, France. After
completing his classical studies at the "Michel Montaigne" High
School in Bordeaux, after two years in the diocesan Major Seminary he was sent
to Rome as a student of the Pontifical French Seminary and the Pontifical
Gregorian University, where he completed his theological and philosophical
studies, obtaining a Licentiate in Philosophy and Theology.
He was ordained a priest on 20 September 1969, and he
exercised his priestly ministry as parish vicar of St. Eulalia in Bordeaux,
while attending courses in Canon Law at the Catholic Institute of Toulouse.
Called to Rome in 1973, he attended the Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy,
where the diplomatic staff of the Holy See is trained, and the Pontifical Gregorian
University where he obtained a degree in Canon Law.
He entered the diplomatic service of the Holy See in March
1975 and was assigned to the Apostolic Nunciature in the Dominican Republic,
where he worked until 1979 until he was transferred to the Apostolic Nunciature
in Lebanon. He stayed there until July 1983, when he was called to work at the
Council of Public Affairs of the Church.
From 1984 to 1988, he followed the work of the Conference
for Security and Cooperation in Europe, participating in international events
such as the 1984 Stockholm Conference on Disarmament, the 1985 Cultural
Forum in Budapest, the 1986 Vienna Follow-up Conference. In 1988 he was
appointed Under-Secretary of the Council for the Public Affairs of the Church.
On 1 December 1990 he was elected titular Archbishop of
Telepte and nominated Secretary of the Council for the Public Affairs of the
Church which then took the name of Section for Relations with States of the
Secretariat of State. He received his episcopal ordination on 6 January 1991 in
the Vatican Basilica from Saint John Paul II.
During his 13 years as head of the Section for Relations
with States, he carried out many missions abroad and led the Holy See
Delegation in numerous international conferences.
John Paul II created and proclaimed him Cardinal in the
Consistory of 21 October 2003, of the Title of S. Apollinare alle Terme
Neroniane-Alessandrine (Deaconry elevated pro hac vice to
presbyteral title on 12 June 2014).
On 24 November 2003 he was appointed Archivist and Librarian
of the Holy Roman Church. On 25 June 2007 Pope Benedict XVI appointed him
President of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue. On 26 June
2013 Pope Francis appointed him Member of the Pontifical Commission for the
Referendum on the Institute for Religious Works.
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