Pope in Romania asks forgiveness
to Roma community: full text
Pope Francis meets with memners of the Roma community in the Barbu Lautaru district of Blaj |
Pope Francis wraps-up his pilgrimage to Romania meeting with
representatives of the nation's Roma community. Here is the full text of his
discourse:
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Good afternoon!
Good afternoon!
I am happy to meet you,
and I thank you for your welcome. You, Father Ioan, are quite right when
you point to a truth as certain as it is often forgotten: in Christ’s Church,
there is room for everyone. Otherwise it would not be Christ's Church.
The Church is a place of encounter. We need to keep this in
mind, not as a pretty slogan but rather as part of our identity card as
Christians. You reminded us of this by recalling the example of the
bishop and martyr Ioan Suciu, who gave concrete expression to the desire of God
our Father to encounter every person in friendship and in sharing. The
Gospel of joy is communicated in the happiness of encounter and the knowledge
that we have a Father who loves us. Knowing that he watches out for us,
we learn how to watch out for one another. In this spirit, I have wanted
to shake hands with you, to look you in the eye and to open my heart to you, in
prayer and in the hope of becoming part of your own prayers and entering into
your hearts.
My heart,
however, is heavy. It is weighed down by the many experiences of
discrimination, segregation and mistreatment experienced by your communities.
History tells us that Christians too, including Catholics, are not
strangers to such evil. I would like to ask your forgiveness for this.
I ask forgiveness – in the name of the Church and of the Lord – and I ask
forgiveness of you. For all those times in history when we have
discriminated, mistreated or looked askance at you, with the look of Cain
rather than that of Abel, and were unable to acknowledge you, to value you and
to defend you in your uniqueness. Cain was not concerned about his
brother. Indifference breeds prejudices and fosters anger and resentment.
How many times do we judge rashly, with words that sting, with attitudes that
sow hatred and division! Whenever anyone is left behind, the human family
cannot move forward. Deep down, we are not Christians, and not even good
human beings, unless we are able to see the person before his
or her actions, before our own judgments and prejudices.
The history
of humanity is never without Abel and Cain. There is the hand held out
and the hand raised to strike. There is the open door of encounter and
the closed door of conflict. There is acceptance and there is
rejection. There are those who see in others a brother or a sister, and
those who see instead an obstacle standing in their way. There is the
civilization of love and the civilization of hate. Each day we have to
choose between Abel and Cain. Like a person standing at a crossroads, we
are faced with a decisive choice: to go the way of reconciliation or the way of
vengeance. Let us choose the way of Jesus. It is a way that demands
effort, but the way that brings peace. And it passes through forgiveness.
May we not let ourselves be dragged along by the hurts we nurse within
us; let there be no room for anger. For one evil never corrects another
evil, no vendetta ever satisfies an injustice, no resentment is ever good for
the heart and no rejection will ever bring us closer to others.
Dear
brothers and sisters, as a people, you have a great role to play. Do not
be afraid to share and offer the distinctive gifts you possess and that have
marked your history. We need those gifts: respect for the value of life
and of the extended family, solidarity, hospitality, helpfulness, support and
concern for the vulnerable within your community, respect and appreciation for
the elderly, this is a great gift that you possess; and for the religious
meaning of life, spontaneity and joie de vivre. Wherever you find yourselves,
share those gifts and try to accept all the good that others can offer to you.
For this reason, I would encourage you tojourney together,
wherever you are, in helping to build a more humane world, overcoming fear and
suspicion, breaking down the barriers that separate us from others, and
encouraging mutual trust in the patient and never fruitless search for
fraternity. Keep trying to journey together with dignity: the dignity of
the family, the dignity of earning your daily bread – this is what helps you to
go forward – and the dignity of prayer. Keep looking to the future
(cf. Prayer Meeting with Roma and Sinti People, 9 May 2019).
Our meeting
is the last of my visit to Romania. I came to this beautiful and
welcoming country as a pilgrim and a brother, in order to meet all its
people. I have met with you and with many people, to build a bridge
between my heart and yours. Now I am returning home enriched by the experience
of different places and special moments, but above all, taking with me your
faces. Your faces will colour my memories and populate my prayers.
I thank you and I bring you with me. And now, before I bless you, I
ask you a great favour: please pray for me. Thank you!
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