Pope in Hiroshima: Use and
possession of atomic energy for war is immoral
Pope at Peace Memorial Park in HIroshima (AFP) |
On his first full day in Japan, Pope Francis visits the
Hiroshima Peace Memorial and describes it as a place where death and life, loss
and rebirth, suffering and compassion have met. He reaffirms that the use and
possesson of atomic energy for purposes of war is immoral.
By Vatican News
Over 70,000 people died instantly. Another 70,000 died later
from radiation burns. At 8:15 on the morning of 6 August 1945, the first
wartime atomic bomb was dropped on the city of Hiroshima, destroying it
completely.
The only building to survive the blast was the Genbaku Dome.
Today its iconic ruin stands at the heart of the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park
as a reminder of the most destructive force ever unleashed by humanity, on
humanity.
Destruction and death
Pope Francis flew to Hiroshima to visit the Peace Memorial
on Sunday. Standing before the A-Bomb Dome, as it is called, he described the
moment of the explosion in his own words: “An incandescent burst of lightning
and fire, so many men and women, so many dreams and hopes, disappeared, leaving
behind only shadows and silence. In barely an instant, everything was devoured
by a black hole of destruction and death.”
Victims and survivors
Pope Francis said he had come to pay homage to the victims
and to acknowledge the strength and dignity of the survivors. “We continue even
today to hear the cries of those who are no longer”, said the Pope. “They came
from different places, had different names, and some spoke different languages.
Yet all were united in the same fate, in a terrifying hour that left its mark
forever not only on the history of this country, but on the face of humanity.”
A pilgrim of peace
The Pope said he had come to this place of memory and hope
for the future, as “a pilgrim of peace”, bringing with him “the cry of the poor
who are always the most helpless victims of hatred and conflict”. Pope Francis
said he wanted to be “the voice of the voiceless, who witness with concern and
anguish the growing tensions of our own time: the unacceptable inequalities and
injustices that threaten human coexistence, the grave inability to care for our
common home, and the constant outbreak of armed conflict, as if these could
guarantee a future of peace.”
Nuclear warfare is immoral
The Pope declared once more, “that the use of atomic energy
for purposes of war is today, more than ever, a crime not only against the
dignity of human beings but against any possible future for our common home.
The use of atomic energy for purposes of war is immoral, just as the possession
of atomic weapons is immoral”, affirmed Pope Francis, and “we will be judged on
this." "Future generations will rise to condemn our failure if we
spoke of peace but did not act to bring it about among the peoples of the
earth.” Peace must be “founded on truth, built up in justice, animated and
perfected by charity, and attained in freedom”, he added.
Let weapons fall from our hands
“If we really want to build a more just and secure society,
we must let the weapons fall from our hands”, continued the Pope. “How can we
propose peace if we constantly invoke the threat of nuclear war as a legitimate
recourse for the resolution of conflicts?” he asked. “A true peace can only be
an unarmed peace”, because peace is not merely the absence of war, he repeated:
“It is the fruit of justice, development, solidarity, care for our common home
and the promotion of the common good, as we have learned from the lessons of
history.”
Remember
Pope Francis presented three moral imperatives: to remember,
to journey together, to protect. We cannot allow present and future generations
to lose the memory of what happened here, insisted the Pope. “It is a memory
that ensures and encourages the building of a more fair and fraternal future;
an expansive memory, capable of awakening the consciences of all men and women,
especially those who today play a crucial role in the destiny of the nations; a
living memory that helps us say in every generation: never again!”
Journey together
We are called to journey together with a gaze of
understanding and forgiveness, continued the Pope, “to open the horizon to hope
and to bring a ray of light amid the many clouds that today darken the sky.”
Pope Francis invited us all to “open our hearts to hope, and become instruments
of reconciliation and peace.”
Protect
“This will always be possible if we are able to protect one
another and realize that we are joined by a common destiny”, he said. “Our
world, interconnected not only by globalization but by the very earth we have
always shared, demands, today more than ever, that interests exclusive to
certain groups or sectors be left to one side, in order to achieve the
greatness of those who struggle co-responsibly to ensure a common future.”
Never again
Pope Francis concluded with a single plea “to God and to all
men and women of good will, on behalf of all the victims of atomic bombings and
experiments, and of all conflicts, let us together cry out: Never again war,
never again the clash of arms, never again so much suffering!”
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