Benedict XVI Calls for Iraqis to Strive for Reconciliation, Peace

In response to the shocking death of Archbishop Paulos Faraj Rahho:

VATICAN CITY, MARCH 16, 2008 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI made a strong appeal for peace in Iraq today, in the wake of the kidnapping and death of the archbishop of Mosul.

The Pope led the praying of the midday Angelus in St. Peter’s Square after he celebrated Palm Sunday Mass. He began his pre-Angelus address with a tribute to Archbishop Paulos Faraj Rahho of Mosul.

The 65-year-old archbishop was kidnapped Feb. 29 after leading the celebration of the Way of the Cross. His two guards and driver were shot and killed…

…”At the end of this solemn celebration in which we have meditated on Christ’s Passion,” the Holy Father said today: “I would like to recall the late Chaldean archbishop of Mosul, Monsignor Paulos Faraj Rahho, who tragically died a few days ago.

“His beautiful witness of fidelity to Christ, to the Church and his people, whom he did not want to abandon despite numerous threats, moves me to cry out forcefully and with distress: Enough with the bloodshed, enough with the violence, enough with the hatred in Iraq!”

The Holy Father went on to plea for an end to the upheaval caused by the war in Iraq, which began five years ago this week.

He said: “And at the same time I make an appeal to the Iraqi people, who for five years have endured the consequences of a war that has provoked upheaval in its civil and social life: Beloved Iraqi people, lift up your heads and let it be you yourselves who, in the first place, rebuild your national life!

“May reconciliation, forgiveness, justice and respect for the civil coexistence of tribes, ethnic groups and religious groups be the solidary way to peace in the name of God!”

The left, following the lead of dimwitted MSM reports, has chosen to call this a Papal condemnation of the liberation of Iraq – of course, what it really amounts to is a heartfelt call for what all good people want – an end to the hatred, which can only be accomplished as Iraqis rise up and work for reconciliation, justice and peace. Iraqis are doing this, in ever greater numbers, but let us pray that the death of Archbishop Paulos serves as a catalyst to bring all Iraqis of goodwill together for the future of Iraq.

36 thoughts on “Benedict XVI Calls for Iraqis to Strive for Reconciliation, Peace

  1. Joe's avatar Joe March 17, 2008 / 9:40 am

    Mark:

    The left, following the lead of dimwitted MSM reports, has chosen to call this blah blah blah blah blah blah blah

    Why do you insist on throwing a dig at Dems on every post? Even on posts that really have nothing to do with Dem/Repub?

    You are making this blog look more and more foolish every day.

  2. Sunny's avatar Sunny March 17, 2008 / 11:09 am

    Pope Benedict XVI on War.

    “There were not sufficient reasons to unleash a war against Iraq.

    To say nothing of the fact that, given the new weapons

    that make possible destructions that go beyond the combatant groups,

    today we should be asking ourselves if it is still licit to admit

    the very existence of a ‘just war.'”

    – Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI, May 2, 2003.

  3. Michael's avatar Michael March 17, 2008 / 11:38 am

    Good thing our government doesn’t take the advice of a religious leader in order to decide how to protect itself. Obama, you listening?

  4. Canadian Observer's avatar Canadian Observer March 17, 2008 / 11:50 am

    2. Sunny | March 17th, 2008 at 11:09 am

    Sunny, Sunny, Sunny.

    His Holiness made those comments before he became God’s spokesman on earth. As Mark will testify, he doesn’t feel that way anymore. He is a staunch supporter of the Bush doctrine and any invasion the U.S. carries out will now receive the Creator’s blessing through him.

  5. SteaM's avatar SteaM March 17, 2008 / 1:26 pm

    I bet you could help out with some of that Iraqi hatred towards the United States by completely reversing the Debaathification giving people their government jobs back. Along with reinstating the Iraqi army that was disbanded. People who are good at what they do and are the professionals should probably be employed and helping to rebuild their country along with defending it by serving honorably in their army.

    Instead we told them they were fired, banned from service, and sent them home to their families as unemployed men and woman. Do you think their children, spouces, family, and friends might be a little upset with the United States?

    Mark, I just don’t think it’s fair to say that we should end the hatred without identifing the source.

  6. OhioOrrin's avatar OhioOrrin March 17, 2008 / 2:02 pm

    u leefty eediot heathens…

    God Almighty has DIRECTED war against the enemies of the faithful.

    War has occured in Heaven itself.

    The Holy See recognizes the doctirne of Righteous War like freeing the slaves & defeating the Nazis.

    educate thyself…

  7. BARRASSO's avatar BARRASSO March 17, 2008 / 2:41 pm

    Good to see the perpetrators of this blog follow their political party over their religion, Bush is right God is wrong. Catholics everywhere who followed the republican party over the Pope must have some real issues.

  8. Nietzsche-Is-Pietzsche's avatar Nietzsche-Is-Pietzsche March 17, 2008 / 2:54 pm

    Mark’s silence in responding to us “heathen” leftists is speaking volumes on this subject. He knows he’s going against the leader of his church.

  9. Decidenator's avatar Decidenator March 17, 2008 / 3:36 pm

    Mark,

    Please link to somebody in the MSM who “has chosen to call this a Papal condemnation of the liberation of Iraq”. I haven’t seen any such claims.

    Thanks,

    Decidenator

  10. MorrisMajor's avatar MorrisMajor March 17, 2008 / 3:57 pm

    Both popes were agains the war. I know GOP theocons seem to suffer from dementia when their cherished Church disagrees with the party line, but the GOP party line is God’s mandate as all right thinking people know.. I’m sure all the hardline jihad types are going to go beat their swords into pruning forks and find a Christian or Jew to hug.

  11. southerner's avatar southerner March 17, 2008 / 6:46 pm

    Pope John Paul on the planned invasion of Iraq in January 2003:

    POPE CONDEMNS ANY WAR IN IRAQ

    VATICAN CITY — Pope John Paul has condemned a possible war in Iraq, saying it could still be avoided and that it would be a defeat for humanity.

    He made clear his opposition in his yearly “State of the World” address to diplomats accredited to the Vatican on Monday, saying diplomacy is the way forward.

    “No to war! War is not always inevitable. It is always a defeat for humanity,” the 82-year-old pontiff said.

    “And what are we to say of the threat of a war which could strike Iraq, the land of the Prophets, a people already sorely tried by more than 12 years of embargo?,” he said.

    “War is never just another means that one can choose to employ for settling differences between nations.”

    He said international law and diplomacy were the only worthy means to resolve differences.

    SOURCE: http://www.cnn.com/2003/WORLD/europe/01/13/sproject.irq.pope/

    Pope John Paul is in line to be Sainted Mark, I guess he’s just another lib-tard in your book.

    Also, there was a very depressing story on the BBC yesterday about the fact that of the 1.5 MILLION Iraqi refugees that have fled Iraq to Syria alone, an estimated 20% of them are Christians. Christians have essentially been told to leave Basra in the south and of those that remain the women have taken to wearing muslim veils to disguise themselves, something they never had to do in Saddam’s secular Iraq.

    This is occuring five years in to our occupation, only a fool could deny that something tragic has happened in Iraq and it has happened directly due to our invasion and post-war stewardship. Whose administration did all of this occur under again?

    The macroeconomic effects of this war, whose total cost is now estimated to be in the range of $3 – $5 TRILLION dollars are unfolding on Wall Street as we speak.

    Roll on November, America has a lesson it’s waiting to teach the Republicans.

  12. southerner's avatar southerner March 17, 2008 / 6:57 pm

    Cardinal Ratzinger’s thoughts on the Iraq war immediately prior to the invasion:

    CARDINAL RATZINGER SAYS UNILATERAL ATTACK ON IRAQ NOT JUSTIFIED

    Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger does not believe that a unilateral military attack by the United States against Iraq would be morally justifiable, under the current circumstances.

    According to the prefect of the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith — who acknowledged that political questions are not within his competence — “the United Nations is the [institution] that should make the final decision.”

    “It is necessary that the community of nations makes the decision, not a particular power,” the cardinal said, after receiving the 2002 Trieste Liberal Award. His statements were published Saturday in the Italian newspaper Avvenire.

    “The fact that the United Nations is seeking the way to avoid war, seems to me to demonstrate with enough evidence that the damage would be greater than the values one hopes to save,” the cardinal said.

    He said that “the U.N. can be criticized” from several points of view, but “it is the instrument created after the war for the coordination — including moral — of politics.”

    The “concept of a ‘preventive war’ does not appear in the Catechism of the Catholic Church,” Cardinal Ratzinger noted.

    SOURCE: http://www.zenit.org/article-5398?l=english

  13. southerner's avatar southerner March 17, 2008 / 7:05 pm

    Pope says Iraq war threatens humanity

    Pope John Paul, in his first public comment on the outbreak of hostilities in Iraq, said on Saturday that the war threatens the whole of humanity, and that weapons could never solve mankind’s problems.

    “When war, like the one now in Iraq, threatens the fate of humanity, it is even more urgent for us to proclaim, with a firm and decisive voice, that only peace is the way of building a more just and caring society,” he said.

    The Pope, in a speech to employees of Catholic television station Telepace, added: “Violence and weapons can never resolve the problems of man.”

    The Pope led the Vatican in a diplomatic campaign to avert war, putting the Holy See on a collision course with Washington and its backers in the Iraq campaign.

    SOURCE: http://www.cathnews.com/news/303/124.php

  14. Almiranta's avatar Almiranta March 17, 2008 / 7:34 pm

    Catholic doctrine says that the Pope is infallible on matters of the faith.

    On other matters, he is just a guy with an opinion.

  15. southerner's avatar southerner March 17, 2008 / 7:49 pm

    No one said the Popes were ‘infallible’ on this issue. What is clear is that they are experts in Catholic morality and they found that the war was not justified according to Catholic morality, simple as that.

  16. southerner's avatar southerner March 17, 2008 / 7:52 pm

    Mark,

    Your little blog has become a complete freak show recently. Watching you justify McCain’s acceptance of a rabid anti-Catholic was bizarre enough, then watching you first ignore the economic turmoils everyone else in America is flipping out about and now vaguely acknowledge that something has to be done to “strengthen the dollar” has also been priceless. (hint Mark – the only proven technique a government can use to strengthen a currency is to increase interest rates – hardly the best course of action in a recessionary economy facing a real estate meltdown).

    But none of the above compare to your new low – completely mischaracterizing the position of the leader of your own Church in regard to the Iraq war. Well done Mark, you never cease to amaze.

  17. Joe's avatar Joe March 17, 2008 / 8:30 pm

    Almiratna: Catholic doctrine says that the Pope is infallible on matters of the faith.

    On other matters, he is just a guy with an opinion.

    So why is everyone up in arms over Obama’s pastor? Couldn’t you also say that what Obama’s pastor said/says is just a guy with an opinion?

  18. Nietzsche-Is-Pietzsche's avatar Nietzsche-Is-Pietzsche March 17, 2008 / 8:48 pm

    Almiranta has unwittingly exposed the quicksand on which conservative thought is based.

    Mark probably agrees with Almiranta on this. The Pope can do away with Limbo in the stroke of a pen but when it comes to the morality of the Iraq War he’s just “some guy with an opinion”.

  19. JD's avatar JD March 17, 2008 / 8:56 pm

    It is absurd that anyone who claims to be a Christian could possibly justify Bush’s war of terror in Iraq. The invasion and occupation of Iraq would seem to be more pleasing to Satan rather than to God.

  20. phil's avatar phil March 17, 2008 / 9:12 pm

    Deleted – mindless insults; commenter to be banned….we stood it till we could stand it no more.

  21. Michael's avatar Michael March 17, 2008 / 9:12 pm

    It is absurd …

    Warning! Beware of anything a leftist “thinks” about religion or matters of God and Satan. Why did we not hear about this Satan fellow when Al Qaeda was posting beheadings on YouTube? Must be because the beheaders were doing it in the name of their God.

    A couple of more things. There was no “war of terror” by the US in Iraq. Our troops did not strap on suicide vests and blow themselves up in civilian marketplaces full of women and children. War, as we fight it, is the effective use of military force against a known enemy. For those particular individuals, I suppose it is pretty terrifying because it is so effective and deadly. But the US military goes through incredible checks and double checks before they take out a terrorist stronghold to minimize the likelihood of civilian damage. The terrorists in the hideout, though, are not afforded that chance, nor should they be. Yes fighting against the US military is a frightening and terrifying experience, at least I hope it is. That will make many think twice before they try to do that. But a war of terror is what Al Qaeda wages and they don’t give a damn about civilians or children or anything but killing. And they justify it with their religion. That’s probably why not too many countries are run by religious leaders and many of the ones that are happen to be dangerous like Iran.

  22. Almiranta's avatar Almiranta March 17, 2008 / 9:13 pm

    Joe, have you EVER been able to follow a train of thought?

    If you have, please provide a link so we can see where and when—’cause it sure ain’t happened here.

    Yes, Jeremiah Wright is just a guy with an opinion. Several opinions, in fact. They include clinging to past wrongs, using them to justify current hatreds, anti-Americanism, rampant hatred for many including this country, white people and Jews, and the belief that he has the right to preach these canards under the pretense that Christian dogma supports them.

    Fortunately, Jeremiah Wright is not running for office, so his opinions in and of themselves are not very important—except to illustrate a dependence on a bizarre combination of general hatred and a sense of victimhood which seems to be far more prevalent among people of color than the average white person realized.

    What matters is that a man who IS running for office apparently shares those views. At least he has financially supported the man who preaches them from his pulpit, has named this man as a personal friend, mentor, and both spiritual and poltical advisor, and has participated as a member of the congretation which appears to enthusiastically approve of the messages coming from that pulpit.

    What matters is that the messages which have been apparently accepted by the primary candidate for the presidency of this nation include messages of virulent racism and hatred of this country.

    What matters is that the wife of this candidate, the woman who wants to be First Lady, apparently has accepted and incorporated those hateful messages into her own identity, as illustrated by her comment that she never, in her adult life, felt pride in this country, until it started to support her husband.

    What matters is the efforts of this candidate to now separate himself from these vile messages of hatred and racial prejudice—he now claims he did not hear such messages, claims which have been proven false. He seems to think we won’t believe that he and his wife ever discussed the messages of hatred for this country, or of white people. We are supposed to believe he didn’t know about the hateful and bigoted speeches from the pulpit, but just heard loving messages of God and peace.

    What matters is not the pastor but the true philosophy of the man who would be President, and what matters is his honesty.

    Only a poor silly befuddled Joe could think that there is any connection between a man who believes that his church stands for peace at all costs and one who believes his religion allows him to preach hatred and refusal to forgive as “Christian” teachings—“it says so in the Bible”.

    Joe, you’re a joke. Just never funny.

    And BTW, if a Catholic was running for the Presidency and the Pope issued such a statement, it would be vital to know if the candidate would factor the teachings of his religious leader into his leadership of the country. While most religious teachings are irrelevant to political leadership, a belief that it is immoral to go war might be seen differently. It would be worth some discussion.

  23. Almiranta's avatar Almiranta March 17, 2008 / 9:16 pm

    NiP, you are as dense as Joe.

    The Pope is infallible in matters of Catholic dogma.

    He is not infallible in matters other than Catholic dogma.

    Why is this so hard for you to understand?

    Why do you think you need to try to make this into some kind of “point”?

    He can lead the Church in religious matters, and he can offer his opinion on other matters. Only the most rabid knee-jerk oppostional Lefty could try to make more of that than there is.

  24. Jones's avatar Jones March 17, 2008 / 10:40 pm

    Before any leftists continue to comment on the Pope’s view or the Catholic church’s view on the war, they should first read the following link:

    Just War Doctrine

    Before you actually use the Catholic Church to support your view, you may want to actually realize what you are supporting.

    First of all, ‘the Catechism identifies those who have the burden of evaluating the conditions for whether a particular war is just: “those who have responsibility for the common good.” In modern nation-states, this means the government.”‘

    For those leftists who cannot comprehend this, this means that the Pope and the Church can offer guidance but cannot make an infallible decision on the morality of the war.

    Finally, from this link, read this paragraph over and over again until it seeks in:

    “This means that it is not necessary for the aggressor to strike first. A moral certainty that the aggression will occur is sufficient. Such certainty might be present, for instance, if a party with a history of aggression began amassing troops or munitions.”

    Sounds like the Church has no problem with the idea of preemptive war as long as all of the other conditions are met.

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