LET'S FIGHT BACK

LET'S FIGHT BACK
GOD BLESS AMERICA

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

POPE PLAYING A DEADLY GAME WITH EVIL


Pope visits Central African Republic mosque: “Together, we say no to hatred, to vengeance and violence”


“Christians and Muslims and members of traditional religions have lived peacefully for many years” — as long as the dhimmi Christians knew their place. It is all very well for him to say no to hatred, vengeance and violence; what Muslim leaders are joining him in doing so? Did he visit a church in the Central African Republic, to show solidarity with the Christians who have been murdered by Muslims there? Or was his compassion for one side only?
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“Pope Francis travels to mosque in heart of sectarian conflict,” by Robyn Dixon, Los Angeles Times, November 30, 2015 (thanks to all who sent this in):
The final hours of Pope Francis’ African tour might well have been most dangerous moments of his papacy, as he visited a volatile Muslim neighborhood in the Central African Republic’s capital, Bangui, followed by an open air Mass at a stadium.
It was the most powerful, symbolic moment of his Africa trip, as he became the first pope in modern history to travel to a war zone.
As crowds cheered, Francis brushed aside security warnings, traveling in the back of an open Pope-mobile — a converted SUV with no bulletproof glass — and wore no bulletproof vest.
It was a trip that the French Defense Ministry had urged against, saying forces from the former colonial power couldn’t guarantee the pontiff’s safety.
But it sent an inspiring message of hope and peace to Christians and Muslims in a nation that has been locked in a cycle of sectarian violence since December 2012.
Francis met Muslim leaders at the Koudoukou mosque in the Muslim enclave, PK5 — the only remaining Muslim residential neighborhood in the capital — which is blockaded by Christian militias, preventing residents from leaving.
U.N. peacekeepers stationed in the landlocked African country and Vatican security guarded the pontiff during his visit, the former stationed in the mosque’s minarets during the visit.
Peace and interfaith dialogue has been the central themes of the pope’s visit to Africa. Francis said his trip would not have been complete had he failed to meet with the Muslim community in PK5.
During his visit to Koudoukou mosque, he said Christians and Muslims were brothers and denounced violence, particularly attacks committed in the name of religion.
“Christians and Muslims and members of traditional religions have lived peacefully for many years. Together, we say no to hatred, to vengeance and violence, especially that committed in the name of a religion or God,” the Associated Press quoted Francis as saying.
“In these dramatic times, Christian and Muslim leaders have sought to rise to the challenges of the moment. They have played an important role in reestablishing harmony and fraternity among all.”
He called for leaders “capable of bringing Central Africans together, thus becoming symbols of national unity rather than merely representatives of one or another faction.”
When he arrived in the Central African Republic on Sunday, the pope said he was visiting as a “pilgrim of peace and an apostle of hope.”
Half a million people, mainly Muslims, have fled the country amid a conflict that saw a coalition of Muslim rebels known as Seleka forces oust President Francois Bozize in 2013.
Christian militias known as anti-balaka fighters battled back, carrying out revenge attacks against Muslim communities. Rebel leader Michel Djotodia resigned the presidency last year to make way for an interim government, headed by interim President Catherine Samba-Panza, but violence continues…

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