Fiche du document numéro 13099

Num
13099
Date
Sunday April 10, 1994
Amj
Hms
Taille
87077
Titre
Pope, opening synod, appeals for peace in Rwanda
Cote
lba0000020011120dq4a0102b
Source
Fonds d'archives
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
VATICAN CITY, April 10 (Reuter) - African dances, drums and songs
filled St Peter's Basilica on Sunday as Pope John Paul opened a synod
of Africa's Catholic church and appealed for an end to the slaughter in
Rwanda that has marred the gathering.

Everywhere there is hate, vendetta, brotherly blood spilled. In the
name of Christ I beg you, lay down your arms,
the Pope said of Rwanda
at the end of a mass which opened the synod.

I address my appeal to all leaders, including the international
community, to attempt everything possible to try to stem so much
destruction and death,
the Pope said.

The synod's ceremonial opening -- punctuated by pounding drums,
ululating chants and rhythmic dancing -- was overshadowed by the events
in Rwanda where tens of thousands of people have been killed in tribal
fighting.

Fighting erupted after President Juvenal Habyarimana and the president
of the neighbouring Burundi were killed on Wednesday in a rocket attack
on their plane. The Pope condemned the attack as part of an
unspeakable drama.

This continent is torn apart by old tension and bloody wars...I feel
the need to launch an appeal to stop that homicide of violence,
the
73-year-old Pope said earlier in his sermon at the unusual ceremony in
the largest church in Christendom.

It was a contrast of cultures as men and women in traditional African
dress danced and swayed up the main aisle of the church that is the
symbol of Western Christianity, passing Swiss Guards in billowing garb
and ambassadors in tuxedos.

Women bore gifts of baskets of fruit and grain during the offertory
part of the mass, which the 10,000-strong congregation followed in a
booklet illustrated with gospel scenes depicting Christ as a black
African with black apostles.

The Pope celebrated the mass with more than 200 bishops, most from
Africa. Prayers were read in 15 African languages, including Igbo,
Lingala, Swahili, and Yoruba.

At the month-long synod, Catholic bishops from Africa will discuss the
problems of the world's poorest continent, including wars, relations
with Islam, AIDS and political instability.

The Pope spoke of Africa's problems and hopes for the synod to chart
the future of the rapidly-growing African church. But he reserved the
strongest words of his sermon for Rwanda.

I wish to recall in particular the people and the church of Rwanda who
these days are being tried by an overwhelming tragedy...
he said.

With you bishops here present I am sharing this suffering caused by
the new catastrophic wave of violence and death...which is is making
blood flow even from priests , religious sisters and religion teachers,
innocent victims of an absurd hatred,
the Pope said.

Among the thousands of people reported killed are political leaders,
aid workers, nuns, priests, ordinary Rwandans and Belgian U.N.
peacekeepers.

I raise my voice to tell all of you: stop these acts of violence.
Stop these tragedies. Stop these fratricidal massacres,' the Pope said
in the sermon he read in French, English, Portuguese and Italian.

The bishops of Rwanda were not able to attend the opening.

The Pope, whose Western vestments were adorned with geometric African
patterns, said he hoped the Church in Rwanda and all Africa would be
able to promote an urgent work of reconciliation to turn Africa into a
land of peace and love.

All of Africa is present today in St Peter's Basilica, the Pope said,
adding that the church rejoiced that African nations today were free of
colonial bonds.

He said sovereignty enabled them to evaluate all that was positive in
what Europeans brought to Africa as well as to criticise past suffering
and outrages, chief among them slavery.

If Africa underwent many wrongs by others in history over the
centuries we must ask ourselves: What must be done to change this
situation? the Pope said.

In his sermon the Pope condemned
so-called progressive civilisations
and
practices hostile to life imposed by means of economic systems
which serve the selfishness of the rich.

This was an apparant attack on development programmes which link
economic aid to the promotion of birth control.

The Pope extended special greetings to Moslems in Africa. Relations
with Islam, which is growing fast on the continent, is one of the most
thorny issues the synod will discuss.

(c) Reuters Limited 1994

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