The Pope and UN chief call for religious and environmental tolerance
Pope Francis and UN
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Friday jointly appealed for
religious tolerance and environmental protection.
"It is good that this meeting of ours takes
place in the days leading up to Christmas,” the Argentinian Pope said in
his native Spanish with Guterres by his side.
“We cannot, we must not look the other way
when believers of various faiths are persecuted in different parts of
the world,” the Pontiff added.
"It is a time of peace and goodwill and I am
sad to see that Christian communities - including some of the oldest in
the world - cannot safely celebrate Christmas," the UN Secretary-General
said.
“Tragically we see Jews being murdered in
synagogues, their gravestones defaced with swastikas; Muslims gunned
down in mosques, their religious sites vandalised; Christians killed at
prayers, their churches torched,” Guterres said.
Repeating the message he made in November
during a trip to Japan for a world without nuclear weapons, Francis
said: "The use as well as possession of nuclear weapons... is also
immoral."
The Pope also urged people to “take care of
our land which, generation after generation, has been entrusted to our
custody by God so that we may cultivate it and hand it over to our
children.”
Guterres arrived in Rome five days after the
UN's COP25 climate summit in Madrid and called on all countries around
the globe to commit to carbon neutrality by 2050.
Francis gave his guest a copy of the “human
fraternity for world peace and living together” declaration which was
signed by the Pope and the Grand Imam of Al-Azhar, Sheikh Ahmed
al-Tayeb, in the United Arab Emirates in February.
Considered a milestone in the dialogue between
Christians and Muslims, the text calls for freedom of belief and
expression, the protection of places of worship and advocates full
citizenship for discriminated "minorities".
Guterres said the text was "extremely
important when we see such dramatic attacks on religious freedom and the
lives of believers".
The Secretary-General said the UN had launched an action plan to safeguard religious sites and a strategy to combat hate speech.
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