From: b sabha <bcsabha.kal...@gmail.com>

http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/pm-narendra-modi-nawaz-sharif-india-pakistan-relation-pope-francis-3044938/
[http://images.indianexpress.com/2016/08/pakistan-indian-guard-480.jpg?w=480]<http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/pm-narendra-modi-nawaz-sharif-india-pakistan-relation-pope-francis-3044938/>

Pope of 
non-violence<http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/pm-narendra-modi-nawaz-sharif-india-pakistan-relation-pope-francis-3044938/>
indianexpress.com
Pope Francis’ message is one that India and Pakistan must hear.





“Your Holiness, please come to India.” “Yes, next year,” Pope Francis answered 
softly but emphatically and with a smile. The twinkle in his eyes accentuated 
his joy at meeting an Indian and showed the pope’s keenness to visit a country 
he knows should have been on his itinerary earlier.

The pontiff was meeting nearly 500 participants — from all over the world — of 
the inter-faith conference in the holy town of Assisi in Italy (18-20 
September). The moment was special; we had assembled to celebrate the 30th 
anniversary of the meet of leaders and representatives of all religions 
convened in 1986 by Pope John Paul II. The place too was special — the scenic 
mountain-top Basilica of St. Francis (1182-1226), whose name and mission the 
pope has chosen for his papacy.

Like St. Francis of Assisi, whom his ardent admirer, Mahatma Gandhi, described 
as “a great yogi in Europe”, Pope Francis has been passionately advocating 
inter-faith harmony and protection of the environment. His encyclical on 
climate change, released before the Paris Summit, is a searing indictment of 
the ecological destruction in our time. This has earned him the epithets, 
“Green Pope” and “Poor Man’s Pope”.

In Assisi, he was the pope of nonviolence. He had come to specially greet the 
conference, organised by the Community of Sant’egidio, a Vatican-inspired body, 
that has been holding inter-faith meets every year in different cities in 
Europe since 1986. I have been participating in these annual conferences for 
the past few years as a Hindu representative.

I presented four of my books to the pope. The first caught his attention, for 
it is titled, Mahatma Gandhi, St. Francis and Pope Francis — Three great men 
and their endeavours to combine God-ward devotion with Man-ward love. He showed 
much interest in the title of my book on Mahatma Gandhi — Music of the Spinning 
Wheel. The next, on Swami Vivekananda, needed some explanation since he did not 
seem to know “this great Hindu monk who was a pioneer of inter-faith dialogue — 
he gave an inspiring speech at the first World Parliament of Religions in 
Chicago in 1893. I also gave him, Fatwa on terrorism and suicide bombings by 
Pakistan’s renowned Islamic scholar, Tahir-ul-Qadri, the Indian edition of 
which carries my introductory essay.

The choice of Qadri’s Quranic condemnation of terrorism and wars in the name of 
Islam was deliberate. The Assisi meet — its theme was thirst for peace — was 
held against the backdrop of the fratricidal wars in four Muslim countries — 
Iraq, Syria, Libya and Yemen. The refugee crisis, triggered by these wars, has 
become an existential crisis for Europe, forcing it to come to grips with its 
own past and its uncertain future.

The Pope’s sermon connected the timeless messages of religion with the pressing 
challenges before today’s world. His words — peace alone, and not war, is holy 
— were clearly addressed to the misguided jihadists of ISIS and other terrorist 
organisations. “The name of God cannot be used to justify violence.”

His words also addressed the common people. “Our future consists in living 
together. For this reason we are called to free ourselves from the heavy 
burdens of distrust, fundamentalism and hate. Believers should be artisans of 
peace in their prayers to God and in their actions for humanity.” The pope 
never misses an opportunity to tell political leaders of the world what they 
should hear. In Assisi, he said: “We turn to those who hold the greatest 
responsibility in the service of the peoples, to the leaders of nations, so 
that they may not tire of seeking and promoting ways of peace, looking beyond 
their particular interests and those of the moment: May they not remain deaf to 
God’s appeal to their consciences, to the cry of the poor for peace and to the 
healthy expectations of the younger generations.”

I could clearly see how relevant his message was for the current situation in 
violence-scarred Kashmir<http://indianexpress.com/tag/kashmir/>, and why Prime 
Ministers Narendra 
Modi<http://indianexpress.com/profile/politician/narendra-modi/> and Nawaz 
Sharif needed to pay heed to it. After the ceremony was over, I went up to the 
pope, shook his hand reverentially, and made an appeal: “Your Holiness, please 
pray for India-Pakistan peace and reconciliation.”

He seemed a little taken aback. After a pause, he said forcefully, “Yes, I 
will!”

The writer was an aide to India’s former prime minister, Atal Bihari Vajpayee.



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