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Pope Francis signs a copy of a declaration crafted by children expressing what fraternity means to them during a meeting dedicated to children and future generations at a conference on human fraternity in the Synod Hall at the Vatican May 11, 2024. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

Peace in politics, in the world starts in people’s hearts, pope says

May 13, 2024
By Carol Glatz
Catholic News Service
Filed Under: Feature, News, Vatican, World News

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Believing security can be obtained through war and fear is a great deception, Pope Francis said.

“To guarantee lasting peace, we must return to a recognition of our common humanity and place fraternity at the center of peoples’ lives,” he told participants in a conference on human fraternity.

“Political peace needs peace of hearts, so that people can meet in the confidence that life always triumphs over all forms of death,” he said in his talk during a late morning audience at the Vatican May 11.

Muhammad Yunus, recipient of the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize, speaks at the closing ceremony of the World Meeting on Human Fraternity in the atrium of St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican May 11, 2024. (CNS photo/Pablo Esparza)

The pope met with some 350 participants of the World Meeting on Human Fraternity being held May 10-11. Organized by the Vatican’s Fratelli Tutti Foundation, the conference brought Nobel laureates, government officials, scientists, experts, athletes and artists to a series of roundtable discussions across Rome and at the Vatican to discuss specific themes aimed at strengthening solidarity and peace.

Those attending the conference included: New York Mayor Eric Adams; Muhammad Yunus, recipient of the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize; Graça Machel Mandela, former first lady of both South Africa and Mozambique; the former quarterback, Tom Brady; and NASA administrator, Bill Nelson. U.S. country singer, Garth Brooks, was scheduled to be part of a late evening concert held in front of St. Peter’s Basilica May 11.

In his address, the pope quoted the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., who said, “We’ve learned to fly the air like birds, we’ve learned to swim the seas like fish, and yet we haven’t learned to walk the Earth as brothers and sisters.”

“War is a deception. War is always a defeat, as is the idea of international security based on the deterrent of fear,” the pope said. “It is another deception.”

“In a planet in flames, you have gathered with the intention of reiterating your ‘no’ to war and ‘yes’ to peace, bearing witness to the humanity that unites us and makes us recognize each other as brothers and sisters, in the reciprocal gift of the respective cultural differences,” he told conference participants.

One of the conference’s aims was to renew the Declaration on Human Fraternity released at the first conference in Rome in 2023 and to draft a new “Charter of Humanity” outlining a “grammar” or code of choices and behaviors needed to build fraternal coexistence in a world marked by uncertainty and fear.

In his speech, the pope underlined the importance of compassion and he encouraged everyone “to make this spirituality of fraternity grow, and to promote, through your diplomatic action, the role of multilateral bodies.”

Only by recognizing everyone is part of a common humanity and putting fraternity at the center of peoples’ lives “will we succeed in developing a model of coexistence capable of giving the human family a future,” he said.

Cardinal Mauro Gambetti, archpriest of St. Peter’s Basilica and president of the Vatican’s Fratelli Tutti Foundation, welcomes people to the closing ceremony of the World Meeting on Human Fraternity in the atrium of St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican May 11, 2024. (CNS photo/Pablo Esparza)

Later in the afternoon, the pope attended a special roundtable, dedicated to children and future generations, held in the Vatican Synod Hall.

The moderator told the pope that a group of special “scientists” had to be introduced before they could start the meeting in the half-empty hall. As the music to “A Thousand Years” played, scores of children walked into the hall wearing crowns made of laurel leaves.

They held paper leaves with words of wisdom written on them and handmade drawings they gave the pope. Some stayed with the pope, sitting next to him behind the dais.

In an informal exchange, the pope asked the children what happiness was and where it could be found. “I love you very much!” was the first and fourth response.

Those who kept on topic answered, “to be united together,” “to be part of a family,” when everyone is doing well, by loving one another, by staying in touch with God and when there is peace.

Peace, they said, can be found when people speak nicely to one another, and insults only cause unhappiness.

Pope Francis then asked them if they understood there were children in the world suffering from hunger and war, and whether they thought the children on “the other side” of a war were enemies.

“No!” they shouted, with one explaining the reason was that war “is not their fault” and “all children are part of one family.”

One child asked the pope to pray for his grandmother, and the pope led everyone in praying the Hail Mary for everyone’s grandparents, ending with the cheer “Long live grandparents!” and explaining how the future depends on young and old working together.

The pope signed a copy of a declaration crafted by the children expressing what fraternity means to them, and he blessed a relic of Blessed Pino Puglisi of Palermo, who spoke out against the Mafia and helped underprivileged children. The priest was murdered in 1993 by order of local Mafia bosses. The relic was a small Gospel that had been buried with him and had remained intact and found when his body was exhumed.

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Copyright © 2024 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops

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Carol Glatz

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