Pope Francis moved by Catholics’ stories from Bosnian war
Pope Francis spoke off the cuff and urged tortured priests and nuns to forgive
Pope
Francis arrives for a meeting at a diocesan youth centre as part of a
one-day visit to Sarajevo in Bosnia. Photograph: Gabriel Bouys/AFP/Getty
Images
“I had a speech all ready for you but after hearing those testimonies, I feel I just have to speak off the cuff to you.”
Perhaps the most moving moment in Pope Francis’s hugely symbolic one-day trip to Sarajevo
on Saturday came in the Sacred Heart Cathedral late in the day. Having
listened to a selection of wartime horror stories recounted by nuns and
priests caught up in the conflict of 20 years ago, the visibly moved
pope dropped his prepared text to tell the nuns and priests: “You must
all listen to these stories. This is the historical memory of your
people and a people who forget their history are a people with no
future”.
The pope had heard stories of how different Catholic
priests and nuns were arrested, tortured, interned and physically abused
by either Bosnian Muslim or Bosnian Serb forces.
One of the priests had spent 120 days in a Serb-run
concentration camp where he was beaten on a daily basis, deprived of
food and water and kept in filthy, unsanitary conditions.
One of the nuns had also been beaten, deprived of food and then threatened at gunpoint with rape.
All of them were called on to renounce their Christian faith in order to be released, but none of them had capitulated.
Pope Francis told them not to forget their experiences, not to “hold grudges” but rather to “create peace”.
Spirit of forgiveness
Acknowledging the spirit of forgiveness in which the war witnesses told their stories, the pope said: “A few words are lodged in my heart: one of these is ‘forgiveness’. A man and a woman who consecrate their lives to the Lord, but don’t know how to forgive, are worth nothing.
“Forgiving an enemy who says something bad to you, or
a sister who is jealous, isn’t difficult. But forgiving someone who
kicks you and hurts you, who threatens your life with a gun, that is
hard to forgive. Yet they did this, and they tell us we should do the
same.”
Arguably, the most important aspect of this stop in Sarajevo was that it happened at all.
He encouraged the Muslim, Orthodox and Catholic
communities of Bosnia along the difficult road to peace and
reconciliation in the wake of the ethnic and religious hatred which 20
years ago cost the lives of more than 100,000 people. The pope told the
65,000 mainly Catholic faithful in the Olympic Stadium: “War means
children, women and the elderly in refugee camps; it means forced
displacement of peoples; it means destroyed houses, streets and
factories; it means, above all, countless shattered lives. You know this
well, having experienced it here: how much suffering, how much
destruction, how much pain.
“Today, dear brothers and sisters, the cry of God’s
people goes up once again from this city, the cry of all men and women
of good will: war never again.”
‘Messenger of peace’
Back in Rome yesterday, the pope told the faithful during the Angelus prayer in St Peter’s Square that he had travelled to Bosnia as a “messenger of peace and hope”.
Sarajevo, the one-time “Jerusalem of Europe”, had become the symbol for all the destruction and pain of war.
The pope said he travelled to Sarajevo to help Bosnia
down the difficult path of reconciliation and help the country reclaim
its place as “an integral part of Europe”.
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