zorra_chiflada
08-20-2005, 08:32 PM
Pope Benedict XVI has urged Muslim leaders to do more to combat the "cruel fanaticism of terrorism".
Addressing leaders of Muslim communities from across Germany who'd gathered in Cologne, the 78-year-old pontiff said those behind terrorist attacks wanted to poison relations between Christians and Muslims.
He urged Muslims to join Christians to try to stop the spread of terrorism, which he called a "new barbarism".
Reminding the leaders of their "great responsibility" in educating their young, he said there was "no room for apathy and disengagement, and even less for partiality and sectarianism".
The Pope, on his the first foreign trip of his pontificate, was later greeted by at least 700,000 young Catholics at a giant open-air prayer vigil to mark World Youth Day.
After a rapturous reception at Marienfeld, a former mine complex outside Cologne, Benedict told the vast crowd that "true revolution" to overturn the injustices of history comes "only from God".
Delivering the same kind of conciliatory message he had given to Jews the day before, he said he was "profoundly convinced that we must not yield to negative pressures in our midst, but affirm the values of mutual respect, solidarity and peace".
SOURCE: World News
thoughts? do you think this could be seen as a way of telling the rest of the world that terrorists are only muslims? (i'm sure many people think that anyway)
Addressing leaders of Muslim communities from across Germany who'd gathered in Cologne, the 78-year-old pontiff said those behind terrorist attacks wanted to poison relations between Christians and Muslims.
He urged Muslims to join Christians to try to stop the spread of terrorism, which he called a "new barbarism".
Reminding the leaders of their "great responsibility" in educating their young, he said there was "no room for apathy and disengagement, and even less for partiality and sectarianism".
The Pope, on his the first foreign trip of his pontificate, was later greeted by at least 700,000 young Catholics at a giant open-air prayer vigil to mark World Youth Day.
After a rapturous reception at Marienfeld, a former mine complex outside Cologne, Benedict told the vast crowd that "true revolution" to overturn the injustices of history comes "only from God".
Delivering the same kind of conciliatory message he had given to Jews the day before, he said he was "profoundly convinced that we must not yield to negative pressures in our midst, but affirm the values of mutual respect, solidarity and peace".
SOURCE: World News
thoughts? do you think this could be seen as a way of telling the rest of the world that terrorists are only muslims? (i'm sure many people think that anyway)