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Francis appeal: ‘Stop this massacre’

byCNS
14 March 2022
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Francis appeal: ‘Stop this massacre’

Appeal for peace: Pope Francis gives his blessing after leading the Angelus from the window of his studio overlooking St. Peter's Square at the Vatican yesterday. Photo: CNS

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APPEALLING again for an end to the war in Ukraine, Pope Francis said those who invoke God to promote or justify violence “profane his name.”

“In the name of God, I ask: Stop this massacre,” the pope said at the end of his Sunday Angelus address.

Children hold Ukrainian flags as Pope Francis leads the Angelus from the window of his studio overlooking St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican. Photo:CNS

With thousands of people gathered under the bright sunshine of a Roman spring to pray the midday Marian prayer, Pope Francis turned their attention to Mariupol, Ukraine, a city named in honor of Mary; it has been besieged by Russian troops for two weeks.

The city council of besieged Mariupol has said more than 2,100 residents have been killed.

The city, Pope Francis said, “has become a martyred city of the heart-wrenching war that is destroying Ukraine.”

Lidija Ivanovna, 75, receives medical assistance after being injured when fleeing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, at the border checkpoint in Medyka, Poland, last week. Photo: CNS

“Before the barbarity of the killing of children, of innocents and unarmed civilians, there are no strategic reasons that hold up,” the pope said. The only thing to do is “to stop the unacceptable armed aggression before it reduces the cities to cemeteries.”

“With pain in my heart, I unite my voice to that of ordinary people who implore an end to the war,” he said. “In the name of God, listen to the cry of those who are suffering and stop the bombings and attacks.”

Negotiations to end the war must begin seriously, he said, and the humanitarian corridors agreed upon to evacuate civilians and to bring basic necessities to people in besieged towns must be respected and secure.

A member of the Ukrainian forces takes a position during Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, in Irpin, Ukraine. Photo: CNS

With the U.N. Refugee Agency reporting that almost 2.7 million refugees had fled Ukraine since February 24, Pope Francis thanked all the individuals and agencies in the neighbouring countries who have welcomed them, and he encouraged continued generosity.

He also asked Catholic parishes and religious orders around the world “to increase moments of prayers for peace.”

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“God is the God only of peace, he is not the God of war,” he said. “Those who support violence profane his name.”

Pope Francis led the people in the square, including several carrying Ukrainian flags, in a moment of silent prayer that God would “convert hearts to a firm desire for peace.”

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