Extract from The Guardian
The pontiff did not directly refer to
Donald Trump’s plan to build a fence along his country’s border
with Mexico, but made a thinly veiled criticism of it
Pope
Francis: ‘A Christian can never say, ‘I’ll make you pay for
that.’ Never! That is not a Christian gesture. An offence is
overcome with forgiveness, by living in peace with everyone.’
Photograph: Tony Gentile/Reuters
Harriet
Sherwood Religion correspondent
Thursday
9 February 2017 04.09 AEDT
Pope
Francis has made a thinly veiled criticism of the policies
of Donald
Trump, saying societies should build bridges not walls to
encourage good relations among people.
The
pontiff did not directly refer to the US president or his
plan to build a fence along his country’s border with Mexico.
But
his statement at his weekly general audience at the Vatican that it
was a Christian calling “to not raise walls but bridges, to not
respond to evil with evil, to overcome evil with good” will be seen
as an allusion to Trump’s plans and policies.
In
improvised remarks, the pope appeared to further refer to Trump by
saying: “A Christian can never say: ‘I’ll make you pay for
that.’ Never! That is not a Christian gesture. An offense is
overcome with forgiveness, by living in peace with everyone.”
Within
days of his inauguration, Trump signed an executive order on the
“immediate construction of a border wall” claiming the move would
save “thousands of lives, millions of jobs and billions and
billions of dollars”.
Trump
has insisted that the Mexican government should be made to pay the
estimated $15bn cost of a 1,000-mile long border fence – flatly
rejected by Mexico’s president, Enrique Peña Nieto.
Francis
may also have been alluding to Trump’s ban on Syrian refugees and
people from seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the US,
which was overturned by a federal judge last week. The pope has made
compassion towards refugees and those on the margins of society a
hallmark of his papacy, and has repeatedly urged world leaders to
reject nationalism and xenophobia.
A
year ago – when Trump was thought to have little chance of winning
the US presidential election – Francis made similar comments about
walls and bridges. He told reporters when returning to Rome from
Mexico: “A person who thinks only about building walls, wherever
they may be, and not building bridges, is not Christian.”
Trump
responded robustly, saying: “For a religious leader to question
a person’s faith is disgraceful.”
The
pope repeated his “bridges not walls” message a few days before
November’s election, when he told social justice activists at the
Vatican that the
“best antidote to fear is mercy” which is “much more
effective than walls, iron bars, alarms and weapons. And it is free.”
Most
Trump critics can expect a lashing from the president on Twitter, but
such a move against Pope
Francis could alienate millions of Catholics and other fans
of the pope.

No comments:
Post a Comment