Pope Francis sent a message to the Saudi-owned and based Al Arabiya network, an international Arabic television channel, noting the "happy coincidence" this year of the end of Ramadan falling close to Easter, and the contrast of the joy of the holidays with the tension in the Middle East.
The message was broadcast on the evening of April 12, 2024, in the context of the sharp rise in tensions between Israel and Iran, which risks dragging the Middle East, already affected by the conflict in Gaza, into a war of even greater magnitude.
In the message, released also by the Vatican on April 12, the Pope reflected that the joy of these holidays "stands in sharp contrast with the sorrow we feel for the blood presently being shed in the blessed lands of the Middle East."
Brothers and sisters, our father Abraham raised his eyes to heaven to gaze at the stars. The light of life, which shines all around us and embraces us from on high, calls us to leave behind the dark night of hatred, so that, in accordance with the Creator’s will, stars may shine brightly upon our world, rather than the glare of missiles lighting up the heavens and raining down fire to devastate the earth!
God is peace
The Pope urged his listeners to stop the spread of war.
God is peace and he desires peace. Those who believe in him cannot fail to repudiate war, which does not resolve but only increases hostilities. War, as I never tire of saying, is always and only a failure: It is a road leading nowhere; it does not open new vistas, but stifles all hope.
Middle East conflicts
The Holy Father reiterated his call for both an end to the fighting in Gaza, and for Hamas to release the hostages taken in October. He also reiterated the Vatican's longtime stance in favor of a two-state solution in the Holy Land.
As well, he defended the rights of Christians in the Middle East, asking that they might be able to "enjoy always and everywhere the right and ability to profess freely their faith, which speaks of peace and fraternity."
I suffer greatly because of the conflict in Palestine and Israel. May there be an immediate cease-fire in the Gaza Strip, where a humanitarian catastrophe is ongoing. May aid be allowed to reach the Palestinian people who are suffering greatly, and may the hostages taken in October be released! I think too of war-torn Syria, Lebanon, and the entire Middle East. Let us not allow the flames of resentment to spread, fanned by the baleful winds of the arms race! Let us not allow war to spread! Let us put an end to the inertia of evil!
I think constantly of the families, the young people, the workers, the elderly and the children. I am certain that in their hearts, in the hearts of ordinary people, there is a great desire for peace. And that, amid the spread of violence, tears flow from their eyes and a single word issues from their lips: Enough! Enough! – I myself repeat that word to those who bear the grave responsibility of governing nations. Enough! Stop! Please, put an end to the clash of arms and think of the children, all the children, as you do your own children. Let us all look to the future with the eyes of children. They do not ask who is the enemy to be destroyed, but who are the friends with whom they can play. They need homes, parks and schools, not tombs and mass graves.
Please, put an end to the clash of arms and think of the children, all the children, as you do your own children.
Friends, I believe that deserts can flower: as in nature, so too in the hearts of individuals and in the lives of peoples. Yet the deserts of hatred can bring forth shoots of hope only if we learn how to grow together, one alongside the other; only if we learn to respect the beliefs of others; only if we recognize the right to existence of every people and the right of every people to have their own State; only if we learn how to live in peace without demonizing anyone.
That is my belief and my hope, which I share with the Christians who, amid not a few difficulties, are living throughout the Middle East. I embrace them and I encourage them, and I ask that they enjoy always and everywhere the right and ability to profess freely their faith, which speaks of peace and fraternity.
I thank you for your attention. I greet you with affection and I assure you that the Middle East continues to have a special place in my heart. I wish each of you all good things and the blessings of the Most High. Shukran! (Thank you!)
From the Vatican, 12 April 2024