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APOSTOLIC JOURNEY TO THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
AND VISIT TO THE UNITED NATIONS ORGANIZATION HEADQUARTERS
FAREWELL CEREMONY
ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
John Fitzgerald Kennedy International Airport, New York
Sunday, 20 April 2008
Mr. Vice-President,
Distinguished Civil Authorities,
My Brother Bishops,
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
The time has come for me to bid farewell to your country. These days that I
have spent in the United States have been blessed with many memorable
experiences of American hospitality, and I wish to express my deep appreciation
to all of you for your kind welcome. It has been a joy for me to witness the
faith and devotion of the Catholic community here. It was heart-warming to
spend time with leaders and representatives of other Christian communities and
other religions, and I renew my assurances of respect and esteem to all of you.
I am grateful to President Bush for kindly coming to greet me at the start of
my visit, and I thank Vice-President Cheney for his presence here as I depart.
The civic authorities, workers and volunteers in Washington and New York have
given generously of their time and resources in order to ensure the smooth
progress of my visit at every stage, and for this I express my profound thanks
and appreciation to Mayor Adrian Fenty of Washington and Mayor Michael Bloomberg
of New York.
Once again I offer prayerful good wishes to the representatives of the see of
Baltimore, the first Archdiocese, and those of New York, Boston, Philadelphia
and Louisville, in this jubilee year. May the Lord continue to bless you in the
years ahead. To all my Brother Bishops, to Bishop DiMarzio of this Diocese of
Brooklyn, and to the officers and staff of the Episcopal Conference who have
contributed in so many ways to the preparation of this visit, I extend my
renewed gratitude for their hard work and dedication. With great affection I
greet once more the priests and religious, the deacons, the seminarians and
young people, and all the faithful in the United States, and I encourage you to
continue bearing joyful witness to Christ our Hope, our Risen Lord and Savior,
who makes all things new and gives us life in abundance.
One of the high-points of my visit was the opportunity to address the General
Assembly of the United Nations, and I thank Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon for
his kind invitation and welcome. Looking back over the sixty years that have
passed since the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, I give thanks for all
that the Organization has been able to achieve in defending and promoting the
fundamental rights of every man, woman and child throughout the world, and I
encourage people of good will everywhere to continue working tirelessly to
promote justice and peaceful co-existence between peoples and nations.
My visit this morning to Ground Zero will remain firmly etched in my memory, as
I continue to pray for those who died and for all who suffer in consequence of
the tragedy that occurred there in 2001. For all the people of America, and
indeed throughout the world, I pray that the future will bring increased
fraternity and solidarity, a growth in mutual respect, and a renewed trust and
confidence in God, our heavenly Father.
With these words, I take my leave, I ask you to remember me in your prayers, and
I assure you of my affection and friendship in the Lord. May God bless America!
© Copyright 2008 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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