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ADDRESS BY HIS HOLINESS
BENEDICT XVI
AT THE CONCLUSION OF THE CONCERT GIVEN BY THE CHINA PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
AND THE SHANGHAI OPERA HOUSE CHORUS
Paul VI Audience Hall
Wednesday, 7 May 2008
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Dear Friends!
Another high-quality musical performance sees us gathered once again
in the Paul VI Audience Hall. For me and for all of us here, it takes on a
particular value and meaning. Since it is offered and performed by the China
Philharmonic Orchestra and the Shanghai Opera House Chorus, it puts us in touch,
as it were, with the living reality of the world of China. I thank the choir
and orchestra for this generous tribute and I congratulate the organizers and
the artists for their skilful, refined and elegant performance of a musical work
that forms part of the artistic heritage of all humanity. In a group of such
accomplished artists, we see represented the great cultural and musical
tradition of China, and this performance helps us to understand better the
history of the Chinese people, their values and their noble aspirations.
Heartfelt thanks for this gift! Thanks also for the music that is about to be
performed! I extend sincere thanks not only to the promoters and the artists,
but to all those who, in different ways, took part in arranging this truly
unique event.
It is worth emphasizing that this performance by Chinese artists of
one of Mozart’s greatest works brings together their own musical talent and
Western music. Conductor Long Yu, with his orchestra, the soloists and the
Shanghai Opera House Chorus have comfortably risen to the challenge. Music, and
art in general, can serve as a privileged instrument for encounter and
reciprocal knowledge and esteem between different populations and cultures; a
means attainable by all for valuing the universal language of art.
There is another aspect that I wish to emphasize. I note with
pleasure the interest shown by your orchestra and choir in European religious
music. This shows that it is possible, in different cultural settings, to enjoy
and appreciate sublime manifestations of the spirit such as Mozart’s Requiem
which we have just heard, precisely because music expresses universal human
sentiments, including the religious sentiment, which transcends the boundaries
of every individual culture.
I should also like to say a word regarding this place where we have
come together this evening. It is the great hall in which the Pope receives his
guests and meets those who come to visit him. It is like a window opening onto
the world, a place where people from all over the world often meet, with their
own personal stories and their own culture, all of them welcomed with esteem and
affection. In greeting you this evening, dear Chinese artists, the Pope intends
to reach out to your entire people, with a special thought for those of your
fellow citizens who share faith in Jesus and are united through a particular
spiritual bond with the Successor of Peter. The Requiem came into being
through this faith as a prayer to God, the just and merciful judge, and that is
why it touches the hearts of all people, as an expression of humanity’s
universal aspirations. Finally, as I thank you once again for this most welcome
tribute, I send my greetings, through you, to all the people of China as they
prepare for the Olympic Games, an event of great importance for the entire human
family.
(in Chinese)
I thank you all and I offer you my best wishes.
© Copyright 2008 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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