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APOSTOLIC JOURNEY TO KOREA, PAPUA NEW GUINEA, SOLOMON ISLANDS AND THAILAND
ADDRESS OF POPE JOHN PAUL II TO THE MEMBERS OF GOVERNMENT OF THAILAND AND TO THE
DIPLOMATIC CORPS OF BANGKOK*
Government Palace of Bangkok (Thailand)
Friday, 11 May 1984
Mr Prime
Minister, Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen, Dear Friends,
1. It is a distinct
pleasure for me to address you this evening and to offer you, and those whom you
represent, my very cordial greetings and heartfelt gratitude for your presence
here.
The friendly relations that have existed between the Holy See and the
Kingdom of Thailand stretch back into history some three hundred years. In 1669,
during the reign of King Narai the Great and the pontificate of Pope Innocent XI,
the first Vicariate Apostolic was erected in the sacred city of Ayutthaya.
Modern times witnessed a growing desire for closer ties between the Holy See and
Thailand, until formal diplomatic relations were established in 1969.
The present status of relation reflects the mutual trust that exists between the
Holy See and Thailand. It gives ample assurance to the Government of Thailand
that there is no incompatibility on any level between a Thai citizen’s loyalty
to his country and his acceptance of the Christian Gospel and membership of the
Catholic Church. Indeed, the promotion of the virtue of patriotism has a long
tradition in Catholic teaching, as the history of the many heroic Catholic
patriots in various countries round the world attests to.
2. The Catholic Church
is a universal community whose members belong to almost all countries and
continents, nations, races, languages and cultures. She sees as an important
part of her mission the task of seeking out ways for understanding and peaceful
collaboration among peoples, and she promotes initiatives which safeguard and
defend the God-given dignity of the human person.
For this reason, I wish to
take the opportunity tonight to call to your attention, as representatives of
governments and nations, a problem of immense magnitude. To keep silent about it
would be a kind of denial of what the Catholic Church teaches about human
dignity and about how individuals and nations can and should respond in defence
of that dignity. I speak of the plight of the thousands and thousands of
refugees currently living in this country. My deep concern for their welfare and
future impels me to mention the subject in this assembly and to speak out on
their behalf.
Through the courtesy of the Thai Government, I had the opportunity
this morning to visit the Refugee Camp at Phanat Nikhom, a processing and
transit centre for over seventeen thousand men, women and children who have been
exiled from their own countries and have sought asylum here in Thailand. It was
a particularly moving experience for me because, as I looked into the faces of
so many suffering human beings, at the same time I realized that there were
thousands more in a similar situation, living in the various other camps in this
country.
The sad lot of these courageous and unfortunate people cannot be
ignored by the international community. Indeed the conscience of humanity must
be made ever more aware of the evils of the situation, so that prompt and
decisive action may be taken towards an adequate solution.
3. The poverty of
these victims of political unrest and civil strife is so extreme on
virtually all levels of human existence, that it is difficult for the outsider
to fathom it. Not only have they lost their material possessions and the work
which once enabled them to earn a living for their families and prepare a secure
future for their children, but their families themselves have been uprooted and
scattered: husbands and wives separated, children separated from their parents.
In their native lands they have left behind the tombs of their ancestors, and
thus, in a very real way, they have left behind a part of themselves, thereby
becoming still poorer.
Many of the refugees have endured great dangers in their
flight by sea or land. All too many were given up for lost or died en route,
often the victims of shameless exploitation. Arriving here completely destitute,
they have found themselves in a state of total dependence on others to
feed them, clothe them, shelter them and make every decision for their future.
And how much greater is the poverty of the aged, the infirmed
and the handicapped, who experience particular difficulty in finding a country
willing to give them stable asylum. These countless victims are indeed enduring
a cruel misfortune: unable to return to their own countries, they cannot
remain indefinitely in their present state. What are they to do? Does the path
which they have been forced to follow offer them real hope for the future?
4. The desperate appeals
of these suffering men, women and children have been heard by many compassionate
people, both in Thailand and round the world, who offer a ray of hope. At this
time, I would like to express my admiration and appreciation to the various
groups who have assisted the refugees during their stay in this country.
In the first place, I wish to express my gratitude to the
Government and people of Thailand. They are to be thanked especially for
having agreed to be, for many years now, the country of first asylum for
thousand and thousands of refugees from other parts of Southeast Asia. The
international community knows the difficulties which they have encountered.
These difficulties are not only of a material nature. The internal and external
political order of the nation have been affected by the steady influx of
refugees. The departure of these same people to resettlement countries has not
proceeded at nearly the same rate.
History will record the sense of hospitality, the respect for
life and the deeply rooted generosity shown by the people of Thailand. These
national traits have enable the Thai authorities to overcome many obstacles and
thus provide a measure of hope for so many people living on the verge of
despair. To His Majesty the King and to the Government and people of Thailand I
renew my deep appreciation.
I also acknowledge, with profound esteem, the work of the United
Nations High Commission for Refugees. This organization’s great solicitude for
the protection and assistance of refugees throughout the world has moved it not
only to assume, with the constant help of governments, the financial burdens of
first asylum, but also responsibility for encouraging nations to accept refugees
and to offer them a real chance of settling down and making a new life. The
generous response of these many host nations is well known and has certainly
earned the enduring gratitude of the refugees.
Similar human solidarity is being
manifested in a very clear way by numerous non-governmental organizations, both
of a confessional and non-confessional nature. I would like to single out the
work of COERR (Catholic Office for Emergency Relief and Refugees), and I am also
glad to mention the many other national and international organizations which
are cooperating in this urgent mission of mercy. These bodies have assisted the
refugees by providing educational facilities, by helping to safeguard their
cultural identity, and by offering them moral and psychological support.
In addition, the contribution of many Catholic
organizations is an expression of the generosity and solidarity of numerous
local Churches in other parts of the world. Here I would like to express a
special word of thanks to those who have given religious assistance to the
refugees, satisfying their spiritual hunger while at the same time respecting
the beliefs of those concerned.
Finally, I cannot pass over in silence the contribution made
by the many volunteers, especially young people, who have come from all
parts of the world to put themselves at the service of the refugees. Their
experiences will impress them deeply and may well give a new orientation to
their own lives.
To all these individuals and groups I offer a word of deep
gratitude and praise. Although they are unable to meet all the needs of their
less fortunate brothers and sisters, these generous people, through a
magnificent example of cooperation, show the refugees that they are not
abandoned and that they still have reason for hope, even in the midst of
unspeakable tragedy.
Furthermore, when we consider the vast numbers of people
living in the camps, these many agencies and groups help to remind us that each
refugee is an individual human being, with his or her own dignity and
personal history, with his or her own culture, experiences and legitimate
expectations. Many of the refugees have written to me, expressing their
anxieties and aspirations, and I have been deeply moved by their pleas for
attention and help.
5. However, the many efforts being made towards relieving the
sufferings of the refugees should not be a convenient excuse for the
international community to stop being concerned for the ultimate future
of these people. The fact remains that it is something repugnant and abnormal
for hundreds of thousands of human beings to have to leave their own countries
because of their race, ethnic origin, political convictions, or religion, or
because they are in danger of violence or even death from civil strife or
political turmoil. Exile seriously violates the human conscience and the norms
of life in society; it is clearly contrary to the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights and to international law itself.
Consequently, the governments of the world and the
international community at large must focus their attention on long-range
political solutions to the complex problem.
Resettlement alone can never be the final answer to these
people’s plight. They have a right to go back to their roots, to return
to their native land with its national sovereignty and its right to independence
and self-determination; they have a right to all the cultural and spiritual
relationships which nourish and sustain them as human beings.
6. In the final analysis, then, the problem cannot be solved
unless the conditions are created whereby genuine reconciliation may take place:
reconciliation between nations, between various sectors of a given national
community, within each ethnic group and between ethnic groups themselves. In a
word, there is an urgent need to forgive and forget the past and to work
together to build a better future.
Within the context of my appeal for reconciliation, I
wish to acknowledge the various representatives of other religious and spiritual
traditions. Their collaboration bears witness to a shared conviction of the duty
to discern more clearly the values belonging to the spiritual dimension of human
existence. From this perspective one can readily see that united efforts
by Christians and members of non-Christian religions in the task of reconciling
individuals and groups, one with another, can be a fruitful field of common
labour. This is especially true since such efforts respond to a fundamental
instinct of the human spirit.
7. Ladies and Gentlemen, from this place tonight I wish to
renew the appeals I have made on other occasions to representatives of
governments and international organizations, to increase and intensify all
efforts so that the refugees, both here in Thailand and elsewhere, may
be received back into their homeland, in which they have a natural human
right to live in freedom, dignity and peace.
The Catholic Church, for her part, offers the
assurance of her unflagging support for any measures which pursue this
goal. She likewise pledges her constant availability to assist, as much as she
can and solely out of her love and respect for the human person, in any efforts
aimed at re-establishing the just conditions and circumstances to which every
refugee has a human right and without which true and lasting peace cannot be
possible.
May our common endeavours on behalf of the dignity of the
human person bring upon us abundant blessings from God, who is the source of all
human dignity and who calls us to acknowledge and respect that dignity as his
precious gift.
May God sustain you in the great mission of serving
humanity in need.
*Insegnamenti di Giovanni Paolo II, vol.VII, 1 p.1375-1381.
L'Osservatore Romano 13.5.1984 p.XXXII-XXXIII.
L'Osservatore Romano. Weekly Edition in English n.21 pp.10, 11.
©
Copyright 1984 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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