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APOSTOLIC JOURNEY
OF HIS HOLINESS JOHN PAUL II
TO JAMAICA, MEXICO AND DENVER (COLORADO)
ON THE OCCASION OF THE EIGHTH WORLD YOUTH DAY
(AUGUST 8-16, 1993)
WELCOME CEREMONY IN DENVER
ADDRESS OF THE HOLY FATHER JOHN PAUL II
International Airport of Denver
Thursday,
12 August 1993
Mr President,
Dear Friends,
Dear People of America,
Dear Young People,
1.
I greatly appreciate your generous words of welcome.
The World Youth Day being celebrated this year in Denver gives me the
opportunity to meet you, and through you to express once again to the American
people my sentiments of deep esteem and friendship. I thank you and Mrs. Clinton
for your kind gesture in coming here personally to welcome me, coming together
with your daughter.
I take this opportunity to
greet the other representatives of the Federal Government, of the State of
Colorado and of the City of Denver who are present here, and to thank all those
who have contributed in any way to preparing this visit. I am grateful to the
Bishops of the United States for their part in organizing the "Eighth World
Youth Day" and in particular to Archbishop Stafford of Denver and the
Catholic Church in Colorado for serving as the local hosts for this important
international event.
I am aware that the United
States is suffering greatly from the recent flooding in the Midwest. I have felt
close to the American people in their tragedy and have prayed for the victims. I
invoke Almighty God’s strength and comfort upon all who have been affected by
this calamity.
2.
There is a special joy in coming to America for the
celebration of this "World Youth Day". A Nation which is itself still
young according to historical standards is hosting young people gathered from
all over the world for a serious reflection on the theme of life: the
human life which is God’s marvellous gift to each one of us, and the
transcendent Life which Jesus Christ our Savior offers to those who believe
in his name.
I come to Denver to listen
to the young people gathered here, to experience their inexhaustible quest
for life. Each successive "World Youth Day" has been a confirmation of young
people’s openness to the meaning of life as a gift received, a gift to which
they are eager to respond by striving for a better world for themselves and
their fellow human beings. I believe that we would correctly interpret their
deepest aspirations by saying that what they ask is that society – especially
the leaders of nations and all who control the destinies of peoples – accept
them as true partners in the construction of a more humane, more just,
more compassionate world. They ask to be able to contribute their specific ideas
and energies to this task.
3.
The well-being of the world’s children and young
people must be of immense concern to all who have public responsibilities. In my
pastoral visits to the Church in every part of the world I have been deeply
moved by the almost universal conditions of difficulty in which young people
grow up, and live. Too many sufferings are visited upon them by natural
calamities, famines, epidemics, by economic and political crises, by the
atrocities of wars. And where material conditions are at least adequate, other
obstacles arise, not the least of which is the breakdown of family values and
stability.
In developed countries, a
serious moral crisis is already affecting the lives of many young people,
leaving them adrift, often without hope, and conditioned to look only for
instant gratification. Yet everywhere there are young men and women deeply
concerned about the world around them, ready to give the best of themselves in
service to others and particularly sensitive to life’s transcendent meaning.
But how do we help them?
Only by instilling a high moral vision can a society ensure that its
young people are given the possibility to mature as free and intelligent human
beings, endowed with a robust sense of responsibility to the common good,
capable of working with others to create a community and a nation with a strong
moral fiber. America was built on such a vision, and the American people
possess the intelligence and will to meet the challenge of rededicating
themselves with renewed vigor to fostering the truths on which this country was
founded and by which it grew. Those truths are enshrined in the Declaration of
Independence, the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, and they still today
receive a broad consensus among Americans. Those truths sustain values which
have led people all over the world to look to America with hope and respect.
4.To all Americans, without exception, I present this
invitation: Let us pause and reason together.
To educate without a
value system based on truth is to abandon young people to moral confusion,
personal insecurity and easy manipulation. No country, not even the most
powerful, can endure if it deprives its own children of this essential good.
Respect for the dignity and
worth of every person, integrity and responsibility, as well as understanding,
compassion and solidarity towards others, survive only if they are passed on in
families, in schools and through the communications media.
America has a strong
tradition of respect for the individual, for human dignity and human rights. I
gladly acknowledged this during my previous visit to the United States in 1987,
and I would like to repeat today the hope I expressed on that occasion:
"America, you are beautiful and blessed in so many ways... But your best beauty
and your richest blessing is found in the human person: in each man, woman and
child, in every immigrant, in every native born son and daughter... The ultimate
test of your greatness is the way you treat every human being, but especially
the weakest and most defenceless ones.
The best traditions of your
land presume respect for those who cannot defend themselves. It you want equal
justice for all, and true freedom and lasting peace, then, America, defend life!
All the great causes that are yours today will have meaning only to the extent
that you guarantee the right to life and protest the human person".
5.Mr. President, my reference to the moral truths
which sustain the life of the nation is not without relevance to the privileged
position which the United States holds in the international community. In the
face of tensions and conflicts that too many peoples have endured for so long –
I am thinking in particular of the Middle East region and some African countries
– and in the new situation emerging from the events of 1989 – especially in view
of the tragic conflicts now going on in the Balkans and in the Caucasus – the
international community ought to establish more effective structures for
maintaining and promoting justice and peace. This implies that a concept of
strategic interest should evolve which is based on the full development of
peoples – out of poverty and towards a more dignified existence, out of
injustice and exploitation towards fuller respect for the human person and the
defence of universal human rights. If the United Nations and other international
agencies through the wise and honest cooperation of their member Nations,
succeed in effectively defending stricken populations whether victims of
underdevelopment or conflicts or the massive violation of human rights, then
there is indeed hope for the future. For peace is the work of justice.
6.
The bounty and providence of God have laid an
enormous responsibility on the people and Government of the United States. But
that burden is also the opportunity for true greatness. Together with millions
of people around the globe I share the profound hope that in the present
international situation the United States will spare no effort in advancing
authentic freedom and in fostering human rights and solidarity.
May God guide this nation
and keep alive in it – for endless generations to come – the flame of liberty
and justice for all.
May God bless you all! God
bless America!
America I express my
gratitude for receiving me with rain.
© Copyright 1993 - Libreria Editrice
Vaticana
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