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ADDRESS OF JOHN PAUL II TO H.E. MRS NINA KOVALSKA, AMBASSADOR OF UKRAINE*
Thursday,
20 May 1999
Your Excellency,
It gives me great pleasure to welcome you to the Vatican and to accept the
Letters of Credence by which you are appointed Ambassador Extraordinary and
Plenipotentiary of Ukraine. It is a fitting occasion for us to reaffirm the
friendship and cooperation which exist between your country and the Holy See,
bonds which go back in history a thousand years to the Baptism of Kievan Rus’
and which have taken on new form and vigour since the advent of your nation’s
Independence. I see your presence here today as a sign of our mutual desire to
consolidate the diplomatic relations established between Ukraine and the Holy
See in 1992. I am grateful for the greetings which you have conveyed on behalf
of His Excellency President Leonid Kuchma, whose visits to the Vatican I vividly
remember and to whom I express my good wishes. I renew the assurance of my
prayers for the peace and prosperity of your country.
The countries of Eastern Europe, including your own, are undergoing a period
of rapid and profound transformation in the social, economic and political
spheres. While such changes are not without great difficulty and cost, they are
essentially positive changes, moving as they do in the direction of respect for
the liberty and self-determination of peoples. After decades of being closed in
a world order established on imposed decisions and ideological barriers, nations
which lacked a voice of their own in the international community are now
asserting their sovereignty and pursuing their destiny as equal partners on the
world stage. The present moment therefore is one of extreme importance in the
life of these peoples, and of grave responsibilities for their leaders.
With the effort and dedication of so many of your fellow citizens, Ukraine is
making great strides along the path of progress towards a more prosperous, just
and democratic society. Your Excellency has indicated your country’s intention
to achieve a “complete reintegration into the European space which rests on
Christian values”. In striving for this goal you are rediscovering the strength
of the spiritual and cultural roots which lie at the very heart of your nation’s
identity and your people’s journey through history. The challenge is to grow in
the noblest traditions of the past while being open to all the demands of the
consciousness maturing among the world’s peoples of the universal nature of
human dignity and human rights.
In spite of the hard lessons of this violent century, Europe is unfortunately
once again the theatre of the oppression of man by man and of the daily thunder
of weapons of death and destruction. In the name of distorted ideals of cultural
and ethnic distinction, the fundamental and real value of the inviolable dignity
of every human being is being utterly denied. Beyond the rhetoric in which such
conflicts are generally presented, it should be clear that the atrocities
occurring every day on European soil in the Balkans are not the result of
peoples’ genuinely held aspirations; they have instead been fueled by unspoken
motives representing particular interests and very definite forms of the thirst
for power.
It must be the concern of everyone to ensure that dialogue replaces conflict.
Dialogue and negotiation would signify the triumph of reason, while the
continuance of ethnic conflicts and power struggles in any part of the world are
a defeat of reason and a sign of the failure of solidarity and human
partnership. We must hope that Europe will manage to find in its rich millenary
heritage the truths and incentives it needs to restore the rule of reason and
law.
Ukrainian Christians, both Orthodox and Catholic, are reviving the
institutions and public expressions of their faith. In the Gospel and the
traditions of their Churches they are finding inspiration and strength for the
enormous tasks before them as responsible citizens of their newly independent
country. It must be the conviction of all Ukrainian believers that mutual
understanding and cooperation, not prejudice or rivalry, are what their faith
requires of them. Difficulties between Christians must be resolved not just at
the level of justice and equity, but at the much deeper level of koinonia
before God and in Jesus Christ. I repeat a thought which I expressed to the
Latin-rite Ukrainian Bishops on the occasion of their ad Limina visit in
March of this year: “If respect for each other’s identity is required by
justice, it is even more a demand of love, which is the supreme law for the
Christian”. As Your Excellency has rightly pointed out, the fast-approaching
celebration of a new Christian Millennium is a wonderful opportunity for all
Christians to grow in peace, tolerance and respect for one another and for all
people. I earnestly hope that a wise and positive unfolding of democracy and
freedom in your country, coupled with a renewal of religious conviction and
moral commitment, will bring about an era of flourishing development, and that
Ukraine’s presence and actions in the family of nations will contribute to that
better and more peaceful world which people everywhere long for. May the already
warm relations between Ukraine and the Holy See lead to increased understanding
and cooperation in matters of common concern.
Your Excellency, I offer you my best wishes as you begin your mission, and
assure you of the readiness of the offices of the Holy See to assist you in your
work. Upon you and your fellow citizens I cordially invoke the abundant
blessings of Almighty God.
*Insegnamenti di Giovanni Paolo II, vol. XXII, 1 pp.1022-1024. L'Osservatore Romano 21.5.1999 p.6. L'Osservatore Romano. Weekly edition in English n.21 p.4.
© Copyright 1999 -
Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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