 |
APOSTOLIC JOURNEY
OF HIS HOLINESS JOHN PAUL II
TO LEBANON (MAY 10-11, 1997)
DEPARTURE SPEECH AT
BEIRUT INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT
Sunday, 11 May
Mr President of the Republic,
1. At the end of my Pastoral Visit to your country, you have wished to come and
greet me with the delicate sense of hospitality which is part of Lebanese
tradition. I would like to tell you again how grateful I am for your welcome and
for the arrangements which were made and ensured the smooth running of the
various meetings I attended.
I extend my thanks to the civil and military authorities, and to the leaders of
the various Churches and Ecclesial Communities for their thoughtfulness during
the two days I have spent in this beautiful country, so dear to my heart. I also
express warm gratitude to the members of the security services and all the
volunteers who, with generosity, efficiency and discretion, contributed to the
success of my visit.
2. During the celebrations and the different interviews I was able to have, I
noticed the deep love that Lebanese Catholics and all their compatriots have for
their country, and their attachment to its culture and traditions. They have
remained faithful to their land and their heritage through many travails, and
they continue to show the same fidelity today. I urge them to continue in this
direction by giving an example of harmony between the cultures and religions, in
a society where all the people and different communities are considered equal.
3. Before leaving your land, I renew my appeal to the authorities and to the
entire Lebanese people to develop a new social order based on essential moral
values and with the concern to guarantee individuals and human groups their
essential place in national life and community decisions: this attention to man,
which belongs naturally to the Lebanese soul, will bring peace to the country
and to the region. I urge national leaders to respect international law,
especially in the Middle East, so that the sovereignty, legitimate autonomy and
security of States will be guaranteed and the law and understandable aspirations
of peoples respected. In acknowledging the efforts of the international
community in the region, I hope that the process of seeking a just and lasting
peace will continue to be upheld with determination, courage and consistency. I
also hope that efforts will be pursued and intensified for supporting the
country’s growth and the advance of the Lebanese towards an ever more democratic
society, with the total independence of its institutions and recognition of its
borders, indispensable conditions if its integrity is to be guaranteed. But it
will be impossible to do anything unless all the citizens are involved, each one
in his own sphere, on the path of justice, equity and peace, in political,
economic and social life and by sharing responsibilities in the life of society.
4. I would like once again to express my warm gratitude to the Patriarchs, the
Lebanese Bishops, the clergy, the religious and the Catholic laity who busily
prepared for my coming. I entrust my Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation to them
all, that it may guide and support them on their spiritual journey and in their
commitments as they accompany their brothers and sisters. Touched by my welcome
from Lebanese Catholics, whose pastoral vitality I could appreciate, I would
like to assure them of my affection and deep spiritual communion, as I invite
them to be merciful witnesses of God’s love and messengers of peace and
brotherhood.
My respectful greetings are also extended to the heads of the other Churches and
Ecclesial Communities, to all the Christians of other denominations, to the
followers of Islam, in the hope that that all will pursue religious dialogue and
co-operation to show that religious beliefs are a source of brotherhood and to
testify that it is possible to live friendship, through love for God, for one’s
brothers and sisters and for one’s homeland.
Through you, Mr President, I greet and thank all the Lebanese, offering them my
fervent wishes for peace and prosperity. May your nation, whose mountains are
like a beacon on the sea coast, offer the countries of the region a witness of
social cohesion and good understanding between all its cultural and religious
constituents.
As I renew my gratitude to you, I invoke an abundance of divine blessings upon
all your compatriots.
© Copyright 1997 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
|