Members of the Presidency of Bosnia-Hercegovina,
1. I heartily thank Your Excellencies for the kind welcome and cordial words
which the President of the Presidency has extended to me in the name of all of
you. I offer to you and your families my respectful greeting, which I
willingly extend to the Authorities present and to all who, in various ways,
have civil and military responsibilities in the day-to-day work of strengthening
peace and civil harmony in Bosnia-Hercegovina.
In this region for many centuries East and West have met and not
infrequently come into conflict. For a long time there has been the experience
of the coexistence of different cultures which, each in its own way, has
enriched the region with its values. In Bosnia-Hercegovina there live side by
side the South Slavs, united in common ancestry though divided by history. In
this capital city, for example, there rise the Catholic cathedral, the Orthodox
cathedral, the Muslim mosque and the Jewish synagogue. These four edifices are
not only the places where believers in the one God profess their faith; they
are also a visible sign of the kind of civil society which the people of this
region wish to build: a society of peace, the members of which acknowledge God
as the one Lord and Father of all.
The tensions which can develop between individuals and ethnic groups as an
inheritance from the past and as a consequence of close proximity and diversity
ought to find in religious values reasons for moderation and restraint, indeed
for understanding, with a view to constructive cooperation.
2. I have had occasion to affirm - and I say it again here today - that
Sarajevo, a city at the crossroads of the tensions between cultures, religions,
and different peoples, can be considered the city symbolizing our century.
Precisely here the First World War began in 1914; here the violence of the
Second World War was unleashed in all its fury; here, finally, in the closing
decade of the century, its people have experienced, amidst destruction and
death, interminable years of fear and anguish.
Now, after so much suffering, Bosnia-Hercegovina is finally committed to
building peace. This is not an easy undertaking, as the experience of the
months since the the end of the conflict have shown. Nevertheless, with the
help of the International Community, peace is possible, indeed peace is
necessary. From a historical perspective, Sarajevo and the whole of Bosnia-
Hercegovina, if they succeed in setting up their institutional structure in
peace, can become at the end of this century an example of coexistence in
diversity for many nations experiencing this same difficulty, in Europe and
elsewhere in the world.
3. The method which must be rigorously followed in solving the problems
which arise along the arduous path is the method of dialogue, inspired by
listening to the other side and mutual respect. The method which, despite cases
of resistance, is being increasingly acknowledged, requires of those taking
part, frankness, courage, patience and perseverance. The effort required by
face-to-face encounter will be richly rewarded. It will slowly become possible
for the wounds inflicted by the recent terrible war to heal and real hope for a
more worthy future for all the peoples who together live in this territory will
become possible.
Dialogue must be conducted with respect for equality of rights, guaranteed
to individual citizens by appropriate legal means, without preference or
discrimination. An urgent effort must be made to ensure that everyone can be
guaranteed work, which is the basis of recovery and development, while
respecting human dignity. An effort must be made to ensure that the exiles and
refugees, in whatever part of Bosnia-Hercegovina, can exercise the right to
recover the homes which they had to abandon in the turmoil of the conflict.
Equality of rights must be granted to the ethnic-religious communities.
Bosnia-Hercegovina is a mosaic of cultures, religions and ethnic groups which,
if recognized and safeguarded in their diversity, can contribute their
respective gifts to the enrichment of the one patrimony of civil society.
4. Building a true and lasting peace is a great task entrusted to everyone.
Certainly, much depends on those who have public responsibilities. But the
future of peace, while largely entrusted to institutional formulations, which
have to be effectively drawn up by means of sincere dialogue and in respect for
justice, depend no less decisively on a renewed solidarity of minds and hearts.
It is this interior attitude which must be fostered, both within the frontiers
of Bosnia-Hercegovina and also in relations with neighbouring States and the
Community of Nations. But an attitude of this kind can only be established on
the foundation of forgiveness. For the edifice of peace to be solid, against
the background of so much blood and hatred, it will have to be built on the
courage of forgiveness. People must know how to ask for forgiveness and to
forgive!
Members of the Presidency, in entrusting to you these considerations, I also
wish to entrust them to the other leaders of every rank and competency in order
that hope for a steady strengthening of the peace so arduously achieved may be
fostered, and an ever more peaceful and prosperous future for every inhabitant
of this beloved Bosnia-Hercegovina may be assured. Despite the difficulties,
obstacles and hindrances, let hope never fail! God does not abandon peacemakers.
I implore him, the almighty Lord of the universe, to grant everyone his
consolation, and to strengthen in people's hearts generous resolutions of
sincere dialogue, true understanding, and mutual commitment to reconstruction
and peace.