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ADDRESS OF PAUL VI TO A
GROUP OF BUDDHIST LEADERS FROM THAILAND
Monday, 5 June 1972
It is with great cordiality and esteem that we greet so distinguished a group
of Buddhist leaders from Thailand.
In your country Buddhist thought has long devoted itself with seriousness and
concentration to the search for an adequate understanding of the deepest
mysteries that surround human existence. These mysteries stir the heart of man
and, even when he cannot precisely formulate them, they confront him with
questions whose solution is ultimately of greater value than would be any
advance in knowledge about lesser things. “Who knows what is good for man in his
lifetime, in those few days he lives so vainly, days that like a shadow he
spends?” (Eccl. 6, 12). These words of the Hebrew sage express a question
that men pose today as yesterday. Buddhist teaching acknowledges that this
shifting world is radically insufficient, and it sets out to show how men can be
liberated from suffering by following a path of lofty asceticism.
We have a profound regard for the spiritual, moral and socio-cultural
treasures that have been bestowed on you through your precious traditions. We
recognize the values of which you are the custodians, and we share the desire
that they should be preserved and fostered. We hope that there will be
increasingly friendly dialogue and close collaboration between the traditions
that you represent and the Catholic Church. Such contacts can be the means to a
mutual enrichment, and assist in advancing the cause of justice and peace in a
world that needs united effort by as many people as possible, if it is to
overcome the grave problems which face it.
We therefore welcome you most warmly. We hope that your talks with our
Secretariat will prove very profitable. And we invoke upon you and all your
country abundant blessings from on high.
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