Pacem in Terris
Dr
Harry Hagopian, LL.D, KOG-KSL
Everyone must sincerely co-operate in the effort to banish fear and the anxious expectation of war from our mind.
Pacem in Terris
HH Pope John XXIII
11
April 1963
Pope John XXIII issued his Encyclical letter Pacem
in Terris a short while after the world had witnessed the construction of
the Berlin Wall in 1961 and the Cuban missile crisis of 1962. This
comprehensive quasi-juridical document underscored the Pope’s committed belief
that the four pillars of peace were truth, justice, charity and liberty. Pax
Christi International (PCI), the largest Catholic grassroots worldwide
movement, adopted this message from Pacem
in Terris as one of its flags, and Pope John-Paul II referred also to its
theme in his World Peace Message 2003 earlier this year.
On 29 March 2003, HB Michel Sabbah, Latin Patriarch of
Jerusalem and PCI International President, re-visited this Encyclical when
addressing the Pax Christi National Congress in France. The highest Catholic
cleric in Jerusalem underlined that ‘a guiding moral order has been lacking to
direct and sustain the economic, political, cultural and military order of our
day. Without such guidance, ideological systems like Communism or unbridled
capitalism arise with a seemingly solid base, but in reality they are very weak
because they lack clear moral foundations.’ He added that, ‘they are like the
enormous statue in King Nebuchadnezzar’s vision: of extraordinary brilliance
and terrible countenance, his head was of pure gold, his chest and arms of
silver, his abdomen and loins of bronze, his legs of iron, but his feet were
part iron and part clay. It was enough to strike the statue’s feet for it to
crumble like sand on a sand-swept beach, blowing away and leaving no trace.’
Indeed, if the world were to succeed in making a
transition from a culture of war to one of peace, the different world religions
must also assume their ecumenical and interfaith roles to help create a more
just and free world. To start with, religions should not be used wrongly and
exploitatively as tools for war!
As Pope John XXIII said, those four pillars of truth, justice, love and
freedom could help realise ‘humankind’s perpetual dream’ for world peace in a
broken world.
But those lofty papal ideals articulated forty years
ago are also being challenged almost daily in the uneven conflict between
Israelis and Palestinians. Under the guise of dismantling the infrastructure of
Palestinian terrorism, Israeli forces have systematically destroyed almost every
political and civil Palestinian institution in the past twelve months! Not only
have Chairman Arafat’s proto-government and security services been decimated,
so have banks and businesses, schools and research centres, town halls and the
media, the land registry and the courts. Sad really, when the USA could shape
the future of this region but lacks the political resolve, whereas the EU
governments have the ambition but lack the political means. Did St Augustine
not write in De civitate Dei, ‘Take away justice, and what are kingdoms
but mighty bands of robbers?’
It is becoming clearer now, more so with a post-Saddam
Iraq upon us, that the only practical way forward for Israelis and Palestinians
alike is the ‘roadmap’ offered by the Quartet of the EU, the UN, the USA and
Russia. However, this ‘roadmap’ should be unpacked now, not at some convenient
distant future, when all ‘terrorism’ has ceased - as America has demanded of
Palestinians for months now. After all, addressing the conditions in which
terrorism flourishes is not the same as condoning it! Recognising the terrible
plight of the Palestinians is not to offer excuses for the massacre of innocent
Israelis!
I also do agree that there are numerous potholes,
boulders and blind corners with the ‘roadmap’. Those who read the document
carefully will see the many ambiguities - over the immutability of Israel’s
pre-1967 borders, over settlements in the occupied territories and over the
final status of Jerusalem. But marking out the route remains a formidable achievement.
There are staged confidence-building measures, careful sequencing and a solid
commitment to provide the necessary security guarantees that are meant to bring
about a viable and democratic Palestinian state. Yet, for all its flaws as an
‘Oslo-Minus’ document, the ‘roadmap’ combines a rational and fair destination
with intelligent sign posting and assured international support along the way.
The signature of the UN confers legitimacy, that of the EU financial resources
and that of Russia strategic depth. Surely the final ingredient lacking now is
US pressure that would tap into the American moral fibre for truth.
Observing the situation in the Holy Land today, I
recall another Encyclical letter Libertas Praestantissimum issued by
Pope Leo XIII on 20 June 1888. The document said that ‘true freedom, freedom
worthy of the sons of God, is that which most truly safeguards the dignity of
the human person. It is stronger than any violence or injustice.’ Indeed, such
freedoms tally with Patriarch Michel Sabbah’s query about the moral foundations
on which a sustainable peace can be built today. And as I envision peace on
earth, the image of Nebuchadnezzar’s brazen statue with soft clay feet springs
very much to mind too!
© hbv-H @ 11 April 2003