Pope, meeting refugees, says better future possible

Pope Francis. (Supplied)
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Updated 30 April 2023
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Pope, meeting refugees, says better future possible

  • Pope Francis thanks Hungarians for welcoming displaced people as he appeals for culture of charity

BUDAPEST: Pope Francis on Saturday met Ukrainians who fled the war on Hungary’s eastern border, telling the refugees that a different future is possible.

Francis met with about 600 refugees, poor and homeless people in a visit to St. Elizabeth’s church in Budapest on the second day of his visit, which began on Friday when he pointedly warned of the dangers of rising nationalism in Europe.
Pope Francis thanked Hungarians for welcoming Ukrainian refugees and urged them to help anyone in need, as he begged for a culture of charity.
Francis was serenaded by a singing band of Hungarian Roma wearing flower-patterned clothing and seemed to enjoy the music as they hovered around him as he sat in his wheelchair.
But what Francis heard earlier was much more sober.
Oleg Yakovlev told of he and his wife Lyudmila and their five children had to leave Dnipro a year ago after Russian bombings.
“We were welcomed here and we have found a new home (but) many have suffered and suffer still because of the war,” Yakovlev told the pope.
Sitting in the first row of the church with his family, the youngest of the Yakovlev children, a boy of about four, was amused by the attention he was getting, making faces at reporters as his father spoke of missiles, crumbled buildings and a 1,500 km trip to safety.

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Pope Francis said that expressing compassion for those suffering from poverty and tragedy is an integral part of being a Christian, even if those in need are non-believers.

Since Feb. 24, 2022, millions of refugees have fled through Central Europe, including Hungary, and moved to other countries. About 35,000 have applied for temporary protection status in Hungary.
Francis said expressing compassion for those suffering from poverty and tragedy is an integral part of being a Christian, even if those in need are non-believers.
“Even amid pain and suffering, once we have received the balm of love, we find the courage needed to keep moving forward: We find the strength to believe that all is not lost, and that a different future is possible,” he said.
Later the pontiff met with Metropolitan (bishop) Hilarion, representative of the Russian Orthodox Church in Budapest.
Hilarion was effectively ousted from the number two post at the ROC headquarters in Moscow last year, a decision seen as indicating discord at the top of the Russian Patriarchate over the war.
The Russian Orthodox Church is by far the biggest of the churches in the Eastern Orthodox communion, which split with Western Christianity in the Great Schism of 1054.
The Russian invasion of Ukraine divided world Orthodoxy and strained relations between the Vatican and the ROC.
ROC Patriarch, Kirill, is a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin. Kirill fully backs the war as a bulwark against a West he describes as decadent.
The EU tried to put Kirill on its sanctions list last year but member states failed to find unanimity on the issue as Hungary opposed his inclusion.
Relations between the Vatican and the ROC have been frosty since Francis said last year that Kirill should not be “Putin’s altar boy.”

 


Thousands protest over Herzog’s visit to Australia

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Thousands protest over Herzog’s visit to Australia

  • Crowds also gathered in the center of Melbourne demanding an end to Israel’s “occupation” of Palestinian territories

SYDNEY: Sydney police used pepper spray on protesters on Monday as a rally against a visit to Australia by Israel’s President Isaac Herzog turned violent.
The head of state’s tightly secured, four-day visit was aimed at consoling Australia’s Jewish community in the wake of the December shooting at Sydney’s Bondi Beach that killed 15 people at a Hanukkah festival.
But he was met with protests in Australia’s two largest cities on Monday evening, with a Sydney rally turning violent as police hit protesters and members of the media, including AFP, with pepper spray.
An AFP journalist said they saw at least 15 protesters being arrested as members of the rally scuffled with the police.
Palestine Action Group spokesman Josh Lees said on Instagram the police had “repeatedly charged us with horses and pepper spray.”
New South Wales police declined to comment when contacted by AFP.
Crowds also gathered in the center of Melbourne demanding an end to Israel’s “occupation” of Palestinian territories.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese had urged people to be respectful of the reason for Herzog’s visit, saying he would join the president to meet with the families of those killed at Bondi Beach.
The New South Wales state government invoked new powers giving police greater powers to control demonstrations prior to the rally.
An attempt by protesters to overturn those powers in the state’s Supreme Court failed just before the rally began, local media reported.
Not far from the protests, Herzog took part in an event on Monday evening titled “An Evening of Light and Solidarity” for the victims of the Dec. 
14 killings.
Earlier, the Israeli president paid homage to the victims under rain and grey skies as he laid a wreath outside the beachside Bondi Pavilion.
“The bonds between good people of all faiths and all nations will continue to hold strong in the face of terror, violence, and hatred,” he said.
“We shall overcome this evil together.”
Herzog said he laid two stones from Jerusalem at Bondi Beach “in sacred memory of the victims.”