Pope Francis ventured into one of the world's most
dangerous neighbourhoods on Monday to beg Christians and Muslims to end a
spiral of hate, vendetta and bloodshed that has killed thousands over the past
three years.
Under intense security, Francis passed through a no-man's
zone to enter PK5, a district where most Muslims who have not fled the capital
of the Central African Republic have now sought refuge.
The neighbourhood has been cut off from the rest of the
capital Bangui for the past two months by a ring of so-called anti-balaka
Christian militias, who block supplies from entering and Muslims from leaving.
UN sharpshooters looked out from the tops of the minarets
crowning the freshly repainted green and white mosque, where hundreds of PK5's
Muslims listened as Francis made an impassioned appeal for an end to the
violence.
"Christians and Muslims are brothers and
sisters," he said after a speech by Imam Tidiani Moussa Naibi, one of the
local religious leaders trying to foster dialogue.
"Those who claim to believe in God must also be men
and women of peace," he said, noting that Christians, Muslims and
followers of traditional religions had lived together in peace for many years.
He appealed for "an end to every act which, from
whatever side, disfigures the face of God and whose ultimate aim is to defend
particular interests by any and all means."
Healing rifts between Christian and Muslim communities
has been a theme throughout Francis' first visit to the continent, which has
also taken him to Kenya and Uganda.
However, nowhere is his call for peace and reconciliation
more pressing than in Central African Republic, where thousands have died and
hundreds of thousands have been displaced in clashes that have split the
country along religious lines.
nice one #Papal
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