Page 5, 28th October 2011

28th October 2011

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Page 5, 28th October 2011 — Cardinal urges Hindus: respect religious freedom
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Cardinal urges Hindus: respect religious freedom

BY CAROL GLATZ CHRISTIANS AND HINDUS
must work together in promoting religious freedom, a top Vatican official has said in a Diwali message.
Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, president of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, said that the lack of religious freedom is “taking centre stage in many places, calling our attention to those members of our human family exposed to bias, prejudice, hate propaganda, discrimination and persecution on the basis of religious affiliation,” he wrote The freedom to “profess, practise and propagate one's religious belief “is the answer to religiously motivated conflicts in many parts of the world,” especially as so many people desperately seek full human development and peaceful coexistence with others, he wrote.
His comments came in an annual message to mark the Hindu celebration of Diwali, a three-day religious festival that begun on Wednesday in most parts of the world.
The cardinal’s letter, released by the Vatican last week, said when religious freedom is hampered or denied “all other human rights are endangered”.
The freedom to worship in public or in private “also involves a serious obligation on the part of civil authorities, individuals and groups to respect the freedom of others. Moreover, it includes the freedom to change one’s own religion,” the message said.
Hinduism is the third largest religion with more than one billion followers, the majority of whom live in India. In recent years, minority Catholic communities in India have faced increasing episodes of violence carried out by Hindu militants and have seen the passage of anticonversion laws in some states. In the worst incident in recent years, over 100 Christians were murdered in Orissa, southern India, and 140 buildings burned down, following the murder of a local Hindu leader.
The cardinal’s message said true religious freedom benefits all society because when believers are free from intimidation and prejudice they are more willing to cooperate with others in building a just community.
Hindus and Christians can work together for the common good, especially by defending life, protecting the family and fostering education, honesty and the protection of resources, it said.
The cardinal's message also highlighted Pope Benedict XVI’s pilgrimage to Assisi with religious leaders from around the world to renew a pledge to make religions a path to peace.
Cardinal Tauran said: “We will be spiritually united with them, confident that believers will always be a blessing for the whole world.”




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