CARDINAL SANDRI TO UKRAINIANS IN ROME: “ BE STRONG” – UKRAINE CRISIS: HOLY SEE REITERATES APPEAL TO OPEN HUMANITARIAN CORRIDORS

As I was coming home from some appointments this afternoon, I was on a bus whose route took it briefly to Via della Conciliazione, the broad avenue that leads from St. Peter’s Square east to Castel Sant’Angelo and the Tiber River. All, or most of , the buildings on Conciliazione are Vatican-owned and they house offices, congregations, and other dicasteries of the Roman Curia. In addition, some embassies to the Holy See have their offices in these buildings.

As the bus stopped at a red light, I saw that two of the embassies, in a building I know well, had blue and yellow banners – the national colors of Ukraine – in the windows outside of which their flags flew.

Here you see the Canadian flag –

And here, on the top floor, is the flag of Taiwan (Republic of China).

The embassy located one floor above Canada and below Taiwan is Malaysia.   You can see the partially unfurled flag.

Other embassies are further down on Via della Conciliazione but I did not get off the bus to check them.

Here is a photo of a salute to Ukraine on the Rome subway –

CARDINAL SANDRI TO UKRAINIANS IN ROME: “ BE STRONG”

The Prefect of the Congregation for the Oriental Churches tells the Ukrainian community living in Rome that they are not alone in this tragic moment and to confide in the power of prayer

By Lisa Zengarini

As Christians worldwide united on Ash Wednesday in a day of prayer and fasting for peace in Ukraine , the Ukrainian Greek Catholic community in Rome gathered in prayer in their Roman church around their pastor, Bishop Dionisij Ljachovič, head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Exarchate of Italy.

Attending the event was also Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, the Prefect of the Congregation for the Oriental Churches, who expressed his heartfelt closeness to the all the suffering Ukrainian people in this tragic moment for their country.

No words, only prayer

“We don’t have many words to say,” the Argentinian cardinal said in his brief remarks. “The words are those we sang and we recited invoking the intercession of the Mother of God, Queen of Ukraine. He insisted that in the face of so much shame for humanity and so much suffering the only weapon available is prayer.

“We have no words. We don’t have missiles, we don’t have guns, we don’t have tanks, we don’t have the force of violence that wants to impose itself at any price. We have the strength of humility of those who receive the contempt of the world and of the powerful of the earth. Our only weapon – in this we join our Pope Francis – in the face of so much shame for humanity and so much suffering is this we have done today: to pray.” Cardinal Sandri to Ukrainians in Rome: “Be strong” – Vatican News

UKRAINE CRISIS: HOLY SEE REITERATES APPEAL TO OPEN HUMANITARIAN CORRIDORS

Archbishop Gabriele Caccia, Permanent Observer of the Holy See to the United Nations stresses the importance of humanitarian corridors to ensure the safety and protection of thousands of people fleeing ongoing hostilities in Ukraine.

By Benedict Mayaki, SJ

The Holy See has called for the opening of humanitarian corridors in the face of the increasing and concerning number of civilian casualties, as well as the damage to critical infrastructure that trails the war in Ukraine.

Speaking at the “Joint Launch of the Humanitarian Flash Appeal and the Regional Refugee Response Plan for Ukraine” on Tuesday, Archbishop Gabriele Caccia noted that the number of people fleeing ongoing hostilities and crossing into neighbouring countries is fast approaching 700,000, and is likely to increase due to disruptions to local supply chains, essential services, access to food and other basic goods

Reiterating Pope Francis’ appeal at the Sunday Angelus, he stressed the urgency of opening humanitarian corridors, as well as ensuring full, safe, and unhindered access for humanitarian actors to deliver assistance to civilian populations in need. Ukraine crisis: Holy See reiterates appeal to open humanitarian corridors – Vatican News

 

 

HOLY SEE AT U.N. CALLS FOR CESSATION OF HOSTILITIES IN UKRAINE, RETURN TO DIPLOMACY AND DIALOGUE

HOLY SEE AT U.N. CALLS FOR CESSATION OF HOSTILITIES IN UKRAINE, RETURN TO DIPLOMACY AND DIALOGUE

Statement by His Excellency Archbishop Gabriele Caccia
Permanent Observer of the Holy See
at the 11th Emergency Special Session of the United Nations General Assembly
New York, March 2, 2022

Mr. President,

Thank you for calling this Emergency Special Session as “in recent days we have been shaken by something tragic: war.”

The Holy See joins the many Member States and millions across the globe who call for the immediate cessation of hostilities in Ukraine and a return to diplomacy and dialogue.

Mr. President,

This Organization was founded “to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war” and “live together in peace with one another as good neighbors.” It is the duty of all States to seek to resolve disputes through negotiation, mediation or by other peaceful means, even when war has commenced.

Mr. President,

Last Sunday, Pope Francis expressed his closeness with all who now suffer as a result of the conflict, stressing that “it is urgent to open humanitarian corridors, and [those fleeing] must be welcomed. With a heart broken by what is happening in Ukraine – and let us not forget the wars in other parts of the world … – I repeat: put down your weapons! … [T]hose who love peace… reject war as an instrument of aggression against the freedom of other peoples and as a means for the settlement of international disputes.

The Holy See wishes to express, also in this forum, its appreciation to those States which are offering humanitarian assistance to those in need both in Ukraine and in neighboring countries in which many Ukrainians have sought safety.

Mr. President,

Pope Francis has called on believers and non-believers alike to observe this Wednesday (March 2) as a “day to be close to the sufferings of the Ukrainian people, to feel that we are all brothers and sisters, and to implore of God the end of the war.

The Holy See is convinced that there is always “time for goodwill, there is still room for negotiation, there is still a place for the exercise of a wisdom that can prevent the predominance of partisan interest, safeguard the legitimate aspirations of everyone, and spare the world from the folly and horrors of war.” May this Emergency Special Session advance efforts that help attain this end.

Thank you, Mr. President.