Pope ends sensitive trip to Asia after
seeking Rohingya forgiveness
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[December 02, 2017]
By Philip Pullella and Krishna N. Das
DHAKA (Reuters) - Pope Francis ended a
diplomatically tricky trip to Asia on Saturday, seeking the forgiveness
of Rohingya Muslim refugees in Bangladesh after his controversial
decision to not directly refer to their plight when he visited their
homeland, Myanmar.
On the last day of his three-day visit to Bangladesh, which came after
meetings in Buddhist-majority Myanmar, the pope went to a home in Dhaka
founded by Mother Teresa for orphans, unwed mothers and destitute
elderly.
Later in a speech to an audience of around 7,000 young Catholics,
Muslims and followers of other religions, the pope spoke about welcoming
and accepting those who "act and think differently than ourselves".
"When a people, a religion or a society turns into a 'little world',
they lose the best that they have and plunge into a self-righteous
mentality of 'I am good and you are bad'," Francis said at the Notre
Dame College, founded by Catholic priests.
He also asked his young listeners to "not spend the whole day playing
with your phone and ignoring the world around you!"
Francis said he was very pleased by an inter-religious meeting on Friday
night, where he had an emotional meeting with refugees from Myanmar and
then used the word Rohingya for the first time on his current trip,
saying they had God within them and should be respected. He also sought
their forgiveness in the name of all who persecuted them.
Previously, in Myanmar, he followed the advice of Myanmar Church
officials who said his use of the word could prompt a backlash against
Christians and hurt that country's fragile path to democracy.
That had disappointed rights groups such as Amnesty International, which
has said Myanmar's "security forces were carrying out a systematic,
organized and ruthless campaign of violence against the Rohingya
population."
Myanmar's military has denied the allegations.
The country does not recognize the stateless Rohingya as an ethnic group
with its own identity and considers them as illegal immigrants from
Bangladesh.
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Pope Francis meets with sick people and staff of the Mother Teresa
House in the Dhaka's Tejgaon neighborhood, Bangladesh, December 2,
2017. REUTERS/Andrew Medichini/Pool
PRAISE FOR BANGLADESH
Mother Teresa, who started the Missionaries of Charity to serve "the
poorest of the poor," opened the Dhaka home in the early 1970s to
look after Bengali women who became pregnant as a result of rape by
Pakistani soldiers during the war of independence.
The pope made an impromptu address to nuns and priests at the home
during which he praised Bangladesh, a Muslim-majority country where
Catholics make up less than one percent of its around 169 million
people, for having what he called some of the best inter-religious
relations in the world.
His words of appreciation have been welcomed by Bangladesh, which
was already home to around 400,000 Rohingya Muslims before nearly
625,000 more came since August after the Myanmar army launched an
offensive in response to attacks on security posts by Rohingya
militants.
Bangladesh last week signed an agreement to return the refugees over
time, "while at the same time expanding refugee camps and
constructing tens of thousands of shelters for them in Bangladesh
until they are able to return", a statement issued on behalf of the
government said.
"Dear friends in Myanmar and Bangladesh, thank you for your
welcome!" Francis said on Twitter as his flight took off. "Upon you
I invoke divine blessings of harmony and peace."
(Reporting By Philip Pullella and Krishna N. Das; Additional
reporting by Serajul Quadir; Editing by Michael Perry and Ros
Russell)
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