|
News Items:
|
|
Headlines
|
|
News Briefs
|
|
Stories
|
|
Movies
|
|
Word To Life
|
|
More News:
|
|
Vatican
|
|
Africa
|
|
Special Sections:
|
|
2006 in review
|
|
Inside the Curia
|
|
Archives:
|
|
Vatican II at 40
|
|
John Paul II
|
|
Other Items:
|
|
Client Area
|
|
Links
|
|
Origins
|
|
.
|
|
Did You Know...
|
The whole CNS
public Web site
headlines, briefs
stories, etc,
represents less
than one percent
of the daily news
report.
Get all the news!
If you would like
more information
about the
Catholic News
Service daily
news report,
please contact
CNS at one of
the following:
cns@
catholicnews.com
or
(202) 541-3250
|
|
.
|
|
Copyright:
|
This material
may not
be published,
broadcast,
rewritten or
otherwise
distributed.
Copyright
(c) 2006
Catholic News
Service/U.S.
Conference of
Catholic Bishops.
|
|
 |
|
CNS Story:
|
ANNAPOLIS-PEACE Nov-27-2007 (760 words) With photos. xxxn
Catholic officials say Middle East peace possible, but U.S. must lead
By George P. Matysek Jr.
Catholic News Service
BALTIMORE (CNS) -- As key leaders from Israel, the Palestinian territories, Saudi Arabia, Syria and other nations gathered in Annapolis for a Nov. 26-28 Middle East peace conference and related meetings, local Catholic leaders said they were hopeful the meetings would trigger further discussions for making a lasting peace in the Holy Land.
Peace is attainable, they said, but it will take assertive leadership from the United States to make it a reality.
"I'm guardedly optimistic in the sense that I'm always happy when there's some kind of negotiation going on in the Middle East," said Baltimore Auxiliary Bishop Denis J. Madden, urban vicar for the archdiocese.
Bishop Madden previously served as associate secretary general of the Catholic Near East Welfare Association and director of the Pontifical Mission for Palestine office in Jerusalem.
He said the lack of strong leadership from the United States in recent years has been a contributing reason the peace process has stalled. He was hopeful the U.S.-led Annapolis conference would change that.
The conference and related meetings included participants from 50 organizations and countries, including Israel, the Palestinian territories and several Arab states.
"I think it's very important for the U.S. to show seriousness about all of this," Bishop Madden told the Catholic Review, newspaper of the Baltimore Archdiocese. "There's a need for an outside party to provide leadership, as long as it's going to be even-handed."
Bishop Madden said there is general consensus about what steps are needed to achieve peace. Israelis would like greater control of the terrorists who pose a threat to security, he said, while Palestinians are looking for a cessation of Israeli settlement-building, the return of land and freer travel.
The bishop led a 12-day October pilgrimage to the Holy Land during which his group met with a variety of government leaders, representatives of local organizations, educators, religious leaders and others.
"The Israelis and Palestinians can and do live in peace," he said. "We have extremist groups that always topple the equilibrium and when there's an episode everything comes to a screeching halt."
Christine Tucker, an official with Baltimore-based Catholic Relief Services and a parishioner of St. Louis in Clarksville, participated in the recent pilgrimage while also conducting CRS business in the Holy Land. CRS is the U.S. bishops' overseas relief and development agency.
She agreed that there are many on both sides who know how to attain peace but that the political process needs to be jump-started.
"Both sides deserve security, the right to education, health care and employment," said Tucker, CRS regional director for the mid-Atlantic area who formerly served four years as the regional director for the Middle East and North Africa.
"I think there is recognition that peace for one is peace for the other," she said.
Tucker said many on both sides recognize that a two-state solution for Israelis and Palestinians is key to any peace process.
She is concerned about what she called the "humanitarian crisis" in the Palestinian territories that is complicated by strict travel restrictions imposed by Israel. There are 38 CRS staff members working in the Palestinian territories, providing food and other relief support, she said. Checkpoints and restrictions "put great difficulty on our ability to deliver assistance," she said.
"One can travel freely throughout Israel and there's access to jobs, health care, education and so those same elements that are part of daily life are simply not there on the Palestinian side," she said.
Tucker said it is important for American citizens to lobby their U.S. senators to pass a measure that encourages President George W. Bush to pursue a "robust diplomatic effort" in the Holy Land and to make a two-state solution "a top priority."
Pope Benedict XVI said he hoped the Annapolis conference, held at the U.S. Naval Academy, would help Palestinians and Israelis reach a "just and definitive solution."
The pope endorsed the U.S. bishops' call for prayers for the success of the conference, saying prayers were needed so that negotiators will have the "wisdom and courage" to take real steps toward peace.
He said the Palestinian-Israeli conflict "for 60 years has been bloodying the Holy Land," causing "so many tears and so much suffering among the two peoples."
The pope made the remarks Nov. 25. The Vatican also sent a delegation to the conference headed by Msgr. Pietro Parolin, undersecretary for the foreign affairs section of the Vatican Secretariat of State. He was accompanied by Msgr. Franco Coppola, another foreign affairs specialist.
END
Copyright (c) 2007 Catholic News Service/USCCB. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed.
CNS · 3211 Fourth St NE · Washington DC 20017 · 202.541.3250
|
|
|
|