Conflicts amount to piecemeal WWIII: Pope

Published September 14, 2014
Pope Francis prays by gravestones in an Austro-Hungarian cemetery in Fogliano di Redipuglia, northern Italy, on Saturday. Pope Francis will confront a piece of his own family’s history when he visits a World War I memorial built amid the battlefields where his grandfather fought in an Italian offensive against the Austro-Hungarian empire, surviving to impress upon the future pope the horrors of war.—AFP
Pope Francis prays by gravestones in an Austro-Hungarian cemetery in Fogliano di Redipuglia, northern Italy, on Saturday. Pope Francis will confront a piece of his own family’s history when he visits a World War I memorial built amid the battlefields where his grandfather fought in an Italian offensive against the Austro-Hungarian empire, surviving to impress upon the future pope the horrors of war.—AFP

REDIPUGLIA (Italy): Pope Francis said on Saturday the spate of conflicts around the globe today were effectively a “piecemeal” Third World War, condemning the arms trade and “plotters of terrorism” sowing death and destruction.

“Humanity needs to weep and this is the time to weep,” Pope Francis said in the homily of a Mass during a visit to Italy’s largest war memorial, a large, Fascist-era monument where more than 100,000 soldiers who died in World War One are buried.

The pope began his brief visit to northern Italy by first praying in a nearby, separate cemetery for some 15,000 soldiers from five nations of the Austro-Hungarian empire which were on the losing side of the Great War that broke out 100 years ago.

“War is madness,” he said in his homily before the massive, sloping granite memorial, made of 22 steps on the side of hill with three crosses at the top.

“Even today, after the second failure of another world war, perhaps one can speak of a third war, one fought piecemeal, with crimes, massacres, destruction,” he said.

In the past few months, Pope Francis has made repeated appeals for an end to conflicts in Ukraine, Iraq, Syria, Gaza and parts of Africa.

“War is irrational; its only plan is to bring destruction: it seeks to grow by destroying,” he said. “Greed, intolerance, the lust for power. These motives underlie the decision to go to war and they are too often justified by an ideology ...,” he said.In his homily, read at a sombre service to thousands of people braving the rain and which included the hauntingly funereal sound of a solitary bugle, Pope Francis condemned “plotters of terrorism” but did not elaborate.

Published in Dawn, September 14th, 2014

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