A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, December 2, 2017
Pope holds emotional meeting with refugees, says "Rohingya" for first time
Philip Pullella, Krishna N. Das-DECEMBER 1, 2017DHAKA (Reuters) - Pope Francis had an emotional meeting with Muslim refugees from Myanmar in Bangladesh on Friday and used the word Rohingya to describe them for the first time on his Asian trip, calling for them to be respected.
He also urged the world not to ignore refugees, persecuted minorities, the poor and vulnerable.
The encounter took place at an inter-religious peace meeting on his
first full day in Bangladesh, to where 625,000 Rohingya from Myanmar’s
Rakhine state have fled from an army crackdown.
Refugees have said scores of Rohingya villages have been burnt to the
ground, people killed and women raped. Myanmar’s military has denied
accusations of “ethnic cleansing” by the United States and United
Nations.
The pope had earlier in the week visited Myanmar, where he met its leader Aung San Suu Kyi and Senior General Min Aung Hlaing.
But there he avoided using the word Rohinngya, a term the authorities
reject. Many people in Myanmar regard the largely stateless Rohingya as
illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.
At the Bangladesh meeting, however, he said: “The presence of God today is also called Rohingya.”
Addressing about 5,000 people at the gathering on the grounds of the
Roman Catholic archbishop’s residence, Francis said: “How much our world
needs this heart to beat strongly, to counter the virus of political
corruption, destructive religious ideologies, and the temptation to turn
a blind eye to the needs of the poor, refugees, persecuted minorities,
and those who are most vulnerable.”
Aid workers brought 16 Rohingya refugees from camps in Cox’s Bazar,
about 430 km (260 miles) southeast of Dhaka on the border with Myanmar,
to join other Muslims, as well as Hindus, Buddhists, Christians and
charity workers.
The pope looked sombre as each member of the group, which included 12
men and four women, including two young girls, told him their stories
through interpreters. Francis looked pained as he listened.
Pope Francis meets a group of Rohingya refugees in Dhaka, Bangladesh December 1, 2017. REUTERS/Max Rossi
Francis said in improvised comments.
Before that, in his calls for peace in Myanmar and Bangladesh, he had
not publicly used the word Rohingya to describe the refugees --
disappointing human rights groups and other prominent figures in the
West who have condemned the repression.
He had decided to follow the advice of Myanmar Church officials, who
said his use of the word could prompt a backlash against Christians and
hurt Myanmar’s fragile path to democracy.
One of the women refugees told Reuters before the meeting:
“Myanmar military captured me and some other women, tortured us. I still
bleed, there is pain in the abdomen, my back hurts, I get headaches.
Medicines have not helped much.”
DECISIVE MEASURES
The pope spoke under a huge tent-like canopy held up by bamboo poles and
covered with red, white and scarlet fabric to guard against the
afternoon sun. He had first visited the cathedral and then was taken to
the tent in a flower-bedecked peddle rickshaw that a man pushed up the
central aisle.
In his address, Francis said: “Religious concern for the welfare of our
neighbour, streaming from an open heart, flows outward like a vast
river, to quench the dry and parched wastelands of hatred, corruption,
poverty and violence that so damage human lives, tear families apart,
and disfigure the gift of creation,” he said.
The pope has called for decisive measures to resolve the political
reasons that caused the refugee crisis and urged countries to help the
Bangladesh government deal with it.
Earlier this year from the Vatican, the pope twice defended the Rohingya
by name, once saying that they had been “tortured, killed simply
because they wanted to live their culture and their Muslim faith”.

