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Pope Francis message Pluriel (with Islam)

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MESSAGE OF THE HOLY FATHER FRANCIS
TO PARTICIPANTS IN THE 4th INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF PLURIEL,
THE UNIVERSITY RESEARCH PLATFORM ON ISLAM

[Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, 4-7 February 2024]

Dear Brothers and Sisters!

I send my warmest greetings to you who are participating in this International Congress of PLURIEL, the University Platform for Research on Islam, in Abu Dhabi, on the occasion of the fifth anniversary of the Document on Human Fraternity for World Peace and Living Together which I co-signed with my friend and brother, the Grand Imam of Al-Azhar, Ahmad al-Tayyeb.
At that event, we asked that “this document become the object of research and reflection in all schools, universities and educational and training institutes, so as help to educate new generations to bring goodness and peace to others, and to be defenders everywhere of the rights of the oppressed and of the least of our brothers and sisters”.
I therefore warmly congratulate the organizers of this academic meeting on the place they have chosen and the  theme they have chosen, “Impact and Prospects of the Document”, at a time when fraternity coexistence are being challenged by injustices and wars which – I would remind you – are always defeats of humanity.
The roots of these evils are threefolda lack of understanding of othersa failure to listen, and a lack of intellectual flexibility.
Three flaws in the human spirit that destroy fraternity and that need to be properly identified if we are to rediscover wisdom and peace.

First, a lack of understanding of others.
Because the problems of today and tomorrow will remain unsolvable if we do not get to know and appr4ciate each other, and if we remain isolated.
Getting to know the other, building mutual trust, changing the negative image we may have of this “other”, who is my brother in humanity, in publications, speeches and teachings, is the way to initiate peace processes that are acceptable to all.
Peace without an education based on respect and knowledge of the other has neither value nor future.  If we do not want to build a civilization of the anti-brotherhood, where “the other who is different” is vaguely perceived as an enemy,
if, on the contrary, we want to build that longed-for world in which dialogue is seen as the way, common cooperation as the norm, mutual knowledge as the method and criterion (cf. Document), then the path we must follow today is that of formation for dialogue and encounter.
As I said in my last Message on the occasion of the World Day of Peace dedicated to artificial intelligence, “peace is the fruit of relationships that recognize and welcome others in their inalienable dignity” (Message for the 57th World Day of Peace 2024).
Human intelligence, for its part, is fundamentally relational: it can only flourish if it remains curious and open to all fields of reality, and if it knows how to communicate freely the fruits of its discoveries.

Second, a failure to listen,
To do this, it is necessary to take the time to listen, to listen to my brother who is different, whom I have not chosen, so that I can live with him on the same earth.
The lack of listening is the second trap that undermines fraternity.
On the contrary: listen before you speak. “Let every man be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to get angry, for the anger of man does not work the righteousness of God” says Saint James (James 1:19-20).
How many evils would be avoided if there were more listening, more silence more and real words, in families, in political or religious communities, even in universities and between peoples and cultures!
Creating spaces where different opinions can be heard is not a waste of time, but a gain for humanity.  Let us remember that “without encountering and relating to differences, it is difficult to achieve a clear and complete understanding even of ourselves and of our homeland.  Other cultures are not ‘enemies’ from which we need to protect ourselves, but different reflections of the inexhaustible richness of human life” (Fratelli tutti, no. 147).
In order to debate, we need to learn to listen, that is to say, to be silent and slow down, in contrast to the current direction of our postmodern world, which is always hectic, full of images and noise. Debating while knowing how to listen and without giving in to emotion, without fearing “misunderstandings”, which will always be present and are part of the game of encountering others, is what will enable us to reach a peaceful common vision in order to build fraternity.

Finally, intellectual flexibility.
But debate presupposes an education in intellectual flexibility.
Education and research must aim to make the men and women of our peoples not rigid but flexible, alive, open to otherness, and fraternal.
As I said at the International Conference for Peace organized at Al-Azhar in Cairo in 2017, “Wisdom seeks the other, overcoming the temptations of rigidity and narrow-mindedness; it is open and in motion, at the same time  humble and inquisitive; it is able to appreciate the past and set it in dialogue with the present, using an aproporiate  hermeneutics (Address to the participants in the International Conference for Peace, 28 April 2017).

Dear brothers and sisters, let us make sure that our dream of fraternity in peace is not limited to words!  The word “dialogue” is in fact extremely rich and cannot be limited to discussions around a table.  “Approaching, seeking, listening, looking at, getting to know and understand one another, and to find common ground: all these things are summed up in the one word ‘dialogue’” (Fratelli tutti, no. 198). Do not be afraid to go beyond your disciplines, remain curious, cultivate flexibility, listen to the world; do not be afraid of this world, listen to your brother whom you have not chosen but whom God has placed beside you to teach you to love. “He, who does not love his brother whom he has seen, cannot love God whom he has not seen” (1 Jn 4:20).

Thank you for what you are already doing, as researchers, students, curious men and women who want to understand and change the world.
I encourage you in the work you will undertake during this Congress, and I invoke God’s blessing upon all of you and your families.

From the Vatican, 4 February 2024

FRANCIS

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