It is vital to promote mutual respect between Muslims and Christians: Indian Archbishop
Mumbai, 10 August 2013: Pope Francis' invitation to promote "mutual respect through
education" is "of vital importance" in India, where the local Church has sought to
bear witness through thousands of schools and educational facilities open to students
of every religious background, said Archbishop Felix Machado, president of the Office
for Dialogue and Ecumenism of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of India (CBCI), as
he commented the papal message at the end of Ramadan.
"The Church in India,"
the prelate said, "runs about 20,000 educational facilities: schools (15,000), colleges
(300), nursing schools (125), hospitals and clinics (5,000), rehabilitation centres
(2,000), technical institutes (1500), university hospitals (6) and two universities.
Such places are the cradle of interreligious dialogue in which our Muslims are treated
with dignity and respect. Many schools also have prayer rooms at their disposal."
In
his message Pope Francis said, "we have to bring up our young people to think and
speak respectfully of other religions and their followers, and to avoid ridiculing
or denigrating their convictions and practices."
These "are the values we
teach in our schools," Archbishop Machado said. "Religious freedom is a vital aspect
of the educational process; so is the transmission of the values of equality, justice
and peace."
In expressing his best wishes "to our Muslim brothers in India,
in Asia and in the world" for the feast of Id al-Fitr, which ends the holy month of
Islam, the bishop pleaded for release of Fr Paolo Dall'Oglio.
The Italian Jesuit,
who has worked for the restoration of Mar Musa Catholic monastery in Syria since 1982,
went missing on 30 July and is thought to be in the hands of jihadist groups.Source:
AsiaNews