Pope Makes Christmas Appeal for
Children
December 24, 2006
By FRANCES D'EMILIO
Associated Press Writer
VATICAN
CITY - Pope Benedict XVI celebrated Christmas Midnight Mass in the
splendor of St. Peter's Basilica early Monday with an appeal for
abused children around the world, including child soldiers,
beggars and others deprived of sustenance and love.
"The child of Bethlehem directs our
gaze toward all children who suffer and are abused in the world, the
born and the unborn," Benedict said in his homily, referring to the
church's stand against abortion.
In celebrating Jesus' birth, he
said people should direct their thoughts toward children forced to
serve "as soldiers in a violent world, toward children who have to
beg, toward children who suffer deprivation and hunger, toward
children who are unloved.
"Let us pray this night that the
brightness of God's love may enfold all these children," the pontiff
said. "Let us ask God to help us do our part so that the dignity of
children may be respected."
Earlier, the pope used his weekly
Sunday blessing to ask the world to overcome prejudice, while some
Christians celebrated amid heightened security due to the threat of
terror attacks.
Peace on earth seemed a distant
dream this Christmas. Police guarded churches in Pakistan and
Indonesia, and in Bethlehem, there were no Christmas carols this
year.
Queen Elizabeth II sent a special
Christmas message to British troops overseas, telling them "your
courage and loyalty are not lightly taken" amid mounting losses in
Iraq and Afghanistan.
The pope began the Midnight Mass,
broadcast to 44 nations, with a call for peace in Latin: "Pax vobis"
("Peace be with you). The faithful responded: "Et cum spiritu tuo."
("And also with you.")
To symbolize the worldwide reach of
the Roman Catholic Church, children in native costumes from around
the world -- including Korea, Poland and Burkina Faso -- brought
flowers to a figure of the Baby Jesus near the altar.
Benedict told worshippers to "not
forget the true gift: to give each others something of ourselves, to
give each other something of our time, to open our time to God."
Christmas gift-giving also means
giving to those who cannot give anything back, he said.
"This is what God has done," the
pontiff said.
Twelve hours after the solemn
ceremony, the 79-year-old Benedict was scheduled to deliver the
traditional "Urbi et Orbi" speech _ Latin for "to the city and to
the world" _ to a crowd expected to number in the tens of thousands
in St. Peter's Square.
His predecessor, Pope John Paul II,
used this traditional Christmas Day message to review progress and
setbacks for humanity.
Wearing gold-colored vestments,
smiling at the faithful and raising a hand in blessing, Benedict
strode up the main aisle to take his place on the central altar,
which was decorated with red poinsettia flowers. He walked around
the altar, sprinkling incense.
Earlier, Benedict delivered his
weekly Sunday blessing to a crowd of pilgrims and tourists gathering
in St. Peter's Square, waiting for midnight Mass.
Speaking from a window overlooking
the square, the pope said people should strive to "overcome
preconceived ideas and prejudices, tear down barriers and eliminate
contrasts that divide _ or worse _ set individuals and peoples
against each other, so as to build together a world of justice and
peace."
Those barriers loomed large in the
predominantly Muslim countries of Pakistan and Indonesia, where
minority Christians attended church under tight security.
There are 31 churches in and around
Pakistan's capital, Islamabad, and "we have given security cover to
all of them," said Sikandar Hayat, a senior police officer.
Church officials said metal
detectors were set up for most services and armed guards watched
over worshippers. Authorities were taking no chances: two assailants
used a grenade to kill three girls at a tiny Protestant village
church in 2002.
"I visited Liberty market last
night to buy some gifts," said Masroor Raza, 19, a student at Forman
Christian College in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore. "I
completed my shopping at earliest and hurried away from the market.
You know the security reasons; it's Christmas Eve."
In Jakarta, Indonesian police
checked worshippers and searched for bombs at churches after
warnings by Western nations that Islamic militants might be plotting
Christmas attacks.
Indonesian officials played down
the alerts, common since Christmas Eve bombings across the country
killed 19 people in 2000. Still, 18,000 officers were deployed at
churches as a precaution, police spokesman Col. I Ketut Untung Yoga
Ana said.
Most of the crowd gathered in
Bethlehem's Manger Square were local Palestinians with a sprinkling
of foreigners. The Islamic militant group Hamas now controls the
Palestinian government, and some Christians worried about open
celebrations.
There were fewer Christmas
decorations in Bethlehem than in the past. For the first time, no
Christmas carols were broadcast over a loudspeaker system.
The day was more upbeat on Flower
Street in Kabul, capital of the overwhelmingly Muslim nation of
Afghanistan, where vendors were selling Christmas trees already
decorated with lights and tinsel to foreigners.
"After the Taliban, we started to
make Christmas trees because lots of foreigners are around, and they
are asking for them," said Eidy Mohammad, owner of the Morsal Flower
Store. "Business is growing _ we had only the wedding season before,
but now we have Christmas as well."
He said he had sold about a dozen
Christmas trees, earning anywhere from $20 to $200 _ a hefty sum for
Afghans, many of whom make only about $50 a month.
Money was short supply this
Christmas in the southern African nation of Zimbabwe, where the
worst economic crisis since independence has led to shortages of
everything from consumer goods to electricity. Many shops and
factories have not been able to pay traditional holiday bonuses to
their employees.
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