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Bosnia’s Catholic leaders say real dialogue impeded by injustices By Jonathan Luxmoore Catholic News Service WARSAW, Poland (CNS) — Catholic leaders in Bosnia-Herzegovina said real ethnic and religious dialogue is not occurring and not all religions have equal rights.
Tomasevic welcomed a September interfaith peace appeal,
issued in Sarajevo after an international peace meeting sponsored by
the Rome-based Sant’Egidio
Community gathered 2,000 Catholic, Orthodox, Protestant, Muslim, Jewish,
Buddhist and Hindu representatives. “Peace is firstly a gift from God, so it’s important all
faiths and confessions pray for it together,” he said. “But
we also need to work for peace, at a time when our Catholic population
has almost halved and the Catholic presence in Sarajevo is dwindling
year by year.” Tomasevic said participants had expressed a wish to create a zone of
peace in Bosnia-Herzegovina, where more than 100,000 people died in the
war. Earlier, the president of the Bosnian bishops’ conference
told the Croatian daily Vecernji List that he had questioned claims at
the meeting that his country offered an example of religious and ethnic
reconciliation. “In no other European country has the plight of Catholics been
as dramatic as here — at least half have left, and those who remain
have problems finding a roof over their heads, food, jobs and conditions
for life,” Bosnian Bishop Franjo Komarica of Banja Luka said in
the interview, published Sept. 16. “I pointed this out many times during the meeting and was warned
participants knew nothing about these things,” he added. “I
accepted this, although I don’t know whether people are uninformed,
or rather uninterested.” Bosnian newspapers said Bosnia’s Grand Mufti Mustafa
Ceric had rejected complaints by Catholic and Orthodox leaders at the
meeting that growing Muslim domination had left Christians with no future
in Sarajevo. A statement issued by participants at the end of the Sept.
8 - 11 meeting said Bosnia was a reminder of hostilities caused by religious
and ethnic differences, but also of the “grace of dialogue” and of “how
to build the future.” Catholics made up 18 per cent of the 4.3 million citizens of Bosnia-Herzegovina,
with Muslims and Orthodox Serbs constituting 44 per cent and 35 per cent,
respectively, before the war, which ended with the formation of separate
Serb and Croat-Muslim territories in a united country. Tomasevic told CNS that religious leaders could not make
the political decisions needed to create firmer foundations for peace,
adding that he feared the meeting’s final statement could be misused
by local politicians. “The peace meeting was all very well, but we still need a more
just society where the three constituent peoples will have equal rights,” Tomasevic
said. “It’s important we shape consciences so people will be open to dialogue and tolerant of differences. But injustices are occurring not just at the level of power, but in ordinary life as well,” he said. “Until a better foundation is created, our personal goodness will not be enough.” Copyright (c) 2012 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops |
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