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In Easter address, pope laments global violence

Benedict's remarks on woes in Asia and Africa resonate with foes of war and death penalty who joined celebrants.

The World

April 09, 2007|Tracy Wilkinson, Times Staff Writer

VATICAN CITY — An unusual Easter Parade made its way through the streets of Rome and into St. Peter's Square on Sunday.

Some of the participants wore ropes tied into nooses around their necks. One 21-year-old, Daniele de Luca, carried pieces of a homemade gallows.


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To protest the death penalty, and war in general, they chose Easter, the day Christians celebrate the resurrection of Jesus. After all, they said, Jesus was the perfect pacifist who fell victim to a regime-sanctioned execution.

And they had something of an ally on St. Peter's throne.

Pope Benedict XVI led a regal Easter Mass and then bemoaned the state of a war-torn world -- singling out Iraq for special lamentation. The Vatican is on record opposing the war in Iraq, but Benedict's comments were notably bleak.

"Nothing positive comes from Iraq," the pope said, "torn apart by continual slaughter as the civil population flees."

Benedict also condemned "growing unrest and instability" in Afghanistan and the horrors, destruction and bloodshed in Africa and Asia. "How many wounds, how much suffering there is in the world!" he said.

The pope's comments came during his traditional "Urbi et Orbi" message -- Latin for "to the city and the world" -- delivered at Easter and Christmas.

"I am thinking of the scourge of hunger, of incurable diseases, of terrorism and kidnapping of people," the pope continued, "of the thousand faces of violence which some people attempt to justify in the name of religion, of contempt for life, of the violation of human rights and the exploitation of persons."

Benedict wore shimmering golden vestments and presided over a ceremony, awash in yellow flowers, that filled St. Peter's Square with an enormous showing of pilgrims.

The death-penalty demonstrators joined the St. Peter's crowd after marching from Rome's City Hall. Some said they were disappointed that the pope did not explicitly condemn the practice, the central issue they sought to dramatize, but took heart in his pointed advocacy of nonviolence and human rights.

"This is such a day of God, of rebirth, and we are talking about love and life," said Ilaria Stivali, 32, who was in a group wearing mock nooses and T-shirts saying "I am against."

"This is our way to say we want peace, the only way we have to say something to our government," she added. "The death penalty is not human, and I can't stand it anymore."

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