
VATICAN (CNS): Any book that is considered sacred by its people must be respected out of respect for the human person who holds it sacred, Pope Francis said in a recent interview with the Arabic-language newspaper, al-Ittihad. excerpts and a translation of the interview were published by Vatican News on July 3.
“Freedom of expression must never be used as an excuse to despise others, and allowing this must be rejected and condemned,” the pope said in response to the latest act of protest in Sweden in which an individual burned pages from a copy of the Quran, Islam’s holy book.
An Iraqi-born Swedish citizen had been granted a permit from Swedish police in accordance with laws protecting the right to freedom of expression, assembly and demonstration. The individual stomped on a copy of the Quran outside of Stockholm’s main mosque, then ripped out and burned several of its pages on June 28, which marked the Muslim holy day of Eid al-Adha.
The Swedish Ministry of Foreign Affairs denounced the acts as Islamophopic and said in a statement on July 2 that these acts “in no way reflect the views of the Swedish government.”
Freedom of expression must never be used as an excuse to despise others
Pope Francis
A number of governments, organisations and leaders condemned the burning, including Pope Francis, who said, “I feel indignant and disgusted by these actions.”
He told the Emirati newspaper, “Any book considered sacred by its people must be respected out of respect for its believers,” adding, “Our task is to transform the religious sense into cooperation, into fraternity, into concrete good works.”
Pope Francis said, “Today we need builders of peace, not makers of weapons; today we need builders of peace, not instigators of conflict; we need firefighters, not arsonists; we need advocates of reconciliation, not people who threaten destruction.”
The pope said, “Either we build the future together or there will be no future.”
Referring to the 2019 document, Human fraternity: For world peace and living together, the pope said, “It is easy to talk about fraternity, but the true measure of brotherhood is what we actually do in a concrete way to help, support, nurture and welcome my brothers and sisters in humanity.”
He said, “Every good by its very nature must be for everyone indiscriminately. If I only do good to those who think or believe as I do, then my good is hypocrisy, because good knows no discrimination or exclusion.”