Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 29 – Yury Sanko,
the official representative of the Conference of Catholic Bishops in Belarus,
says that Roman Catholics, clergy and laity, have been “somewhat braver” than
Orthodox believers in taking part in the demonstrations against Alyaksandr
Lukashenka’s dictatorship and falsification of the elections.
“We say that we do not get involved
in politics,” Sanko tells the Meduza news agency; “but Jesus says: ‘Go and
evangelize.’ If a parishioner comes and says her husband cannot come to church
because he has been beaten, I as pastor cannot ignore this, and together with them,
I take part in peaceful actions” (meduza.io/feature/2020/08/29/my-nemnogo-bolee-smelye-chem-pravoslavnaya-tserkov).
In no country is the church
responsible for changing the political authorities, he says. “This is what the
people do. But the church will never leave the people and always will be for
truth. Our task is not to make a revolution but to pray and bear the burdens of
the world,” the Roman Catholic priest says.
Lukashenka’s attacks on the church
and his suggestion that religious must stay out of politics has infuriated many
Catholics in Belarus and not only Catholics.
The church doesn’t want to get involved in politics, but it must never
stand aside when injustice and violence is being inflicted on people.
The church and its leaders demand an
end to violence, but it is up to citizens to advance br4eoader demands. “We are
only against force. We even cannot give an assessment as a church whether the
elections were falsified or not. We only give an assessment of the subsequent
actions of the powers that be.
Sanko says that “we want that
everyone calm down and begin to speak with one another and that a dialogue will
begin between the existing powers and the people. Without dialogue it is
difficult to speak about changes” because more than one side much be heard for
progress to be possible.
The priest says that the position he
and his congregation have adopted is the position of the Catholic church as a
whole. And he says that his contacts
with Orthodox priests and the representatives of other confessions shows that
they have similar views, although the Catholics may be somewhat more active and
visible.
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