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Pope Appeals Anew for World Peace
5/3/3
By VICTOR L. SIMPSON
MADRID, Spain (AP) - Pope John Paul II urged hundreds of thousands of
young people Saturday to be ``artisans of peace,'' telling a rally outside
Madrid that violence and terrorism are sowing hatred and death in the
world.
Pressing ahead with foreign travel despite his physical infirmities,
the pope made peace a theme of the opening day of his weekend visit to
Spain, clearly referring to his opposition to the U.S.-led war in Iraq.
``Dear young people, you well know how concerned I am about peace in
the world,'' he said in a clear voice. ``The spiral of violence, of terrorism
and war provokes, even in our days, hatred and death.''
Police estimated that up to 600,000 young people - well above the church's
prediction - filled the grounds of the Cuatro Vientos air base on the
outskirts of Madrid. They listened to peace songs and religious music
while waiting for the pope's arrival.
The government of Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar, which includes several
conservative Catholic ministers, supported the Iraq war, although the
vast majority of Spaniards were opposed.
John Paul said peace was a ``gift from heaven'' that must be achieved
through a ``profound interior conversion.'' He urged young people to be
``workers and artisans of peace,'' and rejected ``exaggerated nationalism,
racism and intolerance.''
``Respond to the blind violence and inhuman hate with the fascinating
power of love,'' John Paul said.
His remarks on peace were interrupted by applause and shouts of ``Viva
el Papa.'' One sign indicated Spain's enthusiasm for the aging pontiff:
``Juan Pablo: ole, ole, ole.''
The Vatican maintained that the war in Iraq was neither morally nor legally
justified. With the fall of Saddam Hussein, it has suggested that the
United Nations play a role in reconstruction efforts.
``John Paul II has spoken out for peace, and was not listened to, just
like many other people around the world who asked for peace and said no
to war,'' said Lupe Armas, a 30-year-old elementary school teacher from
the Canary Islands.
``We Christians love life. This pope is going to be remembered as the
pope of young people and the pope of peace.''
As often happens at such rallies, seeing so many young people seemed
to reinvigorate the pope. At one point he called himself ``a young man
of 83'' - which he turns on May 18. He also stood up during one prayer,
holding on to both arms of the chair for support.
Before attending the youth rally, John Paul met with Aznar and his wife.
They stuck to family issues and did not discuss Aznar's stance in the
Iraq war, papal spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls said.
The pope's 32-hour trip, his fifth visit to Spain and 99th foreign tour
of his papacy, was a test of his frail health. John Paul suffers from
the symptoms of Parkinson's - a progressive neurological disorder - that
include slurred speech and trembling hands. He also has knee and hip ailments
that make walking difficult.
The pontiff is seeking to reinvigorate Spanish Roman Catholics who have
strayed from their once-dominant church, and planned to proclaim five
new saints Sunday as part of his efforts to provide role models for the
faithful.
King Juan Carlos and Queen Sofia greeted him as he made his first visit
abroad in nine months. The king praised his work as ``most noble of causes.''
The pope used a lift to descend from the plane and a trolley to move
along a red carpet laid out for him. The queen walked beside him.
He appeared in good form after the 2 1/2 hour-flight from Rome. After
the crowd sang ``John Paul Two, the whole world loves you,'' he joked:
``At least in Spain they do.''
The Spanish church expected up to 1 million people to attend an open-air
Mass on Sunday, when the pope will proclaim two priests and three nuns
as saints. One of the priests was killed in 1936 during the opening days
of the Spanish Civil War and has been declared a martyr of the church.
The church claims 4,184 clergy were killed during the war by the government,
or Republican, side, which accused the church of backing fascist Gen.
Francisco Franco.
The Spanish trip is the start of an ambitious travel agenda that includes
visits to Croatia and Bosnia in June and possibly Mongolia in August.
John Paul had not traveled abroad since visiting his Polish homeland in
August.
That has led some to speculate that history's most traveled pontiff was
giving up foreign travel because of health problems.
``The pope's well,'' Navarro-Valls told reporters on the plane from Rome.
Navarro-Valls said he recently reminded John Paul that his nearly 25-year
papacy had become the fourth longest in the history of the church.
The pope shot back: ``Who are the other three?''
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