Subject: VISnews 111206   
   Organization: VIS   
   From: Vatican Information Service - Eng - txt    
      
   VATICAN INFORMATION SERVICE   
      
   TWENTY FIRST YEAR - N. 214   
   ENGLISH   
   TUESDAY, 6 DECEMBER 2011   
      
   SUMMARY:   
      
   - Benedict XVI to Light the World's Biggest Christmas Tree   
   - Cordial Relations between Christians and Jains   
   - Holy See Becomes a Member of the IOM-OIM   
   - Cardinal Bertone Awarded John Paul II Peace Prize   
   - Christmas Reminds Us of Our Duty to Help Children in Need   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
   BENEDICT XVI TO LIGHT THE WORLD'S BIGGEST CHRISTMAS TREE   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 6 DEC 2011 (VIS) - Tomorrow 7 December, Benedict XVI will   
   switch on the lights of the biggest Christmas tree in the world, a "sign of   
   universal peace and brotherhood among peoples" located in the Italian town   
   of Gubbio.   
      
    The "tree", which is made up of an arrangement of coloured lights on the   
   side of Mount Ingino, has been erected by volunteers every year since 1981.   
   Its base is approximately 450 metres wide and it extends for 750 metres up   
   the hillside from the city's mediaeval walls to the basilica of St. Ubaldo.   
   The silhouette of the tree is marked with 300 green lights, and it covers a   
   surface area of some 130,000 square meters illuminated with 400   
   multicoloured lights. At the top is a comet made up of 250 lights covering   
   an area of 1,000 square metres.   
      
    The tree is illuminated every year on 7 December, during a traditional   
   celebration attended by representatives of the world of culture, show   
   business and politics. Benedict XVI will activate the illumination from his   
   apartments in the Vatican Apostolic Palace. He will touch the screen of a   
   Sony "Tablet" with an "Android" operating system which, via the Internet,   
   will transmit the command to switch on the electric current to the tree.   
      
    The Holy Father will be seen in Gubbio thanks to a television linkup   
   organised by the Vatican Television Centre. The event, which will be   
   televised both nationally and internationally, is due to begin at 5.30 p.m.   
   and the illumination of the tree will take place at 6.30 p.m.   
   .../ VIS   
   20111206 (270)   
      
   CORDIAL RELATIONS BETWEEN CHRISTIANS AND JAINS   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 6 DEC 2011 (VIS) - The Pontifical Council for Inter-religious   
   Dialogue today met with a delegation from the Jain religion. The meeting was   
   presided by Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, president of the pontifical council,   
   and by Nemu Chandaria, deputy chairman of the board of directors of the   
   Institute of Jainology.   
      
    "This meeting was the second one after that of 14 February 1995. Moreover,   
   there have been contacts between the Jain community and the Pontifical   
   Council for Inter-religious Dialogue since 1986", reads an English language   
   communique published today. During the meeting, "held in an atmosphere of   
   mutual respect and friendship, members of the delegations expressed   
   satisfaction over the cordial relations and cooperation that exist between   
   both the Christian and Jain communities in countries where they live their   
   day-to-day lives in proximity.   
      
    "While expressing the desire to expand mutual concrete collaboration", the   
   communique adds, "the delegations agreed that it must be ever more   
   strengthened at the local levels to better contribute towards the common   
   good of the entire society. In particular, they stressed the importance of   
   educating the younger generations to be aware of their own traditions, and   
   to know and better respect those of others.   
      
    "With an aim to find concrete areas of convergence as the basis of   
   collaboration, they discussed the Jain principle of 'non-violence' (Ahimsa)   
   and that of Christian 'charity'. They found some common elements that can   
   motivate and sustain Jain-Catholic collaboration, recognising the   
   differences between the two principles.   
      
    "They also recognised that these elements, on a practical level, call upon   
   the followers of both the traditions to promote mutual respect,   
   truthfulness, honesty, freedom, peace, social harmony and to commit   
   themselves to eliminate every form of violence against human beings, in   
   particular injustice, poverty and exploitation of natural resources".   
   CON-DIR/ VIS   
   20111206 (300)   
      
   HOLY SEE BECOMES A MEMBER OF THE IOM-OIM   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 6 DEC 2011 (VIS) - The Holy See yesterday became a member   
   State of the International Organisation for Migration (IOM-OIM). The Holy   
   See's request was accepted by the Geneva-based institution in the course of   
   its recent plenary.   
      
    The OIM was established in 1951 and bases its activities on the principle   
   that humane and orderly migration benefits both migrants and society. It has   
   130 member States and around 100 observers, including States and   
   non-governmental organisations.   
      
    Speaking on Vatican Radio yesterday, Archbishop Silvano M. Tomasi C.S.,   
   Holy See permanent observer to the United Nations at Geneva, noted that, "as   
   we are witnessing a continuous increase in the number of migrants and   
   refugees in the world, it is important for us to be present and to   
   participate in the efforts of the international community with the specific   
   contribution of the Holy See: an ethical voice which gives a fresh   
   interpretation to these new situations. ... What must prevail is not so much   
   politics, as the need to meet the human needs of these people, as they   
   migrate through the various regions of the world".   
      
    Archbishop Tomasi recalled how the Church has always been in the frontline   
   in helping migrants, through a broad network of Catholic organisations. For   
   this reason, "collaboration with the structures of the international   
   community is a logical operative step helping us to make our service even   
   more effective", he said. Ecclesiastical structures "serve all people   
   generously, irrespective of their religious faith, colour or legal status.   
   What counts is human beings and their dignity, and this is often at risk in   
   the situations of marginality which arise as people move from one country to   
   another seeking work or new forms of survival". The Church's ethical   
   contribution will, then, focus on "the defence of human beings and their   
   dignity".   
   RV/ VIS   
   20111206 (310)   
      
   CARDINAL BERTONE AWARDED JOHN PAUL II PEACE PRIZE   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 6 DEC 2011 (VIS) - Cardinal Secretary of State Tarcisio   
   Bertone S.D.B. has been awarded the John Paul II peace prize, which is   
   granted by the cultural association "Anassilaos", based in the Italian city   
   of Reggio Calabria.   
      
    In his acceptance speech, the cardinal recalled how John Paul II's   
   Encyclical "Redemptoris hominis" identified "respect for human rights as the   
   best way to ensure peace among peoples". Benedict XVI likewise, "by   
   emphasising the universal values shared by religious, cultures and schools   
   of thought", has "identified the foundation of peace in an absolute value:   
   truth".   
      
    For this reason, Cardinal Bertone continued, "the current Pontiff never   
   ceases to remind Christians of the centrality of Jesus Who, breaking down   
   the walls that separate us, shows us the real possibility ... of commitment   
   to universal peace".   
      
    The secretary of State also dwelt on John Paul II's "concrete gestures for   
   peace", such as his concern for human rights, his trips to conflict zones,   
   his initiatives in the international community and the inter-religious   
   meetings he promoted in Assisi.   
   SS/ VIS   
   20111206 (180)   
      
   CHRISTMAS REMINDS US OF OUR DUTY TO HELP CHILDREN IN NEED   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 6 DEC 2011 (VIS) - Given below is an English-language   
   translation made by Vatican Radio of a comment by Holy See Press Office   
   Director Fr. Federico Lombardi S.J. for "Octavia Dies", a weekly programme   
   produced by the Vatican Television Centre.   
      
    "'What will become of this child?' The Gospel relates that this is the   
   question on the lips of friends and relatives at the birth of the young   
   John, who will be known as the Baptist. It is also the question that we all   
   ask when we contemplate the wonder of a child coming into the world. And in   
   that question there is hope, but also a certain concern.   
      
    "It is the question we asked at the Pope's meeting with children two weeks   
   ago - certainly the most wonderful and moving moment of the entire visit to   
   Benin - with the elderly Pontiff surrounded by delightful little children   
   dancing and holding his hand. The synodal document brought to Africa by the   
   Pope enumerates, in a striking passage, some of the 'intolerable treatment   
   inflicted on so many children'; 'children killed before birth, unwanted   
   children, orphans, albinos, street children, abandoned children, child   
   soldiers, child prisoners, children forced into labour, children ill-treated   
   on account of physical or mental handicap, children said to be witches or   
   warlocks, children sold as sex slaves, traumatised children without any   
   future prospects'. The Church knows she must work for all of these children.   
   Of the more than 125,000 health institutions and charities headed by the   
   Church in the world, over 20,000 are specifically dedicated to children;   
   many others are dedicated to education, or to the rescue of children from a   
   life on the streets or other difficulties.   
      
    "On the occasion of a recent international conference on the protection of   
   children from sexual abuse, the intervention of Msgr. Scicluna - with its   
   'Decalogue' of clear and firm principles on how to protect children - was   
   well received. And it is fair to remember the valuable and generous efforts   
   of so many women, religious and lay, in this field. This is certainly one of   
   the most wonderful - and beneficial - ways in which women serve humanity and   
   the Church. In this time of Advent and Christmas, which is especially the   
   Christ child, these are spontaneous reflections: we have every reason to   
   continue to be in the frontline on these frontiers".   
   CTV/ VIS   
   20111206 (410)   
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