"Yesterday's attack on a synagogue in Halle comes as a triple shock to the conscience, and must be condemned with all the vigour we can muster. "Firstly, it reflects the deeply disturbing rise of anti-semitism and extremist nationalism to levels unprecedented in recent European history, moreover in a country responsible for the horrors of the Holocaust. "Secondly the attack is all the more shocking in that it was directed at a place of worship, and thirdly - compounding the evil - it was carried out on Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the year. "We grieve for the victims of the attack and pray for the survivors. We also pray for our Jewish sisters and brothers everywhere, for whom centuries of persecution make any such attack anywhere in the world profoundly worrying and distressing."
Thursday, 10 October 2019
Archbishop Thabo Makgoba condemns anti-semitic attack on German synagogue
Archbishop Thabo today condemned the attack on a synagogue in Halle, which took place on Yom Kippur:
Thursday, 3 October 2019
An address to Taize pilgrims in Cape Town
(Photo: Ricky Kleinhans) |
Taizé Pilgrimage
28
September 2019
Good evening. Bonsoir.
Molweni. Guten
abend. Dumelang. Boa noite. Goeienaand.
Sanbonani. Buena
noches. Habari za jioni.
A very warm spring welcome to
all of you! Palaeontologists tell us that all human life as we know
it started here in the southernmost part of Africa, so welcome home.
You are all Africans!
Thank
you, young people from across South Africa, from the rest of Africa
and from other parts of the world, for coming on this Pilgrimage of
Trust and for gracing us with your presence. I am sorry that I could
not join you earlier – I have just returned from the three-yearly
meeting of my church's legislative body. But you were in good hands.
Thank you to the host families and hosting congregations. Thank you for making us proud with your gifts and skills of hospitality! Julle skrik vir niks! Baie dankie. Enkosi kakhulu.
Thank you to the members of the Taize community – to Brother Alois, Brother Luc and your whole team (to Brothers Norbert, Claudio – I hear you have an angelic voice – to Paolo, Herve, Parfait, Kombo and all the others). Thank you all for your hard work over these last two years.
Thank you to the host families and hosting congregations. Thank you for making us proud with your gifts and skills of hospitality! Julle skrik vir niks! Baie dankie. Enkosi kakhulu.
Thank you to the members of the Taize community – to Brother Alois, Brother Luc and your whole team (to Brothers Norbert, Claudio – I hear you have an angelic voice – to Paolo, Herve, Parfait, Kombo and all the others). Thank you all for your hard work over these last two years.
Thank
you for what your community represents and for reminding us that we
draw our strength from God's first language, which is silence. I know
that these two years during which you have planned this Pilgrimage
have not been an easy time for you. But you have laboured on despite
the challenges. You therefore deserve a standing ovation.
There is a young man here from the Moravian Church who has given an enormous amount of his time to help organise this. His name is David Daniels. The Moravian Church provided the first Christian missionaries for South Africa and you are living up to that legacy beautifully. Thank you, David, for your hard work.
There is a young man here from the Moravian Church who has given an enormous amount of his time to help organise this. His name is David Daniels. The Moravian Church provided the first Christian missionaries for South Africa and you are living up to that legacy beautifully. Thank you, David, for your hard work.
We also thank those such as
Baruti Wilma Jakobsen and Chris Ahrends from South Africa and Mona
Okelo from Kenya for their hard work in helping and encouraging the
brothers in their work. Asante
sana. Thank you
very much.
Thank you too to my twin brother, Archbishop Stephen, for your constant support – ke leboha haholo, Archbishop Stephen – and also a very special thanks to my brother Dr Gustav Claasen of the NG Kerk for your support and wonderful contributions – baie dankie, my broer in Christus. Thank you also to all the other church leaders. And a huge thank you to another very special brother in Christ from the Anglican Communion, Archbishop Sentamu, the Archbishop of York, who is very close to the Taize community and who brought a group of young people from the UK to this pilgrimage.
Thank you too to my twin brother, Archbishop Stephen, for your constant support – ke leboha haholo, Archbishop Stephen – and also a very special thanks to my brother Dr Gustav Claasen of the NG Kerk for your support and wonderful contributions – baie dankie, my broer in Christus. Thank you also to all the other church leaders. And a huge thank you to another very special brother in Christ from the Anglican Communion, Archbishop Sentamu, the Archbishop of York, who is very close to the Taize community and who brought a group of young people from the UK to this pilgrimage.
Before
I say anything more, please allow me to convey through you, our
sisters and brothers from other parts of our continent, my profound
apologies, and I am sure the profound apologies of other South
Africans here, for the violence inflicted in recent times on migrants
and refugees from other parts of Africa. We are appalled and ashamed
by the actions of those of our compatriots who attacked your
compatriots. All of us, including our government, need to adopt new
attitudes and new laws so we can truly live the spirit of ubuntu. The
church affirms that we are Catholic, in the best and widest sense of
that word. We embrace all as Christ embraces all. Let us continue to
aspire to that.
I
believe that this pilgrimage has begun to re-energize us from below,
so helping us South Africans to reimagine the ecumenical movement at
the grassroots. I hope that the Church Unity Commission, the South
African Council of Churches, the South African Christian Leadership
Initiative and other ecumenical structures have taken note of what
happened here this week. You, the young people have shown us what
unity in Christ really means.
Unity in Christ cannot happen instantly, but is a movement of the Spirit. So we must ask:
Unity in Christ cannot happen instantly, but is a movement of the Spirit. So we must ask:
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Will the seeds that have been planted here fall on fertile ground and grow? Or will they fall on hardened hearts?
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If we can grow them, are we ready to nurture the young plants? Or will our disunity be like weeds that strangle what has been started?
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And is the church on this continent ready to be the answer to the prayer of Jesus in John 17: “Father, may they be one, even as you and I are one”?
The
work of building unity is often approached with anxiety, as an issue
of complexity. But what would happen if we rather approached it with
simplicity, building friendships and trust, just listening to each
other's stories? Can we imagine what might happen?
Please, young people, don't wait for the rest of us. Show us the way as you have always done. Show us what unity in action means. Show us what hope means. Show us what just economic relationships mean. Show us the way on climate justice. Show us that there is no Planet B. Show us that the poor will suffer most when water levels rise. Show us that serving Mammon will only lead to our destruction and that we should speak out on behalf of the trees and the birds and the animals. Ecological destruction is all around us and if we are not careful, we will soon not have enough fish and clean air and clean water. Help us to defend and preserve this.
Young Christian men: you have a special responsibility to stop the violence against women. When God sees the violence being perpetrated on women and girls, then God weeps over God's creation. God has created us all equal: now live that out in your everyday lives. We must, through our lives and our love, make God smile again.
Please, young people, don't wait for the rest of us. Show us the way as you have always done. Show us what unity in action means. Show us what hope means. Show us what just economic relationships mean. Show us the way on climate justice. Show us that there is no Planet B. Show us that the poor will suffer most when water levels rise. Show us that serving Mammon will only lead to our destruction and that we should speak out on behalf of the trees and the birds and the animals. Ecological destruction is all around us and if we are not careful, we will soon not have enough fish and clean air and clean water. Help us to defend and preserve this.
Young Christian men: you have a special responsibility to stop the violence against women. When God sees the violence being perpetrated on women and girls, then God weeps over God's creation. God has created us all equal: now live that out in your everyday lives. We must, through our lives and our love, make God smile again.
Christian
young people: you have a special responsibility to build and
strengthen community for other young people. Many of our young people
are traumatised and wholesome Christian community is needed for their
healing. If we don’t do this in our schools, in our communities and
on our campuses, we leave a vacuum which those with evil intentions
will fill. We need to strengthen our youth ministries and young
people must lead the way.
Thank you, Lord Jesus Christ, for the hope of the Resurrection! This is a hope that is not here today and gone tomorrow, but it is a permanent hope, which we will celebrate tomorrow. Just when we fear that evil is overwhelming us, God gives us new hope and new joy. Just recently, the Ndlovu youth choir from Limpopo raised our spirits by inspiring America with their story of hope and joy. They did so not representing only South Africa, but the whole of Africa.
Thank you, Lord Jesus Christ, for the hope of the Resurrection! This is a hope that is not here today and gone tomorrow, but it is a permanent hope, which we will celebrate tomorrow. Just when we fear that evil is overwhelming us, God gives us new hope and new joy. Just recently, the Ndlovu youth choir from Limpopo raised our spirits by inspiring America with their story of hope and joy. They did so not representing only South Africa, but the whole of Africa.
We
all can and must live that same hope and joy every day. We light
candles where we are every day. Don't stop doing that even if you are
not acknowledged. God sees your action and God rejoices. Be assured
that such small acts will multiply and grow.
Please take our love back to your homes, your families, your friends and your congregations. Please pray for South Africa as we battle the forces that corrupt the vision of Nelson Mandela.
Please take our love back to your homes, your families, your friends and your congregations. Please pray for South Africa as we battle the forces that corrupt the vision of Nelson Mandela.
When
he was inaugurated as our president, he declared that “never, never
and never again shall it be that this beautiful land will again
experience the oppression of one by another.” Tonight, let us adapt
and repeat those words as our declaration of commitment:
Never, never and never again must our disunity be a stumbling block for others;
Never, never and never again should we suffer corruption and the abuse of power in Africa or elsewhere;
Never, never and never again
must one person think of him or herself as more important than
others;
Never, never and never again
must young people beg us adults to care for creation.
Always
live the joy and the hope that Christ has planted in your hearts
through the Resurrection. And let me conclude with a prayer we
adapted from Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu:
God bless our world
Protect our children
Transform our leaders
Heal our communities
Restore our dignity
And give us peace
For Jesus Christ's sake,
Amen.
God loves you and so do I. God
bless you, and travel safely when you return home.
Archbishop Thabo Makgoba