 |
|
"That
a people in distress prays to God can be understood, but for the
U.S. that shocks me," said the reverend cardinal
|
PARIS,
April 14 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Paris archbishop
Jean-Marie Lustiger was shocked by U.S. President George W. Bush's
calls for prayers for a U.S. victory in the Iraq war.
"That
a people in distress prays to God can be understood," the
cardinal said on television late Sunday, April 13. "But for the
United States, that shocks me," Agence France-Presse (AFP)
reported Monday, April 14.
Lustiger
went on: "Bush is reacting like everyone reacts in these cases.
He's getting people to pray for United States victory. I don't agree
with this. The principle of this prayer is 'who's not for us is
against us'," while "the principle of prayer for peace is to
break the infernal circle of hatred."
The
World Council of Churches (WCC) branded
February 21 as immoral and unwise the U.S.-British war on Iraq
and praised U.S. and British churches for standing up to politicians
in their countries.
The
WCC executive committee said in a statement that it "strongly
deplores the fact that the most powerful nations of this world again
regard war as an acceptable instrument of foreign policy."
Pope
John Paul II also censured Bush, asserting that he assumed
a "grave responsibility before God" in deciding that
diplomacy to avoid conflict with Iraq had been exhausted, Agence
France-Presse (AFP) reported.
"Whoever
decides that all peaceful means under international law have been
exhausted is assuming a grave responsibility before God, his
conscience and before history," Vatican spokesman Joaquin
Navarro-Valls said.
Bush
Cancels Visit To Anti-War Canada
In
the meantime, U.S. President George W. Bush has postponed his
scheduled May 5 visit to Ottawa, the office of Canadian
Prime Minister Jean Chretien said Sunday.
A
report in the National Post newspaper Saturday, April 12, said
Bush had postponed the trip because of Canada's anti-war stance and
fierce anti-U.S. criticism from Canadian government officials.
On
Saturday, Canadian officials had said they would not be surprised if
he (Bush) cancelled the trip given the war situation.
The
trip’s postponement, however, will likely spark more debate here
among Chretien's critics who say Canada's refusal to participate in
the U.S.-led war against Iraq is damaging the close, bilateral
relationship.
Canada
refused to support the war in Iraq without United Nations approval.
U.S.
Ambassador Paul Cellucci in a speech here criticized Ottawa for not
fully supporting the United States as well as allowing anti-U.S.
comments from within the Chretien government.
‘A
Moron’
Recently,
antiwar Liberal MP Carolyn Parrish called Americans
"bastards" and Natural Resources Minister Herb Dhaliwal said
Bush had failed as a statesman. And in November, a Chretien
spokeswoman had to resign after calling Bush a "moron."
Cellucci's
remarks triggered a fiery debate in Parliament, with conservative
opposition members saying Canada had abandoned its “closest
friend” and ally in a time of need.
Chretien
had himself cancelled a trip to Washington to receive an award in late
March, but his spokesman Jim Munson on Saturday downplayed reports of
seriously strained relations.