On the first full day of his four-nation trip to the Asia-Pacific, the pontiff zeroed in on the role all faiths can play on flashpoint security issues.
“In order to foster a peaceful and fruitful harmony that ensures peace… the Church desires to strengthen interreligious dialogue,” the pope said in a speech after meeting President Joko Widodo.
“(Extremists) through the distortion of religion attempt to impose their views by using deception and violence”.
The pope also said self-interest was preventing the religious unity he had called for, and was driving wars around the world, without referring to a specific one.
“In various regions we see the emergence of violent conflicts, which are often the result… of the intolerant desire to let one’s own interests, one’s own position, or one’s historical narrative prevail at all costs,” he said.
Widodo echoed the pope’s remarks.
“Freedom and tolerance is what Indonesia, together with the Vatican want, to spread… in the midst of an increasingly turbulent world,” he said.
Indonesia, which is the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation, has long struggled with Islamist militancy.
Bombings on the resort island of Bali in 2002 that killed 202 people were the deadliest in Indonesian history and led to a crackdown on militancy. But they are one of six officially recognised religions or denominations in the nominally secular nation, including Protestantism, Buddhism, Hinduism and Confucianism.
The trip to Indonesia is the third ever by a pope and the first since John Paul II in 1989.
Fragile health: The pope’s fragile health is set to be tested on the trip, which will also take in Papua New Guinea, East Timor and Singapore.
He had not travelled abroad since visiting Marseille in France in September last year.
Accompanying him to Indonesia are his personal doctor and two nurses, but Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni said that was standard procedure.
The pontiff appeared refreshed when he arrived in Jakarta from Rome on Tuesday, and again when he met Widodo on Wednesday morning in the first major set piece of his tour.
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