IN response to the current turmoil in the Middle East, a forum was launched by UST Simbahayan Community Development Office (UST Simbahayan), in cooperation with the UST Center for Campus Ministry (UST-CCM), titled “A Peace Forum on Understanding the Plight of Christians in Iraq,” held on September 4 at the Tanghalang Teresita Quirino, Benavides Bldg, UST Graduate School.
The speakers were Mr. Rasti Delizo, spokesman of SANLAKAS party-list, and Fr. Emilio Platti, O.P., professor emeritus at Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (KU Leuven), and writer of the book called “Islam, Friend or Foe?,” which relates Islam to Christianity and modernity.
Delizo, who grew up in Iran, witnessed the conflict in West Asia. He discussed the current state of Iraq, going back to its recent history of wars under the dictatorship of Saddam Hussein. He traced the roots of the Islamic struggle back to the occupation of Zionist Israelis in the Palestinian homeland and to US foreign policy.
“I’m not against US and Israel. I’m against state policies that aggravate military aggression,” he said.
Platti discussed the plight of Christians, wherein they are able to live together in harmony with people of different faiths. He also emphasized the difference between Shi’a and Sunni Muslims, with Sunni being the affiliation of the terrorist group Islamic State (IS), which is radically bent on discriminating non-Islamists.
He also strongly condemned the radical measures done by IS, calling their ideology as violent, exclusive, and extremist. “Humans have no right to set way of life, only God,” Platti said. “It’s so extreme that it’s no longer Islam anymore. This is my conviction,” he firmly stated.
Delizo challenged UST students to be involved and do the seemingly impossible. “When I was a student in San Beda, they said ‘You cannot oust Marcos!’… ‘Erap is too popular,’” he said.
And taking action needs to be done sooner than later. “ASG (Abu Sayyaf Group) or BIFF (Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters) might be knocking at your chapel’s door, of course we don’t want that,” Delizo stresses. “Genuine change with peaceful agenda brings all common good for all humanity.”
Reactors to the lecturers were Charlene Versoza, UST Pax Romana President; Dr. Lillian Sison, Prof. Evelyn Songco, Assistant to the Rector for Student Affairs, UST Office for Student Affairs, and Fr. Hermel Palma, O. P., Regent, Institute of Information and Computer Studies. They unanimously share the speakers’ disdain on religious terrorism.
Most Rev. Socrates B. Villegas, D. D., Archbishop of Lingayen-Dagupan and president of the Catholic Bishop’s Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) though physically absent, expressed his oneness with the spirit of the forum through a video message, saying the Christian response should firstly be in prayer, then in examination of self.
He also expressed his stand on the issue, saying that the situation in Iraq is far from the will of God since religion is being used to promote hatred, “The pursuit of peace is the pursuit of the will of God,” he stated.
Richard Pazcoguin, assistant director of UST-CCM and moderator of the forum’s discussion, announced the “Tulong Tomasino para sa Iraq” fund drive which serves as an avenue for Thomasian involvement. Donations will be collected on September 8, 2014, during the 5:15np.m., “Mass of the Solidarity with the Persecuted Christians in Iraq” at the Santisimo Rosario Church (UST Chapel), which also celebrates the Feast of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary. (By J.G.T)
Photo by Juan Miguel Santos