'The promotion and deepening of Jewish-Christian dialogue has been something close to my heart since I was a young boy,' Pope Francis said on Monday morning, 'because at school I had Jewish classmates; it is a dialogue made up of encounter and concrete gestures of fraternity.'
The Pope addressed his remarks to a delegation from B'nai B'rith International, a Jewish service organization committed to advocating for Jews around the world and promoting human rights.
Pope Francis highlighted the organization's commitment to humanitarian causes, saying 'people have a right to receive help and solidarity from the larger community,' including especially the right to hope.
At the same time, he warned of the threat to world peace 'by forms of particularism and nationalism, driven by selfish interests and unbridled greed,' which must be combatted by remembrance: 'remembrance of the past, remembrance of its wars, remembrance of the Shoah and of countless other atrocities.'
He contrasted remembrance to the 'lying and indifference' that accompanies all violence, illustrated in the story of Cain's murder of Abel.
Confronted with violence and indifference, the Pope said, 'the pages of Scripture show us the face of our brothers and sisters.' God's question to Cain, 'Where is your brother?' reminds us that 'we cannot be fully ourselves without watching out for our brothers and sisters.'
The 'strategy' of heaven, on the other hand, is 'to break the cycle of violence, the spiral hatred, and to start protecting one another.'
Pope Francis expressed his hope that members of B'nai B'rith would continue their work of protecting the most vulnerable and neglected, saying this is something Jews and Christians can do together: 'We can work for the poor, for peace, for justice, and for the protection of creation.'
'Let us strive ahead,' the Pope said in conclusion, 'on the basis of our shared spiritual values, to defend human dignity against all violence, and to seek peace.'