Pope Leo XIV appears at the window of his studio overlooking St. Peter's Square at the Vatican where Catholic faithful and pilgrims gathered for the traditional Sunday blessing at the end of the noon Angelus prayer, Sunday, March 15, 2026. (AP/Andrew Medichini)
Ishtartv.com – ncronline.org
March 15, 2026
Pope Leo XIV demanded a ceasefire
in the Middle East on Sunday in his strongest comments to date, directly
addressing the leaders who launched the war in Iran.
"On behalf of the Christians
of the Middle East and all women and men of good will, I appeal to those
responsible for this conflict," Leo said. "Cease fire so that avenues
for dialogue may be reopened. Violence can never lead to the justice,
stability, and peace that the people are waiting for."
Leo didn't cite the United States
or Israel by name in his comments at the end of his Sunday noon blessing. But
history's first U.S. pope mentioned the attacks that targeted a school, an
apparent reference to the missile strike on an elementary school in Iran in the
opening days of the war that killed over 165 people, many of them children.
U.S. officials have said outdated
intelligence likely led to the United States launching the strike, and that an
investigation is ongoing.
The Vatican has highlighted the
carnage of the Minab strike, running an aerial photo of the mass grave being
dug for the young victims on the March 6 front page of its official newspaper,
L'Osservatore Romano, under the headline "The Face of War."
Leo said he was close to the
families of those who had been killed in the attacks "which have hit
schools, hospitals and residential centers." He expressed particular
concern about the impact of the war in Lebanon, where aid groups are
warning of a humanitarian crisis.
The plight of Christian
communities in southern Lebanon is of particular concern to the Vatican, since
they have long represented a bulwark for Christians throughout the majority
Muslim region.
For the two weeks since the start
of the U.S.-Israeli war, the pope has limited his comments to muted appeals for
diplomacy and dialogue in an apparent attempt to avoid pitting himself as an
American political counterweight to President Donald Trump. He hasn't named the
U.S. or Israel publicly, but that is also in keeping with the Vatican's
tradition of diplomatic neutrality.
On Friday, for example, in a
speech to priests attending a Vatican class on the sacrament of confession, Leo
said the sacrament was a workshop that restores unity and peace.
"One might well ask: do
those Christians who bear grave responsibility in armed conflicts have the
humility and courage to make a serious examination of conscience and to go to
confession?" he said.
But while Leo has sought to keep
his messaging indirect and apolitical to avoid inflaming tensions, some of his
U.S. cardinals and the Vatican secretary of state have not.
Cardinal Robert McElroy, the
archbishop of Washington, said the war was morally unjustifiable. Chicago
Cardinal Blase Cupich said it was "sickening" how the White House was
splicing video game imagery into its social media messaging about the war.
The Vatican secretary of state,
Cardinal Pietro Parolin, rejected Washington's claim of a "preventive
war." But he said this week that the Holy See was regardless keeping
dialogue open.
"The Holy See speaks with
everyone, and when necessary we speak also with the Americans, with the
Israelis and show them what to us are the solutions," he said.
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