Cuba: US Bishops express solidarity, call for peaceful dialogue
In response to widespread demonstrations in Cuba, Archbishop José H Gomez of Los Angeles, president of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), and Bishop David J Malloy of Rockford, chairman of the USCCB's Committee on International Justice and Peace, issued the following statement yesterday:
"As protests continue in Cuba and among the diaspora in the United States, we would like to express our solidarity, as well as that of our brother bishops in the United States, with our brothers in the Cuban episcopate, and with all men and women of goodwill in Cuba.
"As the Cuban bishops declared in their July 12 statement, 'A favourable solution will not be reached by impositions, nor by calling for confrontation, but through mutual listening, where common agreements are sought and concrete and tangible steps are taken that contribute, with the contribution of all Cubans without exception, to the building-up of the Fatherland.'
"In the same spirit as the Cuban bishops, we urge the United States to seek the peace that comes from reconciliation and concord between our countries. For decades, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, in conjunction with the Holy See and the Cuban bishops, has called for robust cultural and commercial engagement between the United States and Cuba as the means to assist the island in achieving greater prosperity and social transformation.
"We pray that Our Lady of Charity, our mother, watches over her children in Cuba, and that, together, our countries can grow in friendship in the interests of justice and peace."