To the Venerable Brethren,
the Patriarchs, Primates, Archbishops, Bishops, and other Ordinaries in Peace and
Communion with the Apostolic See.
1. Among the multiple preoccupations which beset us in this period of time, so full of
decisive consequences for the life of the great human family, and which make Us feel so
seriously the burden of the Supreme Pontificate, Palestine occupies a particular place on
account of the war which harasses it. In all truth We can tell you, Venerable Brethren,
that neither joyous nor sad events diminish the sorrow which is kept alive in Our soul by
the thought that, in the land in which our Lord Jesus Christ shed His blood to bring
redemption and salvation to all mankind, the blood of man continues to flow; and that
beneath the skies which echoed on that fateful night with the Gospel tidings of peace, men
continue to fight and to increase the distress of the unfortunate and the fear of the
terrorized, while thousands of refugees, homeless and driven, wander from their fatherland
in search of shelter and food.
2. To make Our sorrow more grievous, there is not only the news which continually
reaches Us of the destruction and damage of sacred buildings and charitable places built
around the Holy Places, but there is also the fear that this inspires in Us for the fate
of the Holy Places themselves scattered throughout Palestine, and more especially within
the Holy City.
3. We must assure you, Venerable Brethren, that confronted with the spectacle of many
evils and the forecast of worse to come, We have not withdrawn into Our sorrow, but have
done all in Our power to provide a remedy. Even before the armed conflict began, speaking
to a delegation of Arab dignitaries who came to pay homage to Us, We manifested our
lifelong solicitude for peace in Palestine, and, condemning any recourse to violence, We
declared that peace could only be realized in truth and justice; that is to say by
respecting the rights of acquired traditions, especially in the religious field, as well
as by the strict fulfillment of the duties and obligations of each group of inhabitants.
4. When war was declared, without abandoning the attitude of impartiality which was
imposed by Our apostolic duty, which places Us above the conflicts which agitate human
society, We did not fail to do Our utmost, in the measure which depended upon Us, and
according to the possibilities offered to Us, for the triumph of justice and peace in
Palestine and for the respect and protection of the Holy Places.
5. At the same time, although numerous and urgent appeals are received daily by the
Holy See, We have sought as much as possible to come to the aid of the unhappy victims of
the war, sending the means at Our disposal to Our representatives in Palestine, the
Lebanon, and Egypt for this purpose, and encouraging the formation among Catholics in
various countries of undertakings organized for the same purpose.
6. Convinced, however, of the insufficiency of human means for the adequate solution of
a question the complexity of which no one can fail to see, We have, above all, had
constant recourse to prayer, and in Our recent Encyclical Letter, Auspicia Quaedam,
We invited you, Venerable Brethren, to pray, and to have the faithful entrusted to your
pastoral care pray, in order that, under the auspices of the Blessed Virgin, matters may
be settled in justice and peace, and concord may be happily restored in Palestine. As We
said on June 2nd to members of the Sacred College of Cardinals, informing them of Our
anxieties for Palestine, We do not believe that the Christian world could contemplate
indifferently, or in sterile indignation, the spectacle of the sacred land (which everyone
approached with the deepest respect to kiss with most ardent love) trampled over again by
troops and stricken by aerial bombardments. We do not believe that it could permit the
devastation of the Holy Places, the destruction of the great sepulcher of Christ.
7. We are full of faith that the fervent prayers raised to Almighty and Merciful God by
the Christians throughout the world who, together with the aspirations of so many noble
hearts, are ardently inspired by truth and good, will render less arduous to the men who
hold the destinies of peoples the task of making justice and peace in Palestine a
beneficial reality and of creating, with the efficient co-operation of all those
interested, an order that may guarantee security of existence and, at the same time, the
moral and physical conditions of life conducive to spiritual and material well-being, to
each of the parties at present in conflict.
8. We are full of faith that these prayers and these hopes, an indication of the value
that the Holy Places have for so great a part of the human family, will strengthen the
conviction in the high quarters in which the problems of peace are discussed that it would
be opportune to give Jerusalem and its outskirts, where are found so many and such
precious memories of the life and death of the Savior, an international character which,
in the present circumstances, seems to offer a better guarantee for the protection of the
sanctuaries. It would also be necessary to assure, with international guarantees, both
free access to Holy Places scattered throughout Palestine, and the freedom of worship and
the respect of customs and religious traditions.
9. And God grant that the day may soon dawn when Christians may resume their
pilgrimages to the Holy Places, there to see more clearly revealed, as they contemplate
the evidence of the love of Jesus Christ, Who gave His life for His brethren, how men and
nations may live harmoniously together, at peace with their world and themselves.
10. With reliance, then, on this hope, as a pledge of heavenly favors and in token of
our affection, gladly in the Lord do we impart to you, Venerable Brethren, and to your
flocks, as to all who will take this appeal of Ours to heart, Our Apostolic Benediction.
Given at Castel Gandolfo, near Rome, on the 24th day of October, in the year 1948, the
tenth of Our Pontificate.
Sources: Eternal Word Television Network