Pope Francis was hospitalized for a month with pneumonia, calling Italy’s leading newspaper on Tuesday to finish the war, and urged the media to “serve the truth”.
Emphasizing the need for journalism responsible at the time of struggle, the 88 -year -old Catholic leader pushed to hold a quiet head, given that the media’s duty was to “feel the full importance of words”.
In a letter on 14 March, Francis wrote in a letter, “They are never words: they are facts that create human environment. They can connect or divide, serve or use truth.”
“We should strip the words, remove the mind and dispropose the earth. For a sense of complexity, for peace, there is a great need for reflection.”
“While war destroys communities and environment only, without offering solutions to conflicts, diplomacy and international organizations require new life and reliability,” he wrote.
The letter was written in response to a note sent to the Pope by the courier director Luciano Fontana, which has been in Jameli Hospital in Rome since 14 February.
Francis, who regularly asks to end the struggles around the world, said that “in this moment of the disease … the war looks even more absurd”.
“Human fragility, in fact, we have the power to make more clear about what lives and what passes, what makes us alive and what kills,” he wrote.
Peace, Argentina Pontif said, “commitment, work, silence, words are required”.
Doctors have stated that Francis’ condition is now stable, after a significant period, the breathing crisis was marked by which raised apprehension for her life. But the Vatican has not indicated when he may leave the hospital.
On Monday evening, Vatican said that he was now spending less time in breathing on his own.
For at least two weeks, Francis collides with an oxygen mask in turn with an oxygen mask in the night at night, which saves high-flow oxygen-high-flowing oxygen during the day.
He is now turning into low flow for the first time during the day, it said.
In the hospital, Francis has worked on being competent, resting with prayer.
Despite their progress, speculation continues that he may eventually step down due to his fragility, walk on the footsteps of his predecessor, Benedict XVI.
On Monday, the Vatican Secretary State Pietro Parolin told reporters that he had mentioned the improvement in Francis’ health during a visit last week.
But when asked if the conversation has turned into the resignation of the Pope, he replied: “No, no, not at all.”
(This story is not edited by NDTV employees and auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)