Warning follows Pope
Francis's call for nuclear weapons to be banned.
By Common
Dreams for
A boy carries his dead brother on his shoulders
while he waits at a cemetery in Nagasaki in an image taken by U.S. Marine Joe O'Donnell in 1945. |
Speaking to press
aboard the papal plane, he responded to a question about the threat by saying,
“I think we are at the very edge."
"I am really
afraid of this. One accident is enough to precipitate things," he said.
Vatican officials had
distributed to the reporters a 1945 photo of a young boy carrying on his
shoulders his lifeless brother, who had been killed by the U.S. atomic bombing
of Nagasaki.
The pope wanted
to share it,
he said, "because an image like this can be more moving than a thousand
words."
The back of the image
had four words: "The fruit of war."
The pope's comments come a week after his "state of the world" speech, in which he welcomed the adoption last year of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, and said, "nuclear weapons must be banned."
The call followed
numerous appeals for disarmament he made last
year.
The pontiff is
currently embarking on
a visit to Chile and Peru. His first stop is Chile, where he will confront growing
unrest over the church's sexual abuse coverup.
Several churches have
been firebombed ahead
of the visit, and threats against the pope have been made, including one in a
pamphlet outside a torched church that read, "The next bombs will be in
your cassock."