Pubdate: Sun, 07 Aug 2016
Source: Manila Times (Philippines)
Copyright: 2016, The Manila Times
Contact:  http://www.manilatimes.net/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/921

KILLINGS TOO MUCH TO SWALLOW - BISHOP

LINGAYEN-DAGUPAN Archbishop Socrates Villegas said he could no longer 
stomach the killings of suspected drug users and peddlers.

"I do not have to be a bishop to say this. I do not have to be a 
Catholic to be disturbed by the killings that jar us every time we 
hear or watch or read the news," the prelate said in a statement 
entitled, "Let the Humanity in Us Speak."

The statement will be read on Sunday in place of the homily during 
masses in all the churches and oratories in the Archdiocese of 
Lingayen, Dagupan.

"My humanity is in grief. I am in utter disbelief... This is too much 
to swallow," Villegas said.

He noted that it pains him to see a fellow human hurt.

"A portion of my humanity dies when a fellow human dies. Who can say 
the killed is innocent or guilty? Both the guilty and the innocent 
are humans," the bishop stressed.

He lamented the sight of a parent and a child grieving over loved 
ones killed on the sidewalk "or thrown in grassy areas hogtied or 
masked with tape."

The prelate said he fears that the country will turn into a "killing addiction.

Villegas emphasized that the youth need a safe and wholesome 
environment without the menace of drugs.

"We share the dream... It is a great dream for young humanity," he said.

However, he noted that the "little voice of humanity in us" that is 
disturbed by the killings is "drowned out by the louder voice of 
revenge or silenced by the sweet privileges of political clout."

"I pray that humanity be regained so that the killers may listen to 
the voice of conscience -that conscience that has been dulled by the 
sight of too much blood everywhere," he said.

Villegas believes that reason will prevail and humanity will win in the end.

"I believe. I refuse to be forsaken in this belief. I believe in 
humanity," he said.

- -PNA
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom