Pope Leo XIV has said that he is following the humanitarian crisis in Gaza with “great con-cern” while also renewing his “heartfelt appeal for a ceasefire.” Speaking on July 27 in St. Peter’s Square after giving his Angelus address, the Pope described how the civilian population in Gaza is being “crushed by hunger and continues to be exposed to viol-ence and death.”
His comments come shortly after the Israeli military began a system of pausing military ope-rations for limited periods – 10 hours a day – in three populated areas of the Gaza Strip in order to facilitate humanitarian assis-tance. On July 25, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humani-tarian Affairs (OCHA) said that the starvation crisis is deepening across Gaza.
Pope Leo in his address also renewed his “heartfelt appeal for a ceasefire” and called for the release of hostages and full respect of humanitarian laws. “Every human person has an intrinsic dignity conferred on him or her by God himself: I urge the parties in all conflicts to recognise it and to stop any action contrary to it,” said Pope Leo. “I urge you to negotiate a future of peace for all peoples and to reject anything that could jeopardise it.” He added: “I entrust to Mary, Queen of Peace, the innocent victims of conflicts and the rulers who have the power to put an end to them.”
Spanish bishops speak out after leaks of their meeting with Leo XIV
The executive committee of the Spanish Bishops’ Conference, (CEE, by its Spanish acronym) meeting in Madrid this week, issued an official statement regarding the leaks
