Bishop Crispian's crest

The Diocese of Portsmouth covers Hampshire, the Isle of Wight,
the Channel Isles and parts of Berkshire, Dorset and Oxfordshire
 

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The United Kingdom and Nuclear Weapons

A Statement from the Bishops of England and Wales

 

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Pax Christi

Sadako website
 

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Sadako statue

Sadako Sasaki was two years old when the atom bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, Japan on August 6, 1945.  In 1955,  Sadako was diagnosed with Leukemia, "the atom bomb" disease.
Sadako's best friend told her of an old Japanese legend which said that anyone who folds 1000 paper cranes would be granted a wish. Sadako started to work on the paper cranes and completed over 1000 before dying on October 25, 1955 at the age of twelve.
In 1958, a statue of Sadako holding a golden crane was unveiled in Hiroshima Peace Park. Japanese children made a wish which is inscribed at the bottom of the statue and reads:
"This is our cry, This is our prayer, Peace in the world".
Today, people all over the world fold paper cranes and send them to Sadako's monument in Hiroshima.

The very existence of nuclear weapons has always posed grave moral questions. Their uniquely destructive power means that they belong in a different category from any other weapons; this has always been recognised in the particular attention with which they have been regarded by the Holy See and by our own Bishops’ Conference. In his World Day of Peace message for 2006, Pope Benedict XVI, in pressing for progressive and concerted nuclear disarmament, argues powerfully that the retention of nuclear weapons does not enhance the security of their possessors or the peace of the world.

The United Kingdom is now at a moral and strategic crossroads. Its present nuclear-weapon capability is not expected to be sustainable beyond the early 2020s without major new investment in renewal or replacement. Initial decisions about its continuance need to be taken within the lifetime of the present Parliament, which could extend to 2010.

The Church has always been clear in its teaching about the vital necessity for eventual total nuclear disarmament.   Our judgement is that, by decommissioning its nuclear weapons, the UK now has a unique opportunity to offer the international community an approach to security and legitimate self-defence without the unconscionable threat of nuclear destruction.  At the same time it could give a new impetus to the wider process towards total nuclear disarmament.

We recognise the Government’s grave responsibilities in these matters of security, both for our countries and the wider world.  We urge the government to take a long-term view and act with courageous leadership by seeking to make this breakthrough towards total nuclear disarmament.

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