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Peace starts in our hearts, Pope Leo tells Mediterranean Youth Council

Real peace, often used as a slogan, begins in our own hearts and communities, Pope Leo XIV told a group of young adults from the Mediterranean region at the Vatican on Friday.

Real peace, often used as a slogan, begins in our own hearts and communities, Pope Leo XIV told a group of young adults from the Mediterranean region at the Vatican on Friday.

In a speech in both Italian and English on Sept. 5, the pope called young people the “generation that envisions a better future and chooses to build it. You are the sign of a world that does not give in to indifference and complacency,” he added, “but rolls up its sleeves and works to transform evil into good.”

Leo met with around 50 members of the Mediterranean Youth Council, which was founded in 2022 and includes young adults from European and Middle Eastern countries bordered by the Mediterranean Sea.

“Peace is on the agenda of international leaders, it is the subject of global discussions, but sadly, it often gets reduced to a mere slogan,” the pontiff said. “What we need is to cultivate peace in our own hearts and in our relationships, to let it blossom in our daily actions, to work for reconciliation in our homes, our communities, our schools and workplaces, in the Church, and among the Churches.”

Pope Leo tells young adults from the Mediterranean Youth Council at the Vatican on Sept. 5, 2025, “to cultivate prayer and spirituality, together with action, as sources of peace and points of encounter between traditions and cultures.” Credit: Vatican Media
Pope Leo tells young adults from the Mediterranean Youth Council at the Vatican on Sept. 5, 2025, “to cultivate prayer and spirituality, together with action, as sources of peace and points of encounter between traditions and cultures.” Credit: Vatican Media

Being a peacemaker is not easy, Leo said, and he denounced the use of religious traditions to justify violence instead of bringing peace, fraternity, care for creation, and openness to others. 

“We need to reject these forms of blasphemy that dishonor God’s holy name, and to do so by the way we live our lives,” he underlined. “We are called to cultivate prayer and spirituality, together with action, as sources of peace and points of encounter between traditions and cultures.”

“For believers, the future is not one of walls and barbed wire but one of mutual acceptance,” he added.

The pope encouraged the young people to not give up, even if someone does not understand them or what they are working for: “St. Charles de Foucauld said that God also uses headwinds to bring us to port.”

“Do not be afraid: Be seeds of peace where the seeds of hate and resentment grow; be weavers of unity where polarization and enmity prevail; be the voice of those who have no voice to ask for justice and dignity; be light and salt where the flame of faith and the taste for life are dying out,” he said.

This article was originally published on Catholic News Agency.

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