Images (4)
Document
| id |
id
269702881
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 4IMMEDIATE RELEASE
AUGUST 28, 1947
Under date of August 6, 1947, the President addressed a letter
to Pope Pius XII, which was presented by Myron C. Taylor, Personal Represen-
tative of the President of the United States of America to His Holiness
the Pope. The text of this letter follows:
"August 6, 1947
Your Holiness:
In continuance of the exchanges of views undertaken
from time to time since their beginning, on December 23, 1939,
for the purpose of facilitating parallel endeavors for peace and
the alleviation of human suffering, I am requesting Mr. Taylor
to return to Rome and to resume audiences with Your Holiness at
such times as may be found appropriate. These exchanges have
already contributed profoundly toward a sound and lasting peace
and to the strengthening of the impelling convictions pursued by
the peoples of the world in their quest for a moral world order
firmly established in the life of nations.
I desire to do >verything in my power to support and to
contribute to a concert of all the forces striving for a moral
world. Those forces are in the homes of peaceful and law-abiding
citizens in every part of the world who are exemplifying in their
own lives the principles of the good neighbor: the Golden
Rule
itself. They are on the farms, in the factories, mines, and. little
shops in all parts of the world where the principles of free coop-
eration and voluntary association in self-government are honored.
These moral aspirations are in the hearts of good men the
world over. They are in all churches, and in schools. The war
demonstrated that all persons, regardless of divergent religious
allegiances, can unite their efforts for the preservation and support
of the principles of freedom and morality and justice. They must
unite their efforts in the cause of enduring peace if they are not
one by one to be weakened and rendered impotent at the times of their
great need. They have, individually and together, the duty to vin-
dicate, by their thoughts and deeds, the great hopes for which men
fought in World War II and the hopes which today all serious-thinking
men and women throughout the world know must be attained.
TRUMAN
5. SERVICE" RECORDS
ARCHIVES "NATIONAL AND For
s
Relations
belongs_to