文明のターンテーブルThe Turntable of Civilization

日本の時間、世界の時間。
The time of Japan, the time of the world

Apostle of the peace who does not say human rights

2019年12月22日 10時33分50秒 | 全般

The following is from Yuasa Hiroshi's serial column at the beginning of the monthly magazine WiLL released yesterday.
Apostle of the peace who does not say human rights
It was Karl Marx, the founder of communism, that referred to religion as 'opium,' so I was surprised to hear the word 'Marxist priest.'
Pope Francisco, who came to Japan this fall, gave credit to Fidel Castro, a former Cuban revolutionary leader, and some say that in Argentina, his country of origin.
'No way' was my first impression.
Indeed, Marx stated in a difficult book, An Introduction to Criticism of Hegelian Law and Philosophy, that 'religion is the sigh of those who are in trouble' and 'it is the opium of the people.'
What he wanted to say was the construction of the debate that religion was a phantom and would have to begin if we criticized the society that created this phantom.
Therefore, the expression 'Marxist clergy' in the coalescence of water and oil, promoted by Xi Jinping Jintao of China, such as 'Sinicization of the religion,' is any way awkward.
It had no choice but to guess, saying a Pope, too, was youthful passion if there was.
The encounter of the historical pseudo-Marx with the priests occurred only in December of 1989 when Soviet President Gorbachev visited the Vatican and talked with Pope John Paul II at the time to talk about it. Isn't it?
At this time, the 'Berlin Wall' had already collapsed, and the communist Soviet Union was in the process of collapse.
They have been doing Atheism for seventy years since Lenin, but have no way out.
However, Gorbachev himself is the first Soviet leader to acknowledge the fact of being baptized, so there is front and back in the world.
He became an easy prey from a critic who has a sharp tongue, 'Is it entreaty to a deity, becoming last moment?'
This article continues.


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