Skip to main content

Daily Inspiration Quote by Pope Paul VI

"I met a hundred men going to Delhi and everyone is my brother"

About this Quote

A hundred strangers on the road, and suddenly the category of “stranger” collapses. Pope Paul VI’s line works because it takes the most ordinary social fact - passing people in transit - and reframes it as a radical moral claim: these men are not merely fellow travelers, not even “neighbors,” but brothers. That single word smuggles in obligation. Brotherhood implies kinship without consent, a relationship you can’t opt out of, which is precisely the point. Christian universalism isn’t sentiment; it’s a demand.

The Delhi detail matters. It locates the speaker outside the familiar Western parish and inside a postcolonial, newly self-defining India where religion, poverty, and modern nationhood were colliding in full view of the world. Paul VI was the first pope to visit India (1964), and the trip was read as a Vatican gesture toward the “developing world” at the height of Cold War competition for moral authority. Invoking Delhi signals more than exotic scenery; it’s a deliberate widening of the Church’s circle of concern beyond Europe’s old center of gravity.

There’s subtext, too: a pope meeting “men” (not “people”) on the way to a capital city hints at politics and power without naming them. He’s blessing movement toward civic life, toward modernity, while insisting that spiritual fraternity outranks nationality, caste, ideology. The line’s gentle cadence masks its provocation: if everyone is my brother, then borders, hierarchies, and convenient indifference become harder to justify.

Quote Details

TopicPeace
SourceHelp us find the source
More Quotes by Pope Add to List
Everyone Is My Brother - Pope Paul VI
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

Pope Paul VI

Pope Paul VI (September 26, 1897 - August 6, 1978) was a Clergyman from Italy.

24 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes

Joan Collins, Actress
Abdurrahman Wahid, Statesman