POPE
APPEALED FOR PEACE
Hundreds of thousands of worshippers have attended a seafront Mass in
Beirut on the concluding day of Pope Benedict XVI's visit to Lebanon.
The Pope appealed for
leaders in the Middle East to work for peace and reconciliation and urged those
at the service to "be peacemakers".He also renewed his call for a end
to the violence in neighbouring Syria.The Pope's visit has also coincided with
anti-US protests across the region over a film deemed insulting to Islam.It is
the first papal trip to Lebanon since John Paul II went there in 1997.An
estimated 350,000 worshippers gathered for the waterfront Mass. They waved
flags and cheered as the Pope made his way through the crowd in his
bullet-proof popemobile.During the service, he urged Christians throughout the
Middle East to do their part to end "the grim trail of death and
destruction" in the region.Calling again for peace in Syria, he said:
"I appeal to the Arab countries, that, as brothers, they might propose
workable solutions respecting the dignity, the rights and the religion of every
human person."
Christians from around
Lebanon, as well as Syria, Iraq and further afield, travelled to see him speak
in what must have been a very thrilling day, the BBC's Jim Muir in Beirut says.On
Saturday,15th September,2012. The pontiff met Lebanese political
leaders at the presidential palace near Beirut.Lebanon's politicians are
bitterly divided over the conflict in neighbouring Syria, but the Pope met
leaders from across the spectrum, including the Shia Muslim movement Hezbollah.Addressing
an audience of government officials, foreign diplomats and religious leaders,
he called for the "fundamental right" of religious freedom to be
observed.Earlier in his visit, the Pope condemned religious fundamentalism and
called on all religious leaders in the Middle East "to do everything
possible to uproot this threat".Controversy over a film deemed to be
offensive to the Prophet Mohammed has provoked protests throughout the region
since the Pope's arrival in Lebanon.The film, Innocence of Muslims, is believed
to have been made by a Coptic Christian in the US, and related unrest has led
to the death of, among others, the US ambassador to Libya.The Pope also
addressed a gathering of thousands of young people on Saturday, and urged them
to stay in Lebanon "and take your place in society and in the
Church".The number of Christians in the region has been greatly reduced in
recent years due to plitical upheaval and economic pressures.
Prof. John Kurakar
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