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RNS Feature Benedict to make first papal visit to Cyprus By
Francis X. Rocca VATICAN CITY (RNS)
— Pope Benedict XVI’s overseas travels typically involve vast
crowds of adoring Catholics, often squeezed into sports stadiums or public
venues for large-scale masses. But when Benedict
makes the first official papal visit to Cyprus next weekend (June 4-6),
his total flock will number just 25,000, and his main speech will be held
in the sports field of an elementary school. Even so, Benedict’s
words and gestures during his brief visit are likely to resonate far beyond
the divided island nation. The momentous issues on his agenda include
the Catholic Church’s relations with Orthodox Christianity, Islam
and Judaism, and the plight of Christians throughout the Middle East. On June 6, Benedict
is scheduled to with a group of Catholic bishops from the Middle East
in the Cypriot capital of Nicosia, where he will receive the official
agenda for a special October synod on the region. As indicated in
a document released earlier this year, major topics of the Vatican synod
will include religious freedom in Muslim countries, Islamic extremism,
Israel’s “occupation” of the Palestinian territories,
and the recent exodus of Christians from the region. Christians, who
six decades ago formed 20 per cent of the total population of Israel and
Palestine, are today no more than two per cent, largely because of economically
driven emigration. The situation of Christians in Iraq is just as dire,
with tens of thousands fleeing since the US-led invasion in 2003. Benedict will
also meet with Archbishop Chrysostomos II, leader of Cyprus’s 800,000
Orthodox Christians, in the latest sign of warming relations between the
Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches, which split nearly 1,000 years
ago. Last December,
the Vatican and Russia finally established full diplomatic relations —
a move previously opposed by the large and influential Russian Orthodox
Church, which long resented Catholics for allegedly attempting to convert
Orthodox believers. At a recent press
conference at the Vatican, the top ecumenical official of the Russian
Orthodox church voiced optimism that the leader of the Moscow church,
Patriarch Kirill, would soon meet with Benedict, granting a papal wish
that eluded Pope John Paul II. The two leaders say they share the goal
of reviving Christianity in an increasingly secular Europe. Still, tensions
remain, as evidenced by recent protests against the pope’s visit
by a vocal minority of Orthodox Cypriots; Chrysostomos admonished them
to “stay home” while Benedict is there. Benedict’s
visit could also highlight a source of conflict between Orthodox Christians
and Muslims. For three and half decades, the island has been divided between
the internationally recognized Republic of Cyprus in the south, and a
northern sector seized by the Turkish military in 1974, which is now almost
exclusively Muslim. Although travel
between the zones has been permitted since 2003, reunification is not
in sight. Orthodox leaders are especially vehement about the desecration
and destruction of the churches they were forced to abandon in north,
a subject they are likely to raise during Benedict’s stay. The pope is likely
to treat such complaints with diplomatic caution. Islam has been a delicate
subject for Benedict since September 2006, when he quoted a medieval description
of the religion as “evil and inhuman” and “spread by
the sword,” which led to violent outbursts throughout the Muslim
world. Copyright 2010 Religion News Service. All rights reserved. No part of this transmission may be distributed or reproduced without written permission. |
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