Pope's Turkey Visit

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Christina

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Media reports largely missed the true significance of Benedict XVI's trip to this Muslim nation.It certainly was the major international news event of the week. Every leading newspaper carried it on their front page on either one day or the other. All followed it with daily progress reports. Pope Benedict xvi’s four-day visit to Turkey had journalists clamoring for a unique edge to their commentaries.Most followed the line that this was Benedict’s classic opportunity to mend the fences with Islam following his now infamous September speech delivered at his old university in Regensburg, Germany, where he publicized disparaging remarks about Muhammad made by a 14th-century Byzantine emperor. Some homed in on the prospects of Vatican support for the accession of Muslim Turkey to the Catholic club of the European Unionhttp://www.thetrumpet.com/index.php?page=article&id=2755
 

Christina

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December 1, 2006By Philip Pullella and Tom HeneghanISTANBUL (Reuters) - Pope Benedict wound up a fence-mending visit to Turkey on Friday amid praise from the local press for visiting Istanbul's Blue Mosque and praying toward Mecca "like Muslims".The Pope, who sparked protests across the Muslim world with a speech two months ago seen as criticizing Islam, looked relaxed and pleased as he entered the Cathedral of the Holy Spirit for a mass at the end of the sensitive four-day trip.His first visit to a mostly Muslim country, held under tight security for fear of protests by nationalists and Islamists, was highlighted by a series of conciliatory gestures culminating in a stop on Thursday afternoon in Istanbul's famed Blue Mosque."The Pope's dreaded visit was concluded with a wonderful surprise," wrote daily Aksam on its front page."In Sultan Ahmet Mosque, he turned toward Mecca and prayed like Muslims," popular daily Hurriyet said, using the building's official name.His gestures, including support for Ankara's bid to join the European Union and praise for Islam as a peaceful faith, seem to have persuaded the Turks to move beyond the tension following his speech quoting a Byzantine emperor as calling Islam violent.But in Islam's Middle Eastern heartland, Arab commentators still call for Benedict to issue a full apology for his speech. Shocked by the protests it triggered, the Pope has said he did not agree with the controversial quote but has not apologized.Catholic officials also presented the mosque visit, where Benedict stood in silent prayer while Istanbul Grand Mufti Mustafa Cagrici prayed aloud, as a key moment of reconciliation.I would compare the Pope's visit to the mosque to Pope John Paul's gestures at the Western Wall," said veteran Vatican mediator Cardinal Roger Etchegaray, referring to Pope John Paul II's prayers at Jerusalem's Western Wall in 2000."Yesterday, Benedict did with the Muslims what John Paul did with the Jews."TRIP BRINGS OUT THE DIPLOMATThe visit, which began in the capital Ankara and included a stop at the ancient city of Ephesus, brought out the diplomat in the theologian who was expected to take a tougher stand on Islam than his more outgoing predecessor John Paul.Benedict did press during the trip for more freedom of religion in Turkey and by extension in other mostly Muslim countries, but not in the confrontational way some Church officials expected after he was elected Pope in April 2005.There were only scattered protests against the visit.Before the mass, Benedict released doves of peace in the courtyard in front of Istanbul's Roman Catholic cathedral and blessed a statue of John XXIII, who was Pope from 1958 to 1963.As Archbishop Angelo Roncalli, John was a Vatican diplomat in Istanbul from 1935 to 1944, when he was a popular figure. The street where his office was is now named Pope Roncalli Street.During the Second World War, he used his Istanbul base to help 24,000 Jews escape the Holocaust in Nazi-occupied Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria, often with fake baptismal certificates.Among the clergy attending the mass was Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, the spiritual head of the world's 250 million Orthodox Christians. The two signed a joint declaration on Thursday pledging to continue work to bring together their churches split in the Great Schism in 1054.Benedict was due to leave Istanbul for Rome at midday.