Author Topic: ROTFLMAO: Pope Praises Mideast Christians AND Islam Simultaneously!  (Read 459 times)

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Offline Lewinsky Stinks, Dr. Brennan Rocks

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Pontiff Praises Perseverance of Middle East Christian Minorities

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090510/ap_on_re_mi_ea/pope_mideast

No comments here necessary, except that the pope is a very good little dhimmi...

SerbAvenger

Quote from: Yahoo News
Pope praises Mideast Christians for persevering
By VICTOR L. SIMPSON, Associated Press Writer

AMMAN, Jordan – Pope Benedict XVI praised Sunday the courage of Middle East Christians who cling to their faith despite war and adversity, addressing a crowd of 20,000 who filled a sports stadium where he celebrated the first open-air Mass of his Holy Land pilgrimage.

For years, the church has been alarmed by the declining presence of Christians in the Holy Land and throughout the Middle East, ancient communities driven out by conflict and poverty.

"The Catholic community here is deeply touched by the difficulties and uncertainties which affect the people of the Middle East," Benedict said, speaking in English at the Mass. "May you never forget the great dignity which derives from your Christian heritage, or fail to sense the loving solidarity of all your brothers and sisters in the church throughout the world."

He said fidelity to the church's mission in the Middle East "demands of each of you a particular kind of courage" that requires building ties with people of other religions and cultures.

The pope was welcomed at the stadium in Arabic by the Latin rite patriarch of Jerusalem, Archbishop Fouad Twal, who recalled that Jordan has taken in more than 1 million Iraqi refugees since the start of the war, some 40,000 of them Christians. According to Vatican statistics, Jordanian Christians in a community that dates back nearly 2,000 years are less than 2 percent of the country's overwhelmingly Muslim population.

Many Iraqi Christians were forced to flee the sectarian violence following the 2003 U.S.-led war in Iraq. Muslim militants targeted Iraqi Christians, many who were killed, raped or kidnapped. Several churches across Iraq were bombed, and clergy were killed.

Elsewhere in the Middle East, Palestinian Christians, squeezed between Muslims and Jews in the Holy Land, have been immigrating in high numbers — mainly to the West. In Egypt, which has the biggest Christian community in the region at about 10 percent of the country's 76 million, Coptic Christians have strained relations with Muslims. Violent clashes have erupted between the two sides in recent years.

Vatican spokesman the Rev. Federico Lombardi said Benedict was pleased with his Mideast trip so far and believed he had accomplished his objective of warming relations with Muslims, saying the dialogue had taken "new steps forward."

The weeklong Holy Land pilgrimage is Benedict's first trip as pope to the Middle East — where he has faced sharp criticism by both Muslims and Jews.

He angered many in the Muslim world three years ago when he quoted a Medieval text that characterized some of Islam's Prophet Muhammad's teachings as "evil and inhuman," particularly "his command to spread by the sword the faith." When he arrived in Jordan on Saturday, Benedict expressed his "deep respect" for Islam and hoped the Catholic Church would be a force for peace.

He said the 82-year-old pope is "in good form, relaxed and pleased with the welcome."

Sunday afternoon, Benedict traveled some 30 miles (50 kilometers) from Amman to Bethany beyond the Jordan river, the site of Christ's baptism. He got into a golf cart, with King Abdullah II seated beside him, and was driven a few yards from the riverbed.

He also blessed the foundation stones of Latin and Greek Melkite churches and kept up his theme, speaking of the contributions Christians can make to end violence and suffering in the Middle East "inspired by the example of Jesus, of reconciliation and peace."

The German pope will also have to tread carefully when he arrives in Israel on Monday for the final four-day leg of his tour, which will also bring him to the Palestinian territories. Earlier this year, Benedict sparked outrage among Jews when he revoked the excommunication of an ultraconservative bishop who denies the Holocaust.

Catholics from across the Middle East attended Sunday's Mass. Many held up flags from Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and other countries and applauded the pope's words and shouted out his name. Forty Iraqi children making their first communion wore long white robes as they waved the Iraqi and Vatican flags.

In his homily, Benedict said he hoped Christians would always get the "material and moral assistance" they need. He also paid tribute to Christian women in the region, saying many have "devoted their lives to building peace and fostering harmony."

Father Raymond Mousalli, an Iraqi priest, said Iraqis of all faiths must sit together and find peace after years of war.

"The holy father speaks here, and his voice is heard in the Middle East especially by Iraqi Christians who are suffering a lot," Mousalli said.

Peter Samaan, a 15-year-old Iraqi dressed in a white communion robe, said he hoped Benedict could one day travel to Iraq.

"We Christians want to return. We are strangers in this country." Samaan said, adding that his family fled Iraq to avoid persecution.

___

Associated Press Writers Jamal Halaby, Shafika Mattar and Dale Gavlak contributed to this report.

Offline ag337

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Serb,
Here is a video with the transcript of how some Muslim view the Pope and his visit.

http://www.memritv.org/clip/en/0/0/0/0/0/0/2103.htm

Title of Video: Sheik Yousuf Al-Qaradhawi Criticizes Jordan for Hosting the Pope: He Should First Apologize for Affronting Islam and the Prophet Muhammad

Following is an excerpt from a Friday sermon delivered by Sunni Islamist scholar Sheik Yousuf Al-Qaradhawi, which aired on Qatar TV on May 8, 2009:

Yousuf Al-Qaradhawi: [With regard to] the Vatican Pope's visit to the Jordanian kingdom – the Islamists there protested against the Pope's visit, and I join them in their protest, because the Pope affronted the religion of Islam and its Messenger, when, in a sermon in Germany, a few months after his election – without any preliminaries or justifications – he attacked Islam, calling it a religion of violence, and attacked the Messenger of Islam, saying that he didn't introduce anything new, and that he spread his religion by the sword.

Therefore, we in the World Association of Muslim Scholars protested against him, and demanded that he apologize to the nation of Islam for his affronts. Everybody makes mistakes. He had an opportunity to say: I didn't mean it, I did not mean to affront the Muslims, it was a slip of the tongue, or something like that. But he did not do so. Therefore, the World Association of Muslim Scholars has decided to freeze its relations with the Pope and the Vatican, until he apologizes or says something that will cover or erase this. This has yet to happen. Therefore, we expected the Jordanian officials to say to him: Before you come here, we want you to say something to rectify your relations with the Muslims.

***So, we can surmise from this clip that the Muslims were unimpressed with the Pope's words during his visit to Jordan***

Offline mord

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As soon as he landed in Israel he wasted no time criticizing it.Why didn't he criticize Jordan for not allowing Jews to live their or in the past when Jordan ruled the holy sites Jews where forbidden to visit
Thy destroyers and they that make thee waste shall go forth of thee.  Isaiah 49:17

 
Shot at 2010-01-03