(Reuters) – Pope Francis is to visit biblical sites in
Jordan, Israel and the Palestinian Territories in May, his first trip to the
Christian Holy Land as pontiff and only the fourth by a pope since biblical
times.
The May 24-26 trip to Amman, Jerusalem and Bethlehem will
mark the 50th anniversary of a historic trip to the region by Pope Paul VI.
Pope John Paul II visited in 2000 and Benedict XVI went in 2009.
Apart from its significance for Roman Catholic relations
with Jews and Muslims, Francis’ trip will hold major importance for relations
among Christians because it will include a meeting in Jerusalem with the
spiritual head of the world’s Orthodox Christians, as well as Anglican and
Protestant leaders.
Francis, who has made many appeals for peace in the
Middle East since his election in March, announced the trip to thousands of
people gathered in St. Peter’s Square for his Sunday address. He had been
invited to visit by both Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli
President Shimon Peres.
Many key biblical sites are in Israel’s Galilee region
but Bethlehem, revered as the birthplace of Jesus, is in the Israeli-occupied
West Bank, in the Palestinian Territories.
The Church of the Holy Sepulchre, built over the spot
where Jesus is said to have been buried, is in Arab East Jerusalem, which
Palestinians want as the capital of their future state.
INTER-FAITH MEETINGS
Israeli and Palestinian negotiators resumed direct peace
negotiations in late July after three years of no advancement. The Vatican has
urged both sides to make “courageous and determined” decisions to move closer
to peace, with the help of the international community.
Francis, who defined his trip as a “pilgrimage of
prayer”, said he would hold an inter-faith meeting in the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre together with Bartholomew I, the Ecumenical Patriarch of
Constantinople.
Bartholomew is the spiritual leader of the some 300
million Orthodox Christians worldwide.
Francis made the announcement on the exact 50th
anniversary of Pope Paul VI’s meeting in Jerusalem with Bartholomew’s
predecessor, Athenagoras, the first meeting of the leaders of the Western and
Eastern Christianity since they were divided by the Great Schism of 1054.
The meeting between Bartholomew and Francis could also
pave the way for an historic encounter between Francis and Kirill, the
patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church, the largest and most influential in
world Orthodoxy.
There have been signs of a general warming between the
western and eastern branches of Christianity, and Francis fuelled hopes of
further reconciliation in November when he met Russian President Vladimir
Putin, the first Kremlin leader to publicly profess religious faith since the
1917 revolution.
Representatives of Anglican and Protestant churches,
which split from Rome in the 16th century, are also expected to attend the
Jerusalem meeting in May.
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