Pope Francis Calls For End To Violence And Extremism In Iraq
Pope Francis
has called for an end to violence and extremism, on the first ever papal visit
to Iraq.
The pontiff
is making his first international trip since the start of the coronavirus
pandemic.
Covid and
security fears have made this his riskiest visit yet, but the 84-year-old insisted
he was "duty bound".
He also said
Iraq's dwindling Christian community should have a more prominent role as
citizens with full rights, freedoms and responsibilities.
He is hoping
to foster inter-religious dialogue - meeting Iraq's most revered Shia Muslim
cleric - and will celebrate Mass at a stadium in Irbil in the north.
About 10,000
Iraqi Security Forces personnel are being deployed to protect the Pope, while
round-the-clock curfews are also being imposed to limit the spread of Covid.
Iraq's PM Mustafa
al-Kadhimi greeted him at the airport, with a red carpet, Iraqis in national
dress and songs from a largely unmasked choir.
Hundreds of
people lined the airport road as the Pope's convoy, heavily chaperoned by
police motorcycles, left for the city.
But the Pope
was seen to have a pronounced limp, suggesting that his sciatica condition
continues to bother him.
In a speech
after being welcomed by Iraqi President Barham Salih, Pope Francis said he was
very pleased to come to Iraq, which he described as the "cradle of
civilisation".
"May
the clash of arms be silenced... may there be an end to acts of violence and
extremism, factions and intolerance!" he said.
"Iraq
has suffered the disastrous effects of wars, the scourge of terrorism and
sectarian conflicts often grounded in a fundamentalism incapable of accepting
the peaceful coexistence of different ethnic and religious groups."
He turned to
the country's Christians, who he said should have a greater role in public
life.
"The age-old
presence of Christians in this land, and their contributions to the life of the
nation, constitute a rich heritage that they wish to continue to place at the
service of all," he said.
He said
Iraq's diversity was a "precious resource on which to draw, not an
obstacle to eliminate".
Pope Francis
later went to hold Mass in Baghdad's Syriac Catholic church of Our Lady of
Salvation, targeted in an attack in 2010 by jihadists which left 52
Christians and police dead.
This is a
pilgrimage by a Pope who has made reaching out to the persecuted and to other
faiths a cornerstone of his papacy.
Pope
Francis's trip is rich in symbolism but fraught with danger - not just the
security concerns of a country torn by inter-religious and sectarian conflict
but also in the midst of its highest infection levels since the start of the
pandemic.
There is the
risk that the importance of this trip is overshadowed by Covid - particularly
that a mass in Erbil on Sunday, at which up to 10,000 people are expected,
could become a super-spreader.
But Pope
Francis is defiant, telling the BBC reporter on the plane from Rome that he is
"very happy" to be on a "special trip". He clearly feels
that this land, so central to Christianity, has waited too long for a papal
visit, that its dwindling and long-terrorised Christian community needs to feel
emboldened so as to remain here - and that there is no time to lose to bring a
message of peace and hope to Iraq.
One of the
world's oldest Christian communities has seen its numbers plummet over the last
two decades from 1.4 million to about 250,000, less than 1% of the population.
Many have
fled abroad to escape the violence that has plagued the country since the
US-led invasion in 2003 that ousted Saddam.
Tens of
thousands were also displaced when Islamic State (IS) militants overran
northern Iraq in 2014, destroying their historic churches, seizing their
property, and giving them a choice to pay tax, convert, leave or face death.
Security
arrangements are massive, with the Pope mostly flying to make his visits, and
possibly using an armoured car for shorter trips. In central Baghdad,
billboards welcome the Pope, and Iraqi and Vatican flags fly together.
The
Christians of Iraq are hoping the Pope will help them overcome discrimination.
In Baghdad,
there was joy that he was visiting.
"I feel
an indescribable happiness. We're all brothers and sisters, we're all one hand.
We're all going to greet someone great, the greatest figure, the Pope,"
Naem Faouzi told Reuters news agency.
Father
Martin Ra'ad, a Christian priest said: "Today, Pope Francis is realising
the dream that Iraqis have had for the past 20 years, waiting for him to arrive
on Iraqi soil."
Christians
in the north were also looking forward to his visit. Alla Hana Shaba, who fled
to Irbil in Iraq's Kurdistan region after the IS invaded in 2014, told Iraqi
TV: "We want the Pope to help the displaced find a place to settle. We
have lost our houses and money."
Due to
security concerns and a sharp rise in Covid-19 infections, the Pope will have
limited exposure to the public, our correspondent says.
The Pope
himself has had two shots of the BioNTech/Pfizer vaccine, and his entourage
will have been inoculated, but there are fears the trip could become a
super-spreader event given the large crowds expected.
On Saturday,
the Pope will fly south to the Shia holy city of Najaf, where he will visit
90-year-old Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the spiritual reference for
millions of Shia in Iraq and elsewhere.
The
following day in Mosul he will say a prayer of suffrage in Church Square for
the victims of the war with IS, which left tens of thousands of civilians dead.
The Pope
will also visit nearby Qaraqosh, where Christians have returned since the
defeat of IS in 2017.
Who are Iraq's Christians?
·
People in what is now Iraq embraced Christianity in the 1st
Century AD
·
According to the US state
department, Christian leaders estimate there are fewer than
250,000 Christians remaining in Iraq, with the largest population - at least
200,000 - living in the Nineveh Plain and Kurdistan Region in the north of the
country
·
Approximately 67% of those are Chaldean Catholics, whose
Eastern-rite Church retains its own liturgy and traditions but recognises the
authority of the pope in Rome. Another 20% are members of the Assyrian Church
of the East, believed to be the oldest in Iraq
·
The rest are Syriac Orthodox, Syriac Catholic, Armenian
Catholic, Armenian Apostolic, as well as Anglican, Evangelical and other
Protestants

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