Yahoo – AFP,
Samer Al-Atrush and Catherine Marciano, April 28, 2017
![]() |
| Pope Francis and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi chat with officials after meeting in Cairo on April 28, 2017 (AFP Photo/KHALED DESOUKI) |
Cairo (AFP)
- Pope Francis pleaded for peace in a visit to Egypt on Friday as he attended a
service in solidarity with the embattled Coptic minority at a church bombed by
the Islamic State group.
The pontiff
walked to the Saint Peter and Saint Paul church in Cairo in a procession led by
standard-bearing clergy, after meeting Coptic Pope Tawadros II at his
headquarters.
Security
forces in the capital were on high alert under a state of emergency following a
series of church bombings claimed by IS.
On April 9,
the jihadists bombed two churches in the Arab world's most populous country,
killing 45 people in the deadliest attack on Copts in recent memory.
Last
December, the Saint Peter and Saint Paul church was itself targeted by a
suicide bomber in an attack that killed 29 people.
Francis had
earlier met President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and Ahmed al-Tayeb, the grand imam
of the Al-Azhar institution, one of Muslim world's leading authorities, to push
for dialogue between the two faiths.
In a speech
to a Muslim-Christian conference, the 80-year-old pontiff denounced violence
and populism.
"Peace
alone... is holy and no act of violence can be perpetrated in the name of God,
for it would profane his name," Francis said.
He
criticised what he called "demagogic forms of populism... on the
rise", saying they were unhelpful to peace.
Francis
shuttled from one engagement to another in a closed car under heavy guard on
the first day of his tightly scheduled 27-hour trip.
![]() |
Sheikh
Ahmed al-Tayeb, the Grand Imam of Al-Azhar, and Pope Francis embrace
during his
visit to the prestigious Sunni Muslim institution in Cairo on April 28,
2017
(AFP Photo/STRINGER)
|
'Innocent
blood'
Police and
soldiers stood guard outside the Vatican residence in Cairo and armoured cars
were stationed outside the Coptic Orthodox Saint Mark's Cathedral, where
Tawadros II's headquarters are located.
Francis met
the Coptic pope at his offices where the two exchanged gifts.
"Our
church and nation has been through a painful experience in the past few months
when the sinful hand of terrorism reached out to murder praying
innocents," Tawadros said in a speech at the meeting.
"Their
innocent blood unites us," Francis said in turn.
They signed
an ecumenical agreement to no longer require Catholics to be rebaptised if they
choose to become Orthodox, as often happens in Egypt.
He and
Tawadros then walked in procession to the Saint Peter and Saint Paul church,
where they sat near the altar as a choir sang hymns to clashing cymbals.
Hours
before the church visit, Francis became the first Roman Catholic pope to visit
the head of Al-Azhar in his Cairo headquarters, sealing a recent improvement in
relations between Catholicism and Islam.
In another
speech with Sisi in the audience, Francis expressed support for Egypt's
military campaign against IS which bombed the churches and has also killed
hundreds of police and troops.
But he also
insisted on "unconditional respect for inalienable human rights such as
equality among all citizens, religious freedom and freedom of expression".
Sisi has
faced heavy criticism from rights groups for abuses since he led the military
ouster of his Islamist predecessor Mohamed Morsi in 2013.
![]() |
Security is
extremely tight in Cairo for the pope's visit (AFP Photo/
MOHAMED EL-SHAHED)
|
'Pilgrim
of peace'
Before
disembarking from his aircraft in Cairo, Francis had told reporters his visit
was a "journey of unity and fraternity. Less than two days but very
intense."
His meeting
with Tayeb, he said, would "be an example and a model for peace precisely
because it will be a meeting of dialogue".
"Please
pray for my journey tomorrow as a pilgrim of peace to Egypt," Francis
tweeted on the eve of his departure.
Before his
visit, some roads had been festooned with posters showing Francis against the
backdrop of the Pyramids, with a message that read: "Pope of peace in the
Egypt of peace."
John Paul
II was the last pope to have visited Egypt in 2000, with his arrival also
coming weeks after anti-Christian violence that killed about 20 Copts in
January that year.
Vatican
dialogue with the Muslim world, a priority for this pope, was set back
significantly when Francis's predecessor Benedict XVI made a speech in 2006 in
which he was seen as linking Islam to violence.
The
now-retired German pontiff's 2011 comments condemning an attack on a Coptic
church prompted Al-Azhar to denounce Benedict for meddling in Egypt's affairs.
On
Saturday, the pontiff will preside over a mass for the country's small Catholic
community, estimated to number around 272,000 spread across various rites.
Egypt's
Copts, who make up about 10 percent of the country's population of 92 million,
are the Middle East's largest Christian minority and one of the oldest.
But they
have suffered attacks throughout the years and many complain that they feel
like second-class citizens.
burs-se/srm
Pope Francis leads mass during visit to support Egypt's Christian minority and promote dialogue with Muslims https://t.co/AJSsQBy6LZ pic.twitter.com/2pfnLUndyn— AFP news agency (@AFP) April 29, 2017



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