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  • Pope Set Precedent With World Religions

    Pope Set Precedent With World Religions
    By LOUIS MEIXLER, Associated Press Writer

    Associated Press
    Thursday, April 7, 2005

    ANKARA, Turkey - He was the first pope to visit a mosque and pray at
    Judaism's holiest site, and he returned the relics of revered Orthodox
    Christian saints.

    In death, John Paul II continues to set precedents: His funeral is
    attracting religious and political leaders whose faiths were never
    represented at such a high level at papal burials.

    John Paul II ushered in "the globalization of religion," said John
    Esposito, founding director of the Georgetown University Center
    for Muslim-Christian Understanding in Washington. "He increased
    exponentially the dialogue with ... people of all faiths."

    Friday will mark the first time the leaders of Orthodox Christianity
    and the Armenian Apostolic Church have attended a pope's funeral. Iran
    and Syria are sending their presidents, and Israel is dispatching its
    foreign minister - top levels of representation never before seen at
    papal funerals.

    The funeral is making its mark even in places where the pope has
    virtually no following. In Turkey, a country with a small number of
    Roman Catholics, the national police have canceled celebrations of the
    force's 160th anniversary. Turkey's flag, which features the crescent,
    a symbol of Islam, will fly at half mast Friday to honor the pope.

    "Not only was he the leader of the Catholic world, he was also
    the leader for peace and dialogue between religions," Turkish Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Thursday before flying to Rome for
    the funeral. "Even toward the end, at the height of his ill health,
    he relentlessly worked toward that goal."

    Ali Bardakoglu, Turkey's top Islamic cleric, said he shared "the
    grief of Catholics worldwide."

    The pope's ability to bridge the divide between religions was aided
    by his common touch and keen understanding of the power of symbolism,
    which inspired even those who sharply disagreed with him on issues
    of faith. Many people seemed to warm to the pope and regard him as
    genuinely holy even if they did not share his religious beliefs.

    The note he slipped into a crack in the Western Wall apologizing
    for the suffering of Jews over the centuries has been preserved in
    Israel's national Holocaust museum.

    The gesture marked a crucial change from Pope Paul VI's visit to
    Israel in 1964, when the Jewish state and the Vatican were so distant
    the pope traveled only to Christian holy sites and never mentioned
    Israel by name.

    The pontiff's contribution to religious tolerance "will be with us
    for many years," Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said at the
    start of a Cabinet meeting last week.

    For many Muslims, a key symbolic moment was when the pope stood in
    the ancient Omayyad Mosque in Damascus, Syria, in 2001 and appealed to
    Christians and Muslims to seek common ground rather than confrontation.

    For the world's 300 million Orthodox Christians, the pope's landmark
    apology for Roman Catholic wrongs against the Orthodox and his return
    of the relics of two Orthodox saints were no doubt key to the decision
    of Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I - leader of the world's Orthodox
    Christians - to attend the funeral.

    "Pope John Paul II envisioned the restoration of the unity of the
    Christians and he worked for its realization," said Bartholomew. "His
    death is a loss not only to his church, but to all of Christianity
    as well, and to the international community in general, who desires
    peace and justice."

    John Paul's global reach is due in part to the fact that he was
    history's most-traveled pope - logging 723,723 miles, or three times
    the distance to the moon. His message was reinforced by a modern
    media that beamed his smiling image to millions of homes.

    "Pope John Paul in many ways became a leader and symbol to a degree
    that no pope in the past could achieve," Esposito said. "It is a
    product of the man ... but also the fact that with globalization of
    travel and communications he could play that role."

    Besides Bartholomew, key religious leaders at the funeral will include
    the head of the Armenian Apostolic Church Catholicos Karekin II,
    Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, Lebanon's Maronite Christian
    Cardinal Nasrallah Sfeir, Religious Affairs Minister Maftuh Basyuni of
    Indonesia and Shear-Yishuv Cohen, the chief rabbi of the Israeli city
    of Haifa. Teoctist, the 90-year-old patriarch of the Romanian Orthodox
    Church was planning to attend but will not because he has the flu.

    There are some who will not be joining in the mourning.

    "How can the death of a non-Muslim be a loss to the Muslim
    world?" asked Gamal Sultan, an Egyptian Islamic activist and editor
    of Al-Manar, a journal that serves as a mouthpiece of Islamic
    fundamentalists.

    Although Israel is sending its foreign minister, the country's two
    chief rabbis are not attending. And Saudi Arabia, home to Islam's
    holiest shrines, has not announced it will send anyone.

    Left open by the death of the pope is whether his legacy of promoting
    interfaith dialogue will continue.

    "A lot depends on the next pope," Esposito said. "There is a momentum
    there and part of that momentum cannot be reversed."

    http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20050407/ap_on_re_eu/pope_religious_unifier_1
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