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  • Pope performs a PR miracle

    POPE PERFORMS A PR MIRACLE
    Sandro Contenta

    Toronto Star, Canada
    European Bureau
    Dec 2 2006

    Benedict XVI turns Turkish trip into surprising success

    ISTANBUL-Seen through Turkish eyes, the Pope was a charmer till
    the end.

    He began his visit by proclaiming, "I love the Turks," and ended
    it yesterday with a rhetorical offering sure to fuel the gushing
    newspaper headlines.

    "A part of my heart remains in Istanbul," Benedict XVI told Turkish
    officials moments before boarding his plane back to Rome. The
    Roman Catholic pontiff even had a thought for the city's 10 million
    residents, acknowledging they "suffered" through traffic chaos caused
    by the closing of roads in a massive security lockdown.

    The parting words of affection capped a four-day visit that saw
    the pontiff transformed from a man reviled to "the congenial Pope,"
    as an editorial in the influential Hurriyet newspaper put it. For a
    pontiff who sparked outrage in much of the Muslim world two months
    ago by linking Islam to violence, the transformation seemed nothing
    short of miraculous.

    Dreadfully low expectations certainly helped. And the major
    stakeholders in the trip - the Turkish government, the Vatican and
    Turkey's Christian minorities - also had an interest in making sure
    it was a success.

    Vatican officials describe the visit - particularly the pontiff's
    silent prayer at Istanbul's Blue Mosque - as a landmark on the path
    to reconciling Islam and Christianity.

    Judging by headlines such as "The Istanbul Peace," the visit went
    some way to achieving that goal in this officially secular country.

    Similar effusiveness in the rest of the Muslim world, where many
    still demand an apology for Benedict's comments on Islam, will be
    far harder to come by.

    But the Grand Mufti of Istanbul, Mustafa Cagrici, was poetically
    optimistic.

    "A single swallow can't bring spring, but many swallows will follow and
    we will enjoy a spring in this world," he told the Pope, after sharing
    a moment of prayer with him Thursday at the 17th-century Blue Mosque.

    The trip was fraught with the burden of history and contemporary
    concerns of a "clash of civilizations:" A pontiff seen as having
    toughened the Vatican's stand on Islam visiting the ancient seat of the
    Holy Roman Empire before the Ottomans and Islam swept it aside in 1453.

    An anti-Pope protest by 25,000 people and the initial reluctance
    of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to meet the pontiff had many
    fearing the worst on the eve of his visit.

    But Benedict XVI landed in Ankara Tuesday, walked into a meeting with
    a suddenly available Erdogan and began his charm offensive. Erdogan
    emerged to announce the pontiff had reversed his position and now
    backed Turkey's bid to enter the European Union. The Vatican nuanced
    Erdogan's claim, but didn't deny it.

    With Turkey's EU negotiations stumbling, the surprise announcement
    instantly changed the complexion of the Pope's visit. Erdogan reaped
    the benefit of having turned around a pontiff who once described
    Muslim Turkey as being in "permanent contrast" with Europe's Christian
    heritage.

    The Pope then sat quietly as Turkey's director of religious affairs
    denounced those who believed Islam was spread by the sword - a
    not-too-veiled reference to the papal speech that caused so much
    outrage. "Once the Pope swallowed that, suddenly every negative
    thing about him was forgotten and everybody fell in love with him,"
    said Murat Belge, a leading left-wing social critic.

    The Pope called for a sincere dialogue between Muslims and
    Christians. By the time he became only the second pope in history to
    pray at a mosque, the pontiff could do no wrong.

    Yet Benedict never shied away from topics that, in another context,
    would have caused a political storm. He joined Patriarch Bartholomew
    I of Constantinople in calling for more freedom for Turkey's dwindling
    Christian communities. They made it a condition for EU membership.

    The Pope also praised Armenians for clinging to Christianity despite
    "the very tragic circumstances of the last century" - a reference
    to the slaughter of Armenians by Ottoman Turks in 1915. He didn't
    call it genocide - the Vatican's official position - but the mere
    mention of an event Turkey refuses to accept responsibility for no
    doubt strained sensitivities in Ankara.

    Niyazi Oktem, a political philosopher at Istanbul's Bilge University,
    said the visit should act as an example to both sides in the so-called
    "clash of civilizations." Turkey showed other Muslim states the
    strength of its democracy by having a civilized dialogue with the
    leader of the world's 1.1 billion Roman Catholics. It also showed
    Europe how the Turkish model has kept fundamentalist Islam at bay,
    Oktem added.

    The Pope left relieved, but with little desire to push his luck.

    Invited by Istanbul's governor to visit Turkey again, Benedict XVI
    smiled and politely declined.

    "I'm old and I don't know how many more hours the Lord will give me,"
    the Pope replied. "I'm in His hands."
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