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  • Pope Condemns Denial Of Holocaust

    POPE CONDEMNS DENIAL OF HOLOCAUST

    BBC NEWS
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/m iddle_east/8043113.stm
    2009/05/11 17:21:53 GMT

    Pope Benedict XVI has said the suffering of Holocaust victims must
    never be denied as he visited the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial
    in Jerusalem.

    "May the names of these victims never perish. May their suffering never
    be denied, belittled or forgotten," he said in the midst of survivors.

    The pontiff began his trip to the Holy Land by saying in Tel Aviv
    that anti-Semitism was totally unacceptable.

    He also voiced support for the Palestinians' right to a homeland.

    The Pope's immediate, forceful and unequivocal condemnation of
    anti-Semitism in any form and in any part of the world will have
    pleased his Israeli hosts, the BBC's David Willey reports from
    Jerusalem.

    Wreath for the dead Flying in from Jordan, where he visited a mosque
    at the weekend, Benedict was greeted by Israeli leaders at Ben Gurion
    airport near Tel Aviv before being flown to Jerusalem by helicopter.

    Tim Franks BBC News, Jerusalem Yad Vashem is a place of immense
    symbolic importance for Jews around the world and, within it, the Hall
    of Remembrance is one of the most emotion-laden places. The very fact
    of the Pope's visit here carries huge symbolic importance. His personal
    history and the long and tortuous history of relations between the
    Catholic Church and the Jews saw to that. One Holocaust survivor I
    spoke to, who was one of the six the Pope was going to shake the hand
    of, told me she had to think about whether she wanted to meet the man
    who as a teenager had been a Hitler Youth. But then she said yes,
    it was. His very presence here, she said, was a victory for Israel
    and against anti-Semitism.

    "Sadly, anti-Semitism continues to rear its ugly head in many parts of
    the world," he said as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President
    Shimon Peres sat nearby.

    "This is totally unacceptable. Every effort must be made to combat
    anti-Semitism wherever it is found."

    At the Yad Vashem m was flanked by President Peres and other Israeli
    public figures, Pope Benedict laid a wreath on a stone covering the
    ashes of people killed in the Holocaust.

    He shook the hands of six Holocaust survivors before making a sombre
    speech about the six million Jews killed.

    "They lost their lives, but they will never lose their names," he said.

    "These are indelibly etched in the hearts of their loved ones, their
    surviving fellow prisoners and all those determined never to allow
    such an atrocity to disgrace mankind again."

    Pope Benedict, as a child growing up in Nazi Germany, joined the
    Hitler Youth, as was required of young Germans of the time, but he
    was not an enthusiastic member.

    'Just resolution' In his arrival speech, the Pope said the eyes of
    the world were upon the peoples of the Middle East as they struggled
    to solve conflicts that had caused so much suffering.

    POPE IN THE MIDDLE EAST

    * Monday Arrives in Israel, meets President Shimon Peres * Tuesday
    Visits Western Wall, meets Chief Rabbis * Wednesday Visits Bethlehem,
    visits refugees, meets Mahmoud Abbas * Thursday Mass in Nazareth,
    talks with Benjamin Netanyahu, meets Franciscans * Friday Meets
    Orthodox Christian leaders, departs

    He said: "I plead with all those responsible to explore every
    possible avenue in the search for a just resolution of the outstanding
    difficulties so that both people may live in peace in a homeland of
    their own within secure and internationally recognised borders."

    President Peres said he hoped the pontiff's visit would help "pave
    the road to peace".

    Prime Minister Netanyahu has now flown to Egypt, where the idea of a
    two-state solution will be high on the agenda in talks with President
    Hosni Mubarak.

    Israel's new prime minister has so far not said if he will support
    a two-state solution.

    Our correspondent, who is travelling with the Pope, says the Catholic
    Church and the current Israeli government do not see eye-to-eye on
    Palestinian statehood.

    He says the issue will be the main focus of talks ver the next
    few days.

    Sacred places The Pope said Israel and the Vatican had many shared
    values, including the desire to put religion in its rightful place
    in society.

    HAVE YOUR SAY As peace loving human beings we should appreciate
    the Pope's efforts for reconciliation Usman Javaid, US Apart from
    celebrating Mass in Jerusalem and Nazareth, Pope Benedict will also
    visit the most sacred places in Jerusalem for Jews and Muslims.

    He will also visit a Palestinian refugee camp close to Bethlehem.

    Israel is beefing up security for the trip in an operation named
    "White Robe", with tens of thousands of law-enforcement officers
    deployed and entire sections of Jerusalem to be shut down.

    During the previous leg of his tour - a three-day stay in Jordan -
    the Pope stressed the importance of Christians and Muslims working
    together.

    Analysts say his words are likely to be heavily scrutinised during
    this week's trip.
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