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Pope ready to announce synod on Middle East for 2010

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  • Pope ready to announce synod on Middle East for 2010

    MIDEAST-SYNOD Sep-18-2009 (450 words) xxxi

    Pope ready to announce synod on Middle East for 2010

    By John Thavis
    Catholic News Service

    VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Vatican sources said Pope Benedict XVI was
    preparing to convene a Synod of Bishops for the Middle East to be held
    in October of 2010, to address the trials and tribulations of the
    Christian population in the region.

    Patriarchs and other representatives from Eastern churches arrived in
    Rome Sept. 18, and the pope was to meet with them the next day to
    discuss the initiative, the sources said. An announcement of the synod
    was expected in coming days.

    Pope Benedict has spoken frequently about the pressures faced by
    Christian and Catholic minorities in the Middle East, particularly in
    the Holy Land and in Iraq. The synod would provide an opportunity for
    a much-needed strategizing session at the level of the universal
    church, one source said.

    The Vatican press office would not confirm reports of a Middle East
    synod, but it released the names of 11patriarchs and other
    representatives meeting the pope Sept. 19 at his summer residence in
    Castel Gandolfo.

    They included the Chaldean patriarch, Cardinal Emmanuel-Karim Delly of
    Baghdad, Iraq; Latin Patriarch Fouad Twal of Jerusalem; the
    Lebanon-based Maronite patriarch, Cardinal Nasrallah P. Sfeir; and
    representatives of the Ukrainian, Syro-Malabar, Coptic, Melkite,
    Syrian, Armenian, Romanian and Syro-Malankar rites.

    Last January, Chaldean Archbishop Louis Sako of Kirkuk, Iraq, and
    other Iraqi bishops in Rome for their "ad limina" visits asked the
    pope to convene a special synod for the churches of the Middle East.

    Archbishop Sako said the priority topics for such a synod would
    include the problem of Christians fleeing the Middle East, paying
    Christian witness in a predominantly Muslim world, relations with
    Muslims, the role of Christians in civil and political life, lack of
    full religious freedom and Christians' prospects for the future.

    Bishop Maroun Lahham of Tunis, Tunisia, a Jordanian native of
    Palestinian parentage, told Catholic News Service earlier this year
    that when the church discusses Asia -- as it did in a 1998 synod for
    that region -- "it's the Philippines, India, Japan, not the Middle
    East."

    Bishops Lahham, who worked as a priest in the Latin Patriarchate of
    Jerusalem as well as in the United Arab Emirates, said while the
    Middle East is technically part of the Asian land mass, "the issues
    ... were very unlike those" in typically Asian countries.

    "We didn't feel (the Asian synod) was meant for us," said the bishop,
    who was head of the seminary in Beit Jalla, West Bank, at the time.

    - - -

    Contributing to this story was Pat Morrison in Tunisia.

    Copyright (c) 2009 Catholic News Service/USCCB. All rights reserved.
    http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories /cns/0904167.htm
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