Pope Francis invites Israeli, Palestinian leaders to Vatican peace talks
May 25, 2014 -- Updated 1739 GMT (0139 HKT)
Pope visits Bethlehem, calls for peace
Francis and Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople Bartholomew I pray over the Stone of Unction at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem's Old City on Sunday, May 25. The Pope joined Bartholomew in a historic joint prayer for Christian unity at Christianity's holiest site in Jerusalem.
Francis, center, leads an open-air Mass in Bethlehem on May 25.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: Pope Francis arrives in Tel Aviv, speaks to Israeli leaders
- Pope invites Palestinian and Israeli leaders to the Vatican to pray for peace
- Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas will go to Vatican, official says
- Israeli President Shimon Peres welcomes the invitation, his office says
The pontiff's remarks
came at the end of an outdoor Mass in Bethlehem's Manger Square on the
second day of his three-day trip to the Middle East.
"In this, the birthplace of the Prince of Peace, I wish to invite you, President Mahmoud Abbas, together with Israeli President Shimon Peres, to join me in heartfelt prayer to God for the gift of peace," Francis said.
"I offer my home in the Vatican as a place for this encounter of prayer."
He added, "Building peace
is difficult, but living without peace is a constant torment. The men
and women of these lands, and of the entire world, all of them, ask us
to bring before God their fervent hopes for peace."
Pope Francis arrives in Jordan's capital
Pope Francis blesses a man as he greets journalists aboard the papal flight on his way to Jordan on May 24.
Pope visits Holy Land
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Pope Francis
The Palestinian side has
accepted the invitation and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud
Abbas will go to the Vatican, a Palestinian Legislative Council member,
Hanan Ashrawi, told CNN.
The Israeli President's
office said that he welcomed the invitation. "President Peres has always
supported, and will continue to support, any attempts to progress the
cause of peace," his office said.
Pope Francis then traveled on to Tel Aviv, where in remarks on the airport tarmac to Peres and Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu,
he again issued an invitation to pray for peace at the Vatican. He also
reiterated the Vatican's support for Israel's right to exist in peace
and security.
The next stop on his historic trip was Jerusalem.
Two states
Earlier, speaking
alongside Abbas in the West Bank city of Bethlehem, Francis called for
the recognition of a Palestinian state -- but he made the same demand on
behalf of the state of Israel.
He urged "the
acknowledgment by all of the right of two states to exist and to live in
peace and security within internationally recognized borders."
The Pope called on all sides to pursue a path to peace together and not take unilateral actions to disrupt it.
"I can only express my
profound hope that all will refrain from initiatives and actions which
contradict the stated desire to reach a true agreement, and that peace
will be pursued with tireless determination and tenacity," he said.
Middle East peace talks
recently stalled despite high-profile efforts by U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry to push them forward.
The government of Israel
has objected to unilateral initiatives by Palestinians to seek
international recognition as a state, and Palestinians have objected to
Israeli initiatives to expand settlements on the West Bank.
Protecting Christians
In his remarks in Bethlehem, Francis called on Abbas to protect the religious rights of Palestinian Catholics.
Popes and the Queen
Popes and Presidents
The Vatican has expressed concern over the emigration of Palestinian Christians.
The pontiff also took a stand for the poor, suffering under tensions between Israelis and Palestinians.
"Even in the absence of
violence, the climate of instability and a lack of mutual understanding
have produced insecurity, the violation of rights, isolation and the
flight of entire communities, conflicts, shortages and sufferings of
every sort," he said.
After meeting with
Abbas, Francis cruised in the Popemobile through a crowd of hundreds of
Catholic faithful and onlookers gathered in Manger Square as they
awaited the papal Mass.
Priests and the faithful
swayed to religious music, while many waved red, green, black and white
Palestinian flags and others yellow and white Vatican flags.
The Pope hopped off the Popemobile to shake hands with people in the crowd.
In a symbolically
charged moment, he also stopped the vehicle to cross over to the
separation barrier erected by Israel, its surface daubed with graffiti
including the words "Free Palestine!" There, arm outstretched, he
touched the concrete wall, his head apparently bowed in prayer.
Mustafa Barghouti,
general secretary of the Palestine National Initiative, told CNN, "The
Pope did not only put his hand on a concrete wall. He put his hand on
occupation. He put his hand on (an) apartheid system, on a system of
separation, and discrimination, and oppression."
Refugee children make appeal
Francis also met with a group of Palestinian refugee children while in the West Bank.
As they entered, the
children held up signs about the occupation of Palestinian territories,
typed in Arabic, Italian and English.
"Muslims and Christians
live under the occupation," read one. Another said, "I have never been
to the sea!" in an apparent reference to the restrictions on movement
under which Palestinians live.
After the children sang
and presented him with gifts, the Pope responded in his native tongue,
Spanish, to say he had heard their message.
"Never let the past determine your lives," he said. "Violence is not overcome by violence. Violence is overcome by peace."
While in Jerusalem, Francis will meet with Bartholomew, the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople.
His visit to the region
commemorates the 50th anniversary of the landmark meeting between Pope
Paul VI and the spiritual leader of the world's Orthodox Christians at
the time, Patriarch Athenagoras, in Jerusalem.
The pope will also meet
the city's grand mufti and chief rabbis, visit the Western Wall and Yad
Vashem, a memorial to the Holocaust, and lay a wreath on the grave of
the founder of modern Zionism, Theodor Herzl.
The Holy Land visit is
the first for Francis as leader of the Roman Catholic Church, and just
the fourth for any pontiff in the modern era.
'Urgent' solution needed to Syrian crisis
On the first day of his
trip, Francis also gave a message of unity as he celebrated Mass at a
stadium in Amman, Jordan -- a majority Muslim nation with a significant
Christian community.
In his homily, Francis spoke of the need for tolerance and diversity and urged everyone to put aside grievances and divisions.
"The mission of the Holy
Spirit is to beget harmony ... and to create peace in different
situations and between different people," he said.
"Let us ask the Spirit
to prepare our hearts to encounter our brothers and sisters so that we
may overcome our differences rooted in political thinking, language,
culture and religion."
Christian refugees from Syria, Iraq and the Palestinian territories were among those present, and 1,400 children received their First Communion at the Mass.
The Pope's trip to the Holy Land has been billed as a "pilgrimage for prayer," with its roots in faith, not politics.
But in a region where religion and politics are so closely intertwined, his every remark takes on an added significance.
The pontiff is traveling
with two friends -- a rabbi, Abraham Skorka, and a Muslim, Sheikh Omar
Abboud, who leads Argentina's Muslim community. The Vatican has said
their presence is symbolic of his call for unity.
The Pope's first stop was at al-Husseini Royal Palace in Amman, where he met with Jordan's King Abdullah II.
In televised remarks
after that meeting, Francis paid tribute to Jordan's efforts to promote
interfaith tolerance and to the welcome that the small nation has given
to Palestinian refugees and, more recently, those fleeing war-torn
Syria.
Francis said it was "necessary and urgent" that a peaceful solution is found to the crisis in Syria.
While in Jordan, Francis
met some of the 600,000 Syrians who have fled since the start of the
civil war in 2011, as well as refugees from Iraq. He also visited the
River Jordan, where many Christians believe Jesus was baptized.
http://edition.cnn.com/2014/05/25/world/pope-mideast-trip/index.html?hpt=imi_c1
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