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Pope Appeals To Political, Religious Leaders To Help Iraq Reconstruc

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  • Pope Appeals To Political, Religious Leaders To Help Iraq Reconstruc

    POPE APPEALS TO POLITICAL, RELIGIOUS LEADERS TO HELP IRAQ RECONSTRUCTION, RECONCILIATION

    AP Worldstream
    Oct 22, 2006

    Pope Benedict XVI on Sunday appealed to political and religious
    leaders in Iraq and the world to help the conflict-ridden country
    in its reconstruction, and expressed solidarity with the Christian
    community and all victims of the violence there.

    In his Sunday prayer in St. Peter's Square, Benedict also sent his
    "cordial greetings" to Muslims, who are celebrating the holy Muslim
    month of Ramadan, and wished them "serenity and peace."

    The pope expressed worry for the "news coming out of Iraq on the
    very grave situation of insecurity and brutal violence to which many
    innocent people are subjected only because (they are) Shiites, Sunnis
    or Christians."

    Benedict appealed to "the religious leaders, the political leaders,
    both local and of the world, to support those people on the path to
    reconstructing their homeland, in the search of a shared balance, in
    mutual respect, in the awareness that the plurality of its components
    is an integral part of its wealth."

    "I perceive the great worry that runs through the Christian community
    and I intend to assure that I am close to it, as I am to all victims,
    and for all I call for strength and consolation," the pope said.

    Christians make up just 3 percent of Iraq's 26 million people. The
    major Christian groups include Chaldean-Assyrians and Armenians,
    with small numbers of Roman Catholics.

    Benedict has been calling for dialogue between Christianity and Islam.

    He stepped up that call lately after coming under siege from Muslim
    protests over a quotation from a Medieval Byzantine emperor about
    Islam and violence.

    The remarks came during a Sept. 12 speech about faith and reason at
    a university in Germany.

    Benedict has said that his words were misunderstood and that he was
    sorry that Muslims were offended.

    On Friday, the Vatican released its annual Ramadan message and called
    on Muslims to join Catholics in working to defeat terrorism.
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