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Pope Francis Fails To Find Common Ground In Turkey

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  • Pope Francis Fails To Find Common Ground In Turkey

    POPE FRANCIS FAILS TO FIND COMMON GROUND IN TURKEY

    The Christian Science Monitor
    November 30, 2014 Sunday

    Francis said the rise of the Islamic State militant group in Iraq
    and Syria is a threat to the region's Christian minority. Turkey's
    President Erdogan said the fault lies with the West.

    by Nick Squires Correspondent

    The idea was to reach out to Muslims, but Pope Francis got a distinctly
    prickly reception from his hosts during his first trip to Turkey.

    In a series of strongly-worded addresses in Ankara and Istanbul,
    the 77-year-old Pope blamed the "fanaticism" of the Islamic State
    (IS) and other militant groups for persecuting Christians in Syria
    and Iraq and forcing an exodus of communities that have lived in the
    Middle East for 2,000 years.

    But President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who received the leader of the
    world's 1.2 billion Catholics at his controversial $600 million palace
    outside Ankara on Friday, took a very different tack.

    He said extremist groups like IS, responsible for beheading prisoners,
    enslaving captives, and promising to wipe out religious minorities
    like Yazidis in Iraq and Syria, are a consequence of "the rise of
    Islamophobia" in the West.

    "Those who feel defeated, wronged, oppressed and abandoned... can
    become open to being exploited by terror organizations," the Turkish
    leader said.

    While the Pope called for conciliation and dialogue, President Erdogan
    took a swipe at the West, blaming it for many of the problems in the
    Middle East.

    Blame the 'foreigners'

    On Thursday Erdogan said "foreigners" do not like Muslims and are
    only interested in exploiting the Middle East's natural resources.

    "Foreigners love oil, gold, diamonds and the cheap labor force of the
    Islamic world. They like the conflicts, fights and quarrels of the
    Middle East. Believe me, they don't like us. They look like friends,
    but they want us dead, they like seeing our children die," said
    Erdogan, whose abrasive style confounds the West but has endeared him
    to millions of Muslims, not just in Turkey but across the Middle East.

    The president repeated his complaint about growing anti-Muslim
    sentiment in the West when the Pope turned up at his sprawling palace
    on Friday.

    Erdogan told Francis that there was a "very serious and rapid trend
    of growth in racism, discrimination, and hatred of others, especially
    Islamophobia in the West."

    Expressing concern for the plight of Christians was a key plank of
    the Pope's three-day visit, but it clashed with the fact that Turkey
    has been accused of fomenting the persecution of Christians and other
    minorities by failing to stop Islamist militants from crossing its
    borders to fight in Syria and Iraq.

    Turkey's reluctance to join the US-led campaign of air strikes against
    IS also jarred with the position of the Pope, who during his visit
    said it was legitimate to stop "an unjust aggressor," while insisting
    that military force was not a solution by itself.

    The Pope expressed his dismay at the persecution of Christians in a
    joint declaration with Patriarch Bartholomew I, the spiritual head of
    the world's 300 million Orthodox Christians, who is based in Istanbul.

    "We cannot resign ourselves to a Middle East without Christians,
    who have professed the name of Jesus there for 2,000 years," the two
    leaders said. "Many of our brothers and sisters are being persecuted
    and have been forced violently from their homes."

    Blue Mosque

    Francis's desire to build better relations with the Muslim world
    was illustrated when he visited Istanbul's Blue Mosque on Saturday,
    engaging in a few minutes of silent contemplation alongside the chief
    mufti, Rahmi Yaran.

    It was not strictly a prayer, the Vatican said, because it took
    place in a non-Christian place of worship, but rather "a moment of
    silent adoration."

    Aside from differences of opinion with President Erdogan, the Pope
    received a distinctly underwhelming reception in Turkey - little
    surprise, perhaps, given that around 99 percent of the population is
    Muslim and only around 80,000 Christians remain in the country.

    There were none of the cheering crowds that have greeted him on his
    previous international trips, which have included visits to the Holy
    Land, South Korea and Brazil, where millions of people crowded onto
    Copacabana beach in Rio de Janeiro to hear the pontiff speak.

    "He seems like a good man, but I don't really care about his visit,"
    says Ahmet, the owner of a carpet store in the historic heart of
    Istanbul.

    A tiny group of Christians turned up when he visited Hagia Sophia,
    a Christian basilica dating back to the fifth century, when Istanbul
    was Constantinople.

    It was converted into a mosque after the Ottoman conquest of the
    city in the 15th century, but then turned into a museum in the 1930s
    under the secular rule of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of
    modern Turkey.

    "We're very happy to see him here," said Can Barlas, a 50-year-old
    Turkish Christian who belongs to the Armenian Catholic Church.

    As he spoke, army snipers could be seen on the slender minarets
    that surround Hagia Sophia, and a drone operated by Turkish police
    hovered overhead.

    On the third and final day of his trip, on Sunday, the Argentinean
    pontiff met a group of Christian and Muslim refugees forced to flee
    Syria and Iraq and now living in Istanbul.

    The group of 100 refugees, three-quarters of them children, are among
    the estimated 30,000 Christians who have sought sanctuary in Turkey
    since the start of the Syrian war.

    "Your difficult situation...is the sad consequence of brutal conflicts
    and war," the Pope told the refugees, who receive assistance from
    the Salesians, a Roman Catholic order. "The degrading conditions in
    which so many refugees are forced to live are intolerable."

    The Vatican confirmed that the Pope had wanted to visit a refugee camp
    on the border with Syria but said that there had not been enough time
    to include it in his schedule.

    "The Pope desires many things but there was no time to do it," said
    Rev Federico Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman. "If we had had four or
    five days instead of three, then maybe it would have been possible."

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