‘Extremist Christian’; Local Shia cleric sounds a sour note on Papal visit
AMMAN, Jordan (AP): Despite Pope Benedict XVI’s recent steps in Turkey to remake his battered image among Muslims, many religious leaders in the Arab world said Sunday that he still needed to make amends for his remarks about Islam’s Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) before relations could fully be restored. This, despite Benedict’s favorable reception in Turkey, where the country’s top Muslim cleric Mustafa Cagrici, waxed lyrical about “a spring ahead for this world” after praying alongside the 79-year-old pope in the direction of Makkah at Istanbul’s famed Blue Mosque.Cagrici called the moment “even more meaningful than an apology.” But a spokesman for Jordan’s influential Muslim Brotherhood chapter labeled the pope’s visit last week to Muslim Turkey as “futile,” saying the Roman Catholic pontiff had yet to apologize completely to Muslims for his statements.
“We have never stood against dialogue between Muslims and Christians, but the Pope’s positions, his statements and his determination not to apologize clearly make any such attempts futile,” Jamil Abu-Bakr said, referring to a controversial lecture the pontiff delivered in September, when he quoted a medieval Christian emperor describing the teachings of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) as “evil and inhuman.” Although Benedict later expressed regret for the remarks, many Arab Muslims said he has still failed to adequately apologize for statements that caused an explosion of outrage among their numbers. “This visit didn’t diminish the frustration in the Muslim world and other measures are required to rectify the matter,” Abu Bakr argued.
In Kuwait, Shiite cleric Abdul-Hussein Qazwini said he believed the pope’s visit would have been more meaningful “if had it been made to a Muslim country such as Saudi Arabia or Iran,” rather than to Turkey, Benedict’s first visit to a predominantly Muslim country. In entering the mosque, he became only the second Roman Catholic pope to do so since the groundbreaking visit of his predecessor John Paul II to the Ummayad Mosque in Damascus, Syria in May 2001. But Qazwini called Turkey “a secular country, and said that the pope’s visit there “had no effect on anything.” He criticized Benedict calling him “an extremist Christian,” and said he hoped that the pope would have said “something to Muslims showing he had changed his mind” about the quotation.
Ibrahim Zayed al-Kilani of Jordan’s Islamic Action Front, the country’s largest political opposition party, said Arab Muslims are still smarting from the pain of the Pope’s remarks. “We cannot forget them,” he said. This visit (to Turkey) did not in any way erase the pain or the frustrations for us because this pope is well-known for sympathizing with the Zionist movement and the Jews. When he was elected Pope, he expressed his empathy for Israel,” al-Kilani alleged. “When he attacked the Prophet (PBUH), he violated Christian principles,” he argued without elaborating.
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Tuesday, December 05, 2006
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