(http://www.washingtonpost.com/)  
 


 
 
 




Vatican says world  ignores Christians in Mideast
By VICTOR L. SIMPSON and MENELAOS HADJICOSTIS
The Associated  Press
Sunday, June 6, 2010; 2:03 PM 
NICOSIA, Cyprus -- The Vatican said Sunday that the international community 
 is ignoring the plight of Christians in the Middle East, and that the  
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the war in Iraq and political instability in  
Lebanon have forced thousands to flee the region.  
A working paper released during Pope Benedict XVI's pilgrimage to Cyprus to 
 prepare for a crisis summit of Middle East bishops in Rome in October also 
cites  the "extremist current" unleashed by the rise of "political Islam" 
as a threat  to Christians.  
The paper said that the line between religion and politics is blurred in  
Muslim countries, "relegating Christians to the precarious position of being  
considered non-citizens, despite the fact that they were citizens of their  
countries long before the rise of Islam."  
"The key to harmonious living between Christians and Muslims is to 
recognize  religious freedom and human rights," it said.  
In his final Mass in Cyprus on Sunday, Benedict said he was praying that 
the  October meeting will focus the attention of the international community 
"on the  plight of those Christians in the Middle East who suffer for their 
beliefs."  
He appealed for an "urgent and concerted international effort to resolve 
the  ongoing tensions in the Middle East, especially in the Holy Land, before 
such  conflicts lead to greater bloodshed."  
The Vatican considers mostly Greek Orthodox Cyprus as a bridge between 
Europe  and the Middle East and invited bishops to come to the Mediterranean 
island to  receive the working paper.  
The pope said Cyprus can "play a particular role in promoting dialogue and  
cooperation" in the region.  
A meeting between the pope and a Muslim leader was scrapped after the 
Turkish  Cypriot official was delayed crossing the United Nations-controlled 
buffer zone  that divides the island between ethnic Turks and Greeks, the 
Vatican said.  
Yusuf Suicmez, the head of Turkish Cypriots' religious affairs department,  
said he had hoped to pray with the pope for peace and brotherhood. Benedict 
 briefly met with another Turkish Cypriot Muslim leader on Saturday as part 
of  efforts to talk to both sides of the island's decades-old conflict and 
help  foster reconciliation.  
Cyprus was ethnically split in 1974 when Turkey invaded after a coup by  
supporters of union with Greece. Turkish Cypriots declared an independent  
republic in the north in 1983, but only Turkey recognizes it, and it maintains  
35,000 troops there.  
The island's Greek Cypriot President Dimitris Christofias and newly-elected 
 Turkish Cypriot leader Dervis Eroglu resumed long-running reunification 
talks in  May after a two-month pause for the poll. The talks have yielded 
only limited  progress so far.  
Benedict has tread a careful diplomatic path since arriving Friday on the  
island, but he made a poignant appeal for peace before leaving.  
The pope said he saw for himself the "sad division of the island" and that 
he  was "deeply moved" by the pleas of Cypriots who wished to return to 
homes in the  north that were lost during the war.  
"Let me encourage you and your fellow citizens to work patiently and  
steadfastly with your neighbors to build a better and more certain future for  
all your children," the pope said.  
A group of around 100 Orthodox Christian demonstrators earlier staged a  
peaceful protest against Benedict's visit outside the Nicosia sports stadium  
where the pope presided over Mass, holding aloft banners calling the pope "a 
 heretic."  
The Vatican estimates there are about 17 million Christians from Iran to  
Egypt, and that while many Christians have fled, new Catholic immigrants -  
mostly from the Philippines, India and Pakistan - have arrived in recent 
years  in Arab countries to work as domestic or manual laborers.  
The 46-page document said input from clerics in the region blamed the 
Israeli  occupation of Palestinian territories for inhibiting freedom of 
movement, the  economy and religious life, alleging that access to holy places 
is 
dependent on  military permission that is sometimes denied on security 
grounds.  
It also complained that some Christian fundamentalists use biblical texts 
to  justify Israel's occupation "making the position of Christian Arabs an 
even more  sensitive issue."  
The document said the rise of "political Islam" in Arab, Turkish and 
Iranian  societies and its extremist currents are "clearly a threat to 
everyone,  
Christians and Muslims alike."  
The Vatican expects about 150 bishops to attend the Oct. 10-24 meeting in  
Rome.  
© 2010 The  Associated Press
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