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Local News
Catholics hope Amir's visit with Pope will secure their home


Published Date: April 29, 2010 

KUWAIT: The inclusion of the Vatican in a state trip by His Highness the Amir 
to Europe that began this week has left Kuwait's Catholics praying for an 
announcement that will secure the future of their church and relieve 
overcrowding that they say is putting their congregations at risk. The Amir was 
in Germany earlier this week and will also visit Italy and the Vatican during 
his tour.

The possibility of a meeting with the pope has raised hopes among Kuwait's 
350,000 Catholics that Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al- Sabah will use the opportunity 
to renew a 50-year lease for church land, which was given to the church by 
former Amir, Sheikh Abdullah Al-Salem Al-Sabah and is due to expire in 2016.

Bishop Camillo Ballin, the spiritual leader of Kuwait's Catholics, who has 
worked in the Middle East for 41 years, including five in Kuwait, said: "I'm 
trying to see what might happen after six years.

Bishop Ballin said the Vatican never invites other states to visit so the 
Kuwaiti delegation must have asked to meet the Pope. He said he is not involved 
in discussions about what the two leaders will discuss, but "we hope that the 
contract will be renewed for 50 more years".

A diplomatic source close to the issue believes the Amir might use the visit to 
announce something related to the Kuwaiti churches. He said this "could be the 
moment of truth" for the Catholic community in Kuwait.

Bishop Ballin said: "I hope to keep this land and besides that to have other 
land, especially in the boundaries in Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh, because there are many 
thousands of Catholics and they need a place otherwise they are lost.

We don't ask for privileges, we don't ask to have special laws, special 
agreements, we just ask to be able to pray." The church has not asked for the 
lease to be renewed yet, "because this procedure should start one year before 
the expiry", Bishop Ballin said. He believes the church's location is coveted 
by owners of hotels and restaurants.

Two of Kuwait's churches - Evangelical and Catholic - are built on prime sites 
near the capital's coast. Another Catholic and an Anglican church are built far 
from the city centre in Ahmadi on land that is owned by Kuwait Oil Company. The 
government recently relocated the Coptic Orthodox from the city centre to the 
suburbs because of construction and compensated it with a grant of land 10 
times the size of the previous plot. The Armenian and Greek Orthodox 
denominations also worship in rented villas in the
city.

Representatives of the Evangelical Church were unavailable for comment about 
their lease. Archbishop Petar Rajic is the apostolic nuncio to Kuwait, Bahrain, 
Qatar, Yemen and the UAE and apostolic delegate in the Arabian Peninsula, 
making him in effect the Vatican's ambassador to the region. The Archbishop 
declined to answer questions related to the leases because "I do not feel 
competent to do so", but did say that the Amir's visit would be "beneficial for 
both sides".

Another major concern for all of Kuwait's 460,000 Christians is that they are 
vying for space in existing places of worship. At the Catholic Church on 
Sunday, several hundred crammed inside for the service while hundreds more 
gathered on the grounds, ready to file in as soon as the previous congregation 
left.

Bishop Ballin said his church hosts 28 services on Saturday and Sunday and a 
total of 46 every week. He said the church is built on 5,000 square meters of 
land, but it needs at least 40,000. Two years ago, he requested more land from 
the Amir, but did not receive a reply, he said.

If panic is caused in the church, we will have hundreds of people die. So we 
are just asking the country for a place to pray: to pray for the country, to 
pray for the Amir ... We don't want anything else," he said.

Any move to give the country's Christians more land will not be received well 
by some of Kuwait's Islamists, who believe that no non-Muslim places of worship 
should be built in Kuwait.

Many other denominations use the grounds of the city centre's two churches. 
Father Jose Mathew, the spiritual leader of Kuwait's 10,000-strong Indian 
Orthodox community, which mostly comes from Kerala, hosts two services a week 
in the Evangelical Church. He said 83 other congregations share the church's 
two main halls and several smaller rooms.

At a flat in Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh under two large pictures of the long, 
white-bearded supreme head of his church, Baselios Marthoma Didymus I, Father 
Mathew said a lack of space in his services forces most of his congregation to 
stand outside the church, and they cannot hold many of their traditional 
celebrations and feasts because their allotted time is not enough.

Most of the people are hesitating to come. They are coming with their families 
and they are not getting space inside the church, so they feel that they should 
stay and pray in their homes. They have the basic right to worship," he said.

Some of the country's largest Christian communities, including Catholics, 
Copts, Protestants, Armenian and Greek Orthodox, voice their concerns through 
the Christian Council Forum, which is also attended by a Kuwaiti Christian, Rev 
Amanuel Ghareb.

Father Mathew said the group met in December and voiced concerns over a lack of 
space, and Rev Ghareb promised to bring the issue up when he met the Amir, but 
he has not yet heard a reply. The reverend declined to comment on anything 
related to the leases or new land. "We hope and pray" the Amir will announce 
something on his visit to the Vatican, Father Mathew said. -Agencies

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