http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-2095387,00.html



I feel the pain of terrorism, Charles tells the Arab world

>From Damian Whitworth in Cairo 

  <http://images.thetimes.co.uk/images/trans.gif>       


REFLECTING on how a terrorist outrage shattered his own life as a young man,
the Prince of Wales spoke last night of his "heavy heart" at the death and
destruction he sees in the world as he called for a greater tolerance
between faiths. 

Arriving in Egypt at the start of only his second official overseas tour
with the Duchess of Cornwall, the Prince spoke of how the murder of his
mentor Earl Mountbatten, who was blown up while out fishing with his family
in Ireland, had given him a personal insight into the impact of terrorism. 



        
        
"I find my heart is incredibly heavy from all the destruction and death that
occurs," he said. "I know so well from having experienced the horror of
terrorism myself, in losing my beloved great-uncle Lord Mountbatten back in
1979 when he was blown up in a terrorist bomb. I do have some understanding
I think, a little, of what people go through with these horrors." 

The Prince regarded Mountbatten as his "honorary grandfather" and was very
close to him. The Prince was beginning a two-week tour of the Middle East
and India during which he will elaborate on a favourite theme: the need for
greater tolerance between faiths. He will give a speech today on "unity in
faith", and in an interview with an Egyptian television station last night,
he said: " 


People who are reasonable and responsible and feel things in the heart need
to work even harder, I think, and speak up louder about the vital importance
of understanding that, at the end of the day, the three great Abrahamic
faiths do share an awful lot more in common than perhaps people realise." 


He added: "It's tolerance, it's understanding of what other people hold
sacred, which I think is so vital - the old wisdom that is contained within
the scriptures of 'do unto others as you would have them do to you'." 


In his speech at al-Azhar University, where he will number among a very few
non-Muslims invited to speak, he will emphasise that Christianity, Islam and
Judaism have much in common, and will illustrate his point by quoting from
the texts of each faith. Last year the Prince allowed his new wife a gentle
introduction to the business of royal overseas working visits with a
comfortable week-long jaunt to the United States. This tour, which should
provide rich material for his diaries, if he is still writing them, is more
of a marathon, taking in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and India in just under a
fortnight, and it has a serious mission. The Foreign and Commonwealth
Office, which conceived the tour, recognises that the Prince's long track
record as an advocate of better dialogue between the West and Muslim
countries makes him one of Britain's most effective ambassadors to the
Islamic world. The Prince's 1993 speech calling on the West to overcome its
prejudices about Islam was acclaimed throughout the Arab world. 


The Prince suggested that his earlier speech had not been as successful as
he would have liked in preventing a spiral of terrorist violence. "I have a
dreadful feeling that what I was trying to say then, what I was warning
about, seems to have been coming about. The situation does seem to have
worsened which is a tragedy. What I was trying to do 12 years ago was remind
people of the crucial importance of building bridges and maintaining those
bridges. I could see there were real problems building up on the horizon." 


He added that it was "utter lunacy to start killing each other when we
should be united in the greatest challenge that has ever faced the world,
the environmental challenge". 


The Prince will not enjoy the unanimous good wishes of staff at Al-Azhar
university when he receives an honourary degree today. "All the prince did
is say that Islam is the most widespread religion in the world and that's a
reality not a discovery by the prince," said Abdel Azim al-Mataani, a
lecturer in Arab literature. "That's not enough for him to receive such a
reward." As well as this new speech, he will promote British education and
Islamic art in the country and visit an oasis town. Last night the couple
met the Aga Khan at al-Azhar Park, a lush example of another subject close
to the Prince's heart: urban renewal. The Prince was seen deep in
conversation with the Aga Khan. Later the royal couple had a private tour of
the Egyptian Museum, which holds treasures from Tutankhamun's tomb. 

  <http://images.thetimes.co.uk/images/trans.gif>       
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,13509-2095387,00.html
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