Posted on 09/19/2006 7:22:26 AM PDT by NYer
Pope Benedict faced a growing chorus of demands on Tuesday for an unequivocal apology for remarks seen as portraying Islam as a violent faith, despite attempts by Western leaders and churchmen to defuse the crisis.
Even President Bush got involved, saying on Monday the Pope had been "sincere" when he said sorry to Muslims and that his words had been misunderstood.
But for many Muslims, the Pope's attempt to explain himself on Sunday did not go far enough and observers were waiting to see if he would speak about it again at his general audience at the Vatican on Wednesday.
The Pope enraged Muslims in a speech a week ago in Germany quoting 14th century Byzantine Emperor Manuel II Palaeologus, who said everything the Prophet Mohammad brought was evil "such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached."
The leader of the world's 1.1 billion Roman Catholics said on Sunday he was "deeply sorry" for the reaction caused -- but stopped short of apologizing for his words or retracting them.
In a telegram to the order of an Italian nun killed in Somalia who may be the crisis' first victim, the Pope hoped her sacrifice would help build "real fraternity among people with reciprocal respect of everyone's religious convictions."
But the deluge of criticism and threats continued. Italian media said an al Qaeda group in Egypt called for the German-born Pope, who is 79, to be punished by strict Islamic sharia law for insulting their religion. An al Qaeda umbrella group in Iraq has also vowed war on "worshippers of the cross."
Workers at Turkey's Directorate General for Religious Affairs, or Diyanet, petitioned for the arrest of the Pontiff when he makes a scheduled visit to Turkey in November.
They held banners saying "Either apologize or don't come."
The Pope's comments annoyed the Turkish government but there are no plans yet to cancel the trip.
In Iraq, where an effigy of the Pope was burned on Monday, parliament speaker Mahmoud al-Mashhadani called his apology "inadequate and not commensurate with the moral damage caused to Muslims' feelings."
The Grand Mufti of the Palestinian Territories, Sheikh Mohammad Hussein, said the Pope must make "a personal and clear apology to 1.5 billion Muslims in this world for the insult caused by his lecture..."
But the cleric asked for an end to attacks on churches in the area, after seven were vandalized this weekend.
WORDS TWISTED?
The president of mostly Catholic Slovenia, Janez Drnovsek, said on his Web site that Muslims were justifiably upset and that the pope should be big enough to learn from his error.
In Italy, politicians and churchmen defended the Pope and said his words were taken out of context and his explanation was quite clear. Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano published it in Arabic on its front page to try to clarify his meaning.
But while some Muslim clerics say the alleged insults are the latest skirmish in a new Western "crusade" against Islam, some Catholic churchmen say the Pontiff's words have been purposefully twisted by militant Muslims.
"We pray for the Pope whose words have been maliciously interpreted," Cardinal Crescenzio Sepe said in Naples at the annual "miracle" of fourth century Saint Gennaro, whose blood turns from powder to liquid in what is seen as a good omen.
The head of Australia's 5.1 million-strong Catholic church went as far as to say that violent reaction "justified one of Pope Benedict's main fears" about Islam.
Cardinal George Pell said this showed "the link for many Islamists between religion and violence, their refusal to respond to criticism with rational arguments, but only with demonstrations, threats and actual violence."
Local Muslims called Pell's comments "unhelpful."
Apologize ! If hell freezes over the Pope should not apologize , the muzzies can not understand or handle what the Pope said an apology won't change the fact . YOU CAN NOT FORCE ISLAM ON CHRISTIANS AND JEWS BY USING THE SORD .
No argument here. I was just carrying the metaphor all the way through. ;o)
Still waiting for the Muslims to apologize for 911.
Perhaps the Pope should convert to Islam and command all Catholics to do the same...that would probably suffice as an apology adequate for the Muslims.
From our friends at al Jazeera.
http://www.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/A2D5F059-EB04-43E3-9ADF-1ED7F5AD6345.htm
At the risk of being unchic, I think the Pope can be as outre as he wants to be! ;o)
Well Done! :-)
Funny thing. On first reading, I thought that said Palestinian terrorists.
Silly.
Well, since I represent the Catholics of Monmouth County, NJ with as much authority as Drnovsek represents Slovenian Catholics, and since there are as many observant Catholics here as there are in all of Slovenia, I hereby declare that the Muslims are big crybabies whining about nothing and that the pope should demand an apology from them.
Amen!!!!
D'oh...!
This is, after all, the Pope who appeared in public in a Santa Claus hat!
The Muslims need to get over themselves.
It's 11:52 a.m. EDT.
The Pope is seen as calling Islam a violent faith.
Muslim feelings are hurt. They respond by vandalizing churches and killing a nun.
And they want an apology after proving the Pope correct?
If I were the Pope (and it's a good thing I can't be) I would say, "Look, you have proven that you are a violent faith by your reaction to my words. If you can quell the violence without an apology, then I will consider whether an apology is in order. But while you are proving me correct, what would I be apologizing for, telling the truth?"
Shalom.
Someone pass the Koranimals a box of kleenex. They really need to get over themselves. The funny part is the speech was made on Tuesday and the koranimals didn't start rioting until late Friday/early Saturday? It's faster than the cartoon riots, perhaps the clerics got some tips on organization from the fine folks who brought us the immigration walk-outs.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.