Posted on 09/16/2012 8:02:01 PM PDT by Alex Murphy
Its not often during a papal trip that a Catholic bishop and one of the popes official hosts actually corrects the boss, or at least strikes a slightly different note, but it happened Saturday night to Benedict XVI in Lebanon vis-à-vis the most important movement in this part of the world, the Arab Spring.
Last night, Benedict visited the headquarters of the Maronite church, by far the largest of the seven Catholic churches in the country, to celebrate a youth rally that drew an estimated 20,000 young Lebanese, mostly Catholics but with some Muslims in the crowd as well.
Prior to Benedicts speech, the crowd heard from several figures, including Archbishop Georges Bou-Jaoude of Tripoli, a Maronite, who heads up the lay apostolate here. Bou-Jaoudes brief welcome included a slightly different take on the Arab Spring than that offered by Benedict himself on Friday, in remarks to reporters aboard the papal plane.
Speaking about Lebanons youth, the archbishop said: They know they are called to rebuild their country together on a sound footing after long years of war lived in Lebanon for decades. Its the same feeling of young people among our Arab neighbors after the upheavals facing their respective countries during the so-called Arab Spring, who are hoping that this is really a spring.
Thats a somewhat more skeptical note than the line offered by Benedict, who said that in itself the Arab Spring is a positive thing."
Its a desire for greater democracy, for greater liberty, greater cooperation and a renewed Arab identity, the pope also said, calling the movements in the Arab world a very positive and healthy thing, also for us Christians.
To be sure, Benedict went on to add that theres a risk that the present push for liberty may forget tolerance of the other. Moreover, the pope has repeatedly stressed the importance of religious freedom and the need to build societies which respect minority rights throughout his three-day trip.
Further, its not as if Bou-Jaoude were explicitly responding to Benedicts comment. His welcome was prepared days in advance, well before he had any idea what the pope might say to reporters.
Still, Bou-Jaoudes take on the Arab Spring inescapably came off as slightly less rosy.
Perhaps not accidentally, Bou-Jaoude is the archbishop of Tripoli, in Lebanons north, where on Friday Muslim protestors smashed a Kentucky Fried Chicken and a Hardees, and later tried to storm a government building, leaving one person dead and several wounded. Tripoli has also been the scene of sectarian violence between Shiites and Alawites in recent months.
In reality, Bou-Jaoudes caution probably comes closer to capturing the sentiments of many Christians across the Middle East, many of whom fear that the Arab Spring may turn into a Christian winter.
Recent history illustrates its not a hollow concern. In Iraq after Saddam Hussein fell, in some ways it's become open season on Christians. According to the Hammurabi Human Rights Organization in Iraq, some 900 Iraqi Christians were killed between 2003 and May 2012, while 200 were kidnapped, tortured and ultimately released for exorbitant ransoms. While there were 1.5 million Christians in the country prior to the First Gulf War in 1991, today the high-end estimate is 450,000.
Many Christian leaders in places such as Egypt and Syria worry it may be their turn next that the fall of a dictatorial regime will not usher in vibrant democracy, but rather chaos and a rising fundamentalist tide, with Christians bearing the brunt.
In the run-up to the papal visit to Lebanon, Fr. Rafic Greiche, spokesperson for the Catholic Coptic church in Egypt, stressed that the countrys Christians understand that many Muslims have been offended by the obscure American movie attacking Islam which has been cited as a pretext for the violence thats spread across the region this week.
In the same breath, however, Greiche complained that the Muslim world rises up whenever anyone insults Muhammad, yet Christians in Egypt appear to be open season.
After the fall of Mubarak, the Salafis and the Muslim Brotherhood have filled the newsstands and shops with newspapers, magazines, books that contain entire passages against Christians each week, he said.
Magdi Cristiano Allam, an Egyptian-born convert to Christianity who's a prominent Italian figure and member of the European parliament, recently said: "If we are to assess the 'Arab Spring' by its fruits, we must conclude that it is not a good tree," claiming it has emboldened Islamic terrorism.
In Syria too, many Christian leaders worry about the aftermath should the Assad regime implode -- in part because some elements among the rebel forces have reportedly adopted the motto, "Christians to Lebanon, Alawites to the grave!"
Jesuit Fr. Samir Khalil Samir, an Egyptian who teaches in Rome and Beirut, and whose views on Islam carry weight in the Vatican, recently declared that the Arab Spring is "no more," claiming that it's been hijacked by Islamist groups, including in his homeland.
In that sense, the slight but significant contrast between the papal line and the archbishops the verbal difference between positive and healthy, and so-called perhaps captures the ambivalence that many Christians across the region presently feel.
Speaking about Lebanons youth, the archbishop said: They know they are called to rebuild their country together on a sound footing after long years of war lived in Lebanon for decades. Its the same feeling of young people among our Arab neighbors after the upheavals facing their respective countries during the so-called Arab Spring, who are hoping that this is really a spring.
Thats a somewhat more skeptical note than the line offered by Benedict, who said that in itself the Arab Spring is a positive thing." Its a desire for greater democracy, for greater liberty, greater cooperation and a renewed Arab identity, the pope also said, calling the movements in the Arab world a very positive and healthy thing, also for us Christians.
Guess that means we can’t count on a new crusade anytime soon.
Oh well, im not Catholic, but the last 2 popes have done a lot more good than bad i my book. JP2 is almost a saint, and brought down communism as much as anyone. And this guy is good too. Ill give em some space.
But lord protect him in that part of the world. He has stones Obama doesn’t. You’d never see Obama going where the pope will.
Dear Archbishop Georges Bou-Jaoude,
The purpose of “Arab Spring democracy” is to enable Al Qaeda to elect their own to power, and get rid of the current governments which have held on to peace with the West.
“Hoping” this won’t happen is like jumping out of an airplane without a parachute and hoping for a soft landing.
P.S. Stick to religion. As a Catholic, you’re an Archbishop. In politics, you’re throwing sheep to wolves. Doing both makes people wonder if they’re both the same job.
Pope Benedict XVI is correct. In and of itself, the Arab Spring is a good thing and it was brought about by the desire for a good thing - freedom from oppression. It is the desire for this good thing that is being exploited by the those who need to topple these sovereign nations and their oppressive regimes, to enable them to enslave the people under a new, even more oppressive, force. All of these nations are intended to lose their sovereignty and be more oppressed than before, in the end. Enough prayer can prevent that from happening.
Speaking about Blessed John Paul II, this RC news report reminds me when Blessed JP II visited this country on his papal visit, at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in D.C., there was this disident nun who tried to stand up to BJP II and try to challenge him on some issue or another, which at this time of the day, early morning I have no idea it was about.
Anyone who would know or remember what it was, PLEASE fill me in on it. Thank-you! :)=^..^=
Rather the “Arab spring” was sadly or rather has been “hijacked” by those who have dreams of another Muslim “caliphate”, unlike Eastern Europe, which before it experienced its liberation from the oppression of communism, had the foundation set to make freedom possible, business and culture wise.
....As seen last week over in Lybia by the murder of those four Americans.
Remember also too that the Christian faith is really the “fastest growing faith” with Islam in second place.
I suspect the “correction” is either a deliberate effort to appease Muslims and score political points or the habit of a Christian who is a dhimmi first and a member of the church second.
The rest of the story which you omitted in your cut and paste job.
Thanks Alex Murphy.
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