Pope Francis targets Russia as he joins world religious leaders to call for end to 'childlike' warmongering at Bahrain interfaith summit
Pope Francis has called for the world’s religious leaders to counter “childlike” whims of the powerful to make wars at an interfaith summit in the Gulf kingdom of Bahrain.
Key points:
- Pope Francis told an interfaith summit in Bahrain that religious leaders gathering is evidence that they've chosen to "set sail on the same waters"
- Global Muslim, Christian and Jewish leaders were present
- It's the pope's second visit to a Gulf Arab country after a 2019 trip to Abu Dhabi
On Friday, with Russia's war in Ukraine raging, the pope joined Muslim, Christian and Jewish leaders in calling for the world's great religions work together for peace, telling the summit that religion must never be used to justify violence.
It was his second day in Bahrain and Pope Francis closed out a conference on East-West dialogue sponsored by King Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa.
That was his second such conference in as many months, following one in Kazakhstan.
The pope has previously said that people of different faiths meeting could help heal conflicts and promote a more just and sustainable world.
Sitting around him in the Sakhir royal palace grounds were leading Muslim imams, the spiritual leader of the world's Orthodox Christians, and US rabbis who have long engaged in interfaith dialogue, as well as the king himself.
Speaker after speaker called for an end to Russia's war in Ukraine and the start of peace negotiations.
The Russian Orthodox Church — which sent an envoy to the conference — has strongly supported the Kremlin in its war and justified it on religious grounds.
However, the pope told the gathering that, while the world seemed to be heading apart like two opposing seas, the mere presence of religious leaders together was evidence that they "intend to set sail on the same waters, choosing the route of encounter rather than that of confrontation".
"It is a striking paradox that, while the majority of the world's population is united in facing the same difficulties, suffering from grave food, ecological and pandemic crises, as well as an increasingly scandalous global injustice, a few potentates are caught up in a resolute struggle for partisan interests," he said.
"We appear to be witnessing a dramatic and childlike scenario: In the garden of humanity, instead of cultivating our surroundings, we are playing instead with fire, missiles and bombs, weapons that bring sorrow and death, covering our common home with ashes and hatred.”
King Hamad, for his part, urged a coherent effort to stop Russia's war in Ukraine and to promote peace negotiations, "for the good of all of humanity".
The visit was Pope Francis' second to a Gulf Arab country, after his 2019 landmark trip to Abu Dhabi, where he signed a document promoting Catholic-Muslim fraternity with a leading Sunni cleric, Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayeb, who is the grand imam of Al-Azhar, the seat of Sunni learning in Cairo, and has become the pope’s key partner in promoting greater Christian-Muslim understanding.
The Sheikh joined Pope Francis in Bahrain and was on hand last month in Kazakhstan too. In his prepared remarks, he called for an end to Russia's war "to spare the lives of innocents who have no hand in this violent tragedy".
He also called for Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims to engage in a similar process of dialogue, to try to heal their centuries of divisions, saying Al-Azhar was prepared to host such an encounter.
"Let us together chase away any talk of hate, provocation and excommunication and set aside ancient and modern conflict in all [their] forms and with all [their] negative offshoots," he said.
Bahrain praised as ‘role model’ for ‘coexistence and tolerance’
Bahrain is ruled by a Sunni monarchy that has been accused by human rights groups of systematic discrimination against its Shi'ite majority, charges the government rejects.
Later on Friday, Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayeb was to meet privately with Pope Francis and participate in a larger encounter at the mosque in the royal palace with the Muslim Council of Elders, which he heads.
Pope Francis was also bringing his message of dialogue to Bahrain's Christian leaders by presiding over an ecumenical meeting and peace prayer at the Our Lady of Arabia Cathedral, the largest Catholic Church in the Gulf, which was inaugurated last year on land gifted to the church by the king.
The pope opened his visit to Bahrain on Thursday by urging Bahrainian authorities to renounce the death penalty and ensure basic human rights were guaranteed for all citizens — a nod to Bahraini Shi'ite dissidents who have said they have been harassed and detained, subjected to torture and "sham trials", with some sentenced to death for their political activities.
However, the Bahrainian government denies discriminating against Shi'ites.
The pope also aimed to highlight Bahrain's tradition of religious tolerance.
Unlike neighbouring Saudi Arabia, where Christians cannot openly practice their faith, Bahrain is home to several Christian communities as well as a small Jewish community.
In his prepared remarks to the forum, US Rabbi Marc Schneier — who has long worked to promote Jewish-Muslim understanding and serves as the king's special adviser on interfaith matters — praised Bahrain as a "role model in the Arab world for coexistence and tolerance of different faith communities".
AP