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Pope, King
Abdullah meet in historic audience
Foreign Desk Report
VATICAN CITY—Benedict XVI raised concerns about restrictions on
Christian worship in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday in the first meeting ever
between a pope and a reigning Saudi king.
Benedict and other Vatican officials have often protested that
Christians are unable to worship openly in Saudi Arabia and are barred
from opening churches in the desert kingdom where Islam’s holiest sites,
Mecca and Medina, are located.
King Abdullah, the protector of the holy sites, requested the audience
during his European tour, the Vatican said. Benedict warmly greeted the
king, grasping both his hands before heading into 30 minutes of private
talks in his library.
At the end of the meeting, Abdullah presented Benedict with a
traditional Middle Eastern gift — a golden sword studded with jewels —
as well as a gold and silver statue of a palm tree and man riding a
camel. The pope admired the statue but merely touched the sword.
Islam is the official religion of Saudi Arabia and the kingdom requires
all Saudi citizens to be Muslims. Only Muslims can visit the cities of
Mecca and Medina.
Under the authoritarian rule of the royal family, the kingdom enforces
strict Sharia, or Islamic law. It follows a severe interpretation of
Islam known as Wahhabism which rejects the possibility of diplomatic
relations with a Christian entity. This interpretation would prohibit a
Vatican embassy in Saudi Arabia on the grounds it would be equivalent to
raising the cross inside the site of Islam’s holiest places.
It is forbidden to practice Christianity publicly inside Saudi Arabia,
and it is illegal to bring symbols from religions other than Islam into
the country. Bibles and crosses, for instance, are confiscated at the
border.
Some Christian worship services are held secretly, but the government
has been known to crack down on them, or deport workers from the
Philippines if they are known to hold even private services.
The United States has also criticized Saudi Arabia’s restrictions on
other religions. The Vatican has said it wants to pursue a dialogue with
moderate Muslims after the pope angered the Muslim world in 2006 with a
speech linking Islam to violence.
He later said he was misunderstood and regretted offending Muslims. He
has since met a number of Islamic leaders and a year ago visited
predominantly Muslim Turkey.
The Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano said the Vatican hoped the
meeting with the Saudi king would produce a frank dialogue on Christian
worship in the country, noting that there are more than 1 million
Christian guest workers in Saudi Arabia.
The Vatican said the “positive presence and work of Christians was
raised” during the talks. The talks were “warm” and allowed a wide
discussion on the need for interreligious and intercultural dialogue
among Christians, Muslims and Jews “for the promotion of peace, justice
and spiritual and moral values, especially in support of the family,” a
statement said. Benedict has said he wants to reach out to all countries
that still do not have diplomatic relations with the Vatican, which
include Saudi Arabia and China. Abdullah had visited the Vatican twice
before, as crown prince and deputy prime minister.
The two octogenarians met for half an hour, conversing through
interpreters. Abdullah, wearing a traditional blue, gold and white robe,
offered the 80-year-old Benedict a gold sword encrusted with stones and
accepted a 16th-century engraving of the Vatican from the pope.
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