Pope Benedict waves to people from his 'Popemobile' |
Pope Benedict urged Arab leaders on Sunday at a huge
open-air Mass in Lebanon to work for reconciliation in a Middle East riven by
Syria's civil war and blazing with fury over a film mocking the Muslim Prophet
Mohammad.
"May God grant to your country, to Syria and to the
Middle East, the gift of peaceful hearts, the silencing of weapons and the
cessation of all violence," the pope said in a prayer after Mass that
organizers said was attended by 350,000 people.
Activists say more than 27,000 people have been killed in
Syria's 18-month-old, mainly Sunni Muslim uprising against President Bashar
al-Assad, who belongs to the minority Alawite sect that grew out of Shi'ite
Islam, reports Reuters.
Few Christians, who form about 10 percent of Syria's
population, have joined the uprising, fearing that it could bring hostile
Islamists to power in a fight raging just 50 km (30 miles) east of Benedict's
Mass in Beirut.
Addressing worshippers on the Mediterranean seafront, close
to the front-line of Lebanon's 1975-1990 civil war, Benedict said Lebanese
people "know all too well the tragedy of conflict and...the cry of the
widow and the orphan".
"I appeal to the Arab countries that, as brothers, they
might propose workable solutions respecting the dignity, the rights and the
religion of every human person," the 85-year-old pontiff said.
Peace between warring factions and among the many religious
groups in the Middle East has been a central theme of his visit to Lebanon,
along with his call to Christians not to leave the region despite war and
growing pressure from radical Islamists.
"In a world where violence constantly leaves behind its
grim trail of death and destruction, to serve justice and peace is urgently
necessary," Benedict said.
The pope has made no reference during his three-day visit to
a U.S-made film depicting the Prophet Mohammad which has caused unrest across
the Muslim world, including a protest in north Lebanon on Friday in which one
person was killed.
Politicians from all sectors of multi-faith Lebanon attended
the Mass, including from the militant Shi'ite group Hezbollah. Leaders of the
country's main religions all assured the Vatican of their support for the visit
in advance.
The Mass took place on reclaimed land next to the port
without any shade for the crowd, despite temperatures of more than 30 degrees
centigrade (86 Fahrenheit).
The altar was shielded from the sun under a canopy, but the
pope was seen mopping sweat from his forehead at one point.
Red Cross workers carried away at least two worshippers who
fainted from the heat half way through the celebration.
Many in the crowd wore white caps bearing the motto of the
visit, "salami o-tikum!" (Arabic for "my peace I give to
you"), a phrase the pope, known as 'Baba' in Arabic, has repeated in
several speeches.
Cedars of Lebanon, the country's symbol, featured in a white
backdrop to the altar where the pope presided over the Mass, and on the white
capes worn by prelates of the Maronite Church, the largest of six Christian
churches here linked to the Vatican.
Prelates from other Eastern Catholic churches stood out in
their distinctive gold or black vestments, in contrast to the green chasuble
worn by the pope. Hymns in Arabic added a local touch to the Gregorian and
classic Catholic works being sung.
Streets near Beirut's port were closed to traffic in the
morning and soldiers manned main intersections. Three military helicopters
buzzed overhead and a navy ship patrolled offshore.
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