Page 5, 4th June 2010

4th June 2010

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Page 5, 4th June 2010 — Pope flies to Cyprus as region enters crisis
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Pope flies to Cyprus as region enters crisis

BY CINDY WOODEN IN ROME
JUST 13 MONTHS after he visited the Holy Land Pope Benedict XVI will give Christians in the Middle East his full attention again as he visits Cyprus today.
Christians on the small island in the eastern Mediterranean Sea share a biblical heritage with Middle Eastern Christians and face some of the same challenges in finding ways to live in peace and security in a land shared with people from other ethnic and religious groups.
The visit comes amid rising tensions in the region following the deaths of at least 10 protesters killed on Monday by Israeli commandos who stormed a ship aiming to break the blockade of Gaza. The violence has already been condemned by the Vatican.
Since 1974 Cyprus has been divided. UN peacekeepers patrol a buffer zone between the area controlled by the government of Cyprus and about one-third of the island which is controlled by Turkish Cypriots.
Negotiations to end the island’s division are continuing — President Demetris Christofias and the recently elected Turkish Cypriot leader Dervis Eroglu met for the first time last week – but relations are peaceful enough that tourists and residents cross the buffer zone with relative ease.
A key sticking point in the negotiations is how to convincingly guarantee the full rights of the Turkish Cypriot minority, a predominantly Muslim community, on an island whose population is predominantly Orthodox Christian.
The question of minority rights, particularly when a large segment of the minority has a different religious tradition, is a concern in many parts of the Middle East.
The region’s Catholics also are challenged to improve relations with their Orthodox neighbours and to promote dialogue with fellow citizens who are Muslims.
During the Pope’s visit to Cyprus he will meet Catholic patriarchs and bishops from throughout the region and give them the working document for the special Synod of Bishops for the Middle East at the Vatican in October.
The theme of the Synod is: “Communion and Witness: ‘The Community of Believers Was of One Heart and Mind.’” Pope Benedict and his hosts will have an opportunity not just to preach unity and cooperation but also to demonstrate it.
The first event after the official government welcoming ceremony is an ecumenical prayer service at an archaeological park believed to be the spot where the apostles Paul and Barnabas preached in Cyprus, as recounted in the Acts of the Apostles.
The Pope also is scheduled to hold a private meeting and luncheon with Orthodox Archbishop Chrysostomos II, head of the Orthodox Church of Cyprus and a strong supporter of Catholic-Orthodox dialogue. The archbishop made an official visit to the Vatican in 2007.
The government of Cyprus estimates the entire island has a population of about 854,000 people. Around 76 per cent belong to the Greek Cypriot community, which is predominantly Orthodox, about 10 per cent are Turkish Cypriots, a predominantly Muslim community, and almost 13 per cent are foreigners. The Vatican estimates there are about 25,000 Catholics in Cyprus. Most belong to the Maronite Church. The Latinrite Catholic community is composed of a tiny group of Cypriot Catholics and several thousand foreign workers, particularly from the Philippines and Sri Lanka.
The outline for the synod on the Middle East was released in January, setting out topics for the bishops and local Catholics to discuss and questions for them to respond to in preparation for the synod. Their input helped shape the document the Pope was to present in Cyprus.
The synod’s outline said the main goals for the October assembly were “to confirm and strengthen Christians in their identity through the word of God and the sacraments, and to deepen ecclesial communion among the particular churches”.
A renewal of faith and improved ecumenical collaboration will also help Christians better understand their role in Muslim societies and how they can aid their nations by being authentic witnesses of Christ, the outline said.
Another key concern for the Church, expected to be discussed at the synod, is that Christians are emigrating from many areas of the Middle East, including the Holy Land, seeking greater opportunities for their families and more freedom in countries without all the political tensions found in the Middle East.
Looking at the situation in Cyprus Pope Benedict’s hosts from both the government and the Christian community are likely to repeat their request that he speak out in defence of Christian churches and monuments in areas controlled by the Turkish Cypriots.
George Poulides, Cyprus ambassador of Cyprus to the Vatican, said that hundreds of Christian churches in the north have been turned into hotels or restaurants or destroyed, “some 30,000 icons have been stolen and two cemeteries have been destroyed”.
On the other hand, he said, the government of Cyprus has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars maintaining mosques in the southern part of the island. Thousands of Turkish Cypriots cross the buffer zone each day to work and thousands of Muslims from the Arab world come to the island to live and work, Mr Poulides said, which proves “there is no religious problem in Cyprus”.




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