JERUSALEM (AP) — Pope Francis
prayed on Monday at Jerusalem's Western Wall, the holiest place where
Jews can pray, and deviated from his busy itinerary to visit a memorial
to Israeli victims of terrorism as he spent his third and final day in
the Middle East honoring Jews.
Francis bowed his head in prayer and touched the wall, the only remains of the biblical Second Temple.
He left a note with the text of the "Our Father" prayer written in his native Spanish in one of the cracks between the stones.
He
then embraced his good friend, Argentine Rabbi Abraham Skorka, and a
leader of Argentina's Muslim community, Omar Abboud, both of whom joined
his official delegation for the trip in a sign of interfaith
friendship.
When St. John Paul
II visited the Western Wall in 2000, he left a note asking forgiveness
for the suffering inflicted on Jews by Christians over history. Pope
Benedict XVI's note prayed for peace for Christians, Muslims and Jews
alike.
Francis deviated from
his packed schedule to visit a memorial to Israeli victims of terrorism
before traveling to the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial. He also laid a
wreath at the grave of Zionist visionary Theodor Herzl.
Francis' whirlwind trip has
been marked by his surprise invitation to the Israeli and Palestinian
presidents to come to the Vatican next month to pray for peace. Both men
accepted, and Francis was to meet with the outgoing Israeli President
Shimon Peres later Monday.
Francis
started the day by taking off his shoes to enter the Dome of the Rock,
the iconic shrine located at the third-holiest spot in Islam. The
gold-topped dome enshrines the rock where Muslims believe the Prophet
Mohammad ascended to heaven.
The
mosque complex, known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and to Jews as
the Temple Mount, is at the heart of the territorial and religious
disputes between Israel and its Arab neighbors.
Speaking
to the grand mufti of Jerusalem and other Muslim authorities, Francis
deviated from his prepared remarks to refer not just to his "dear
friends" but "dear brothers."
"May
we respect and love one another as brothers and sisters!" he said. "May
we learn to understand the suffering of others! May no one abuse the
name of God through violence!"
No comments:
Post a Comment