Zenit reports on the fifth day of Pope Benedict XVI's Middle Eastern trip. He spent yesterday in the West Bank, delivering four addresses. In at least two of them, he again tread into the politics of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. During a welcome from Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas at the presidential palace in Bethlehem, Pope Benedict spoke (
full text) saying in part:
Mr. President, the Holy See supports the right of your people to a sovereign Palestinian homeland in the land of your forefathers, secure and at peace with its neighbors, within internationally recognized borders.... It is my earnest hope that the serious concerns involving security in Israel and the Palestinian Territories will soon be allayed sufficiently to allow greater freedom of movement, especially with regard to contact between family members and access to the holy places.
Later in the day the Pope spoke at
Aida Refugee Camp near Bethlehem, where he praised the work of Catholic aid agencies who provide humanitarian assistance to refugees (
full text of remarks). He said in part:
My visit to the Aida Refugee Camp this afternoon gives me a welcome opportunity to express my solidarity with all the homeless Palestinians who long to be able to return to their birthplace, or to live permanently in a homeland of their own....
Towering over us ... is a stark reminder of the stalemate that relations between Israelis and Palestinians seem to have reached -- the wall. In a world where more and more borders are being opened up -- to trade, to travel, to movement of peoples, to cultural exchanges -- it is tragic to see walls still being erected.... On both sides of the wall, great courage is needed if fear and mistrust is to be overcome, if the urge to retaliate for loss or injury is to be resisted. It takes magnanimity to seek reconciliation after years of fighting. Yet history has shown that peace can only come when the parties to a conflict are willing to move beyond their grievances and work together towards common goals, each taking seriously the concerns and fears of the other, striving to build an atmosphere of trust. There has to be a willingness to take bold and imaginative initiatives towards reconciliation: if each insists on prior concessions from the other, the result can only be stalemate
Today, according to the
New York Times, the Pope will meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Again political considerations shape the location. The two leaders will meet at the Church of the Annunciation in Nazareth instead of at the Apostolic Delegation in East Jerusalem that Benedict often uses. The
Los Angeles Times last week reported on a complicated exchange between reporters and a spokesman for the Vatican who attempted to sidestep the political issues that would have been presented by a meeting at the East Jerusalem site that is officially known as the Apostolic Delegation of Jerusalem and Palestine.