Violent protests feared. Seething spreading elsewhere — because the Pope dared suggest Islam is violent. None of those protesting seem to have realized that the best way to refute the Pope’s statement that religious violence is unjustified would be to eschew religious violence.
From AP:
ISTANBUL, Turkey – Pakistan’s legislature unanimously condemned Pope Benedict XVI. Lebanon’s top Shiite cleric demanded an apology. And in Turkey, the ruling party likened the pontiff to Hitler and Mussolini and accused him of reviving the mentality of the Crusades.
Ralph Peters will no doubt be along presently to call the pontiff a right-wing bigot with genocidal longings.
Across the Islamic world Friday, Benedict’s remarks on Islam and jihad in a speech in Germany unleashed a torrent of rage that many fear could burst into violent protests like those that followed publication of caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad….
Salih Kapusuz, deputy leader of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Islamic-rooted party, said Benedict’s remarks were either “the result of pitiful ignorance” about Islam and its prophet or, worse, a deliberate distortion.
“He has a dark mentality that comes from the darkness of the Middle Ages. He is a poor thing that has not benefited from the spirit of reform in the Christian world,” Kapusuz told Turkish state media. “It looks like an effort to revive the mentality of the Crusades.”
“Benedict, the author of such unfortunate and insolent remarks, is going down in history for his words,” Kapusuz added. “He is going down in history in the same category as leaders such as Hitler and Mussolini.”
Even Turkey’s staunchly pro-secular opposition party demanded the pope apologize before his visit. Another party led a demonstration outside Ankara’s largest mosque, and a group of about 50 people placed a black wreath outside the Vatican’s diplomatic mission.
Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit said the pope should explain and “tell us what exactly did he mean. … It can’t just be left like that.”
Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi has tried to defuse anger, saying the pope did not intend to offend Muslim sensibilities and insisting Benedict respects Islam. In Pakistan, the Vatican envoy voiced regret at “the hurt caused to Muslims.”
But Muslim leaders said outreach efforts by papal emissaries were not enough.
“We do not accept the apology through Vatican channels … and ask him (Benedict) to offer a personal apology “” not through his officials,” Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah, Lebanon’s most senior Shiite cleric, told worshippers in Beirut….
In Cairo, some 100 demonstrators stood outside the al-Azhar mosque chanting: “Oh Crusaders, oh cowards! Down with the pope!“…
In Britain, the head of the Muslim Council, a body representing 400 Muslim groups, said the emperor’s views quoted by the pope were bigoted.
“One would expect a religious leader such as the pope to act and speak with responsibility and repudiate the Byzantine emperor’s views in the interests of truth and harmonious relations between the followers of Islam and Catholicism,” said Muhammad Abdul Bari, the council’s secretary-general.
Many Muslims accused Benedict of seeking to promote Judeo-Christian dominance over Islam….
Few in Turkey, especially, failed to pick up on Benedict’s reference to Istanbul as Constantinople “” the city’s name more than 500 years ago “” before it was conquered by Muslim Ottoman Turks.
Actually it remained Constantinople, although under the Turkish yoke, until the early 20th century.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel defended the German-born pope, saying his message had been misunderstood.
“It is an invitation to dialogue between religions and the pope has explicitly urged this dialogue, which I also endorse and see as urgently necessary,” she said Friday. “What Benedict XVI makes clear is a decisive and uncompromising rejection of any use of violence in the name of religion.”
In the United States, a Muslim group, the Council for American-Islamic Relations, asked for a meeting with a Vatican representative and urged more efforts at improving understanding between Muslims and Catholics.
“The proper response to the pope’s inaccurate and divisive remarks is for Muslims and Catholics worldwide to increase dialogue and outreach efforts aimed at building better relations between Christianity and Islam,” the group said.
Great. Memo to Ibrahim Hooper of CAIR: I’m a Catholic, and I volunteer for this dialogue.