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Pope to Celebrate Open-air Mass in Beirut

16 Sep 2012

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Pope Benedict XVI


BBC

Pope Benedict XVI is due to celebrate an open-air Mass on the seafront in Beirut on the concluding day of his three-day visit to Lebanon.

On Saturday the pontiff met Lebanese political leaders at the presidential palace near Beirut, reports the BBC.

Later, he travelled to the town of Bkerke to address a gathering of thousands of young people.

The visit has coincided with anti-US protests across the region over a film deemed insulting to Islam.

In his speeches on Saturday, the Pope said that Lebanon, with its religiously mixed population, should be an "example" to the region.

"In Lebanon, Christianity and Islam have lived in the same space for centuries," he said at the presidential palace in Baabda near Beirut.

"It is not unusual to find, in the same family, both religions. If this is possible in one single family, why would it be impossible at the level of the society as a whole?" he asked.

Lebanon's politicians are bitterly divided over the conflict in neighbouring Syria, but the Pope met leaders from across the spectrum, including the Shia Muslim movement Hezbollah.

The Pope's three-day visit marks the first papal trip to Lebanon since John Paul II went there in 1997.

Enthusiastic crowds lined the roads and waved Lebanese and Vatican flags as the bullet-proof Popemobile moved from one location to another, the BBC's Jim Muir in Beirut reports.

Thousands of young people from around Lebanon gathered in Bkerke, seat of the Maronite Catholic Patriarchate, to hear the Pope speak.

The Pope urged them to stay in Lebanon "and take your place in society and in the Church" and not to be tempted to emigrate in the face of unemployment and uncertainty, as many have in recent years.

Christians from around Lebanon and elsewhere in the region had travelled to the event, as well as some Muslims.

The Pope addressed some of his words to Syrians in the crowd, saying: "I want to say how much I admire your courage."

"Tell your families and friends back home that the Pope has not forgotten you. Tell those around you that the Pope is saddened by your sufferings and your griefs," he added.

Earlier in his visit, the Pope condemned religious fundamentalism and called on all religious leaders in the Middle East "to do everything possible to uproot this threat".

Controversy over a film deemed to be offensive to the Prophet Mohammed has provoked protests throughout the region since the Pope's arrival in Lebanon.

One person was killed in Lebanon as protesters set fire to a KFC fast-food restaurant in the northern city of Tripoli, sparking clashes with security forces.

The Pope was being kept informed of protests against the film, a Vatican spokesman told the Reuters news agency.

Tags: News, World, POPE, Open-air Mass, BEIRUT

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