12/5/2020
Pope Francis Makes ‘Historic’ Gulf Tour Amid Yemen Crisis and Christian Repression - The New York Times
https://nyti.ms/2UEuiZX
Pope Francis Makes ʻHistoricʼ Gulf Tour Amid Yemen Crisis and Christian Repression By Jason Horowitz Feb. 3, 2019
ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates — Pope Francis became the first pontiff to visit the Arabian Peninsula, the birthplace of Islam, as he arrived on Sunday in the United Arab Emirates on a trip seeking to improve relations with the Muslim world and to offer encouragement to Catholic migrants in a region where his flock has dwindled amid increasing persecution and bloodshed. The three-day stay in the Emirates, a relatively tolerant oasis that is home to some one million Catholics, also comes as a brief reprieve for a pope whose legacy and moral authority have been challenged by his struggle to come to grips with a global sex abuse scandal that shows no signs of abating. Those troubles seemed far away as the pope’s plane touched down amid the palm trees, opulent high-rises, men in white dishdashas and enormous mosques in Abu Dhabi. While the tension in some of the pope’s recent travels has been around what sort of apology he might issue for the Church’s misdeeds, his emphasis on this trip will be interreligious dialogue and improving the situation of Roman Catholics, both in this oil-rich nation that has promoted religious inclusion and throughout the less tolerant, and more dangerous, region. The United Arab Emirates, which even has a Ministry of Tolerance, has long sought to burnish its attraction as a cosmopolitan center of glass towers and global commerce with inclusive religious laws. The country’s rulers, who festooned street lamps with Emirati and Vatican flags for Francis’ arrival, have granted a large degree of freedom to religious minorities, including Roman Catholics from India, the Philippines and South America who have helped support its growth as construction workers, housekeepers and oil-industry employees. While Catholics, Hindus and other religious minorities can practice their faith, they cannot profess it in the media or try to spread it, as conversion from Islam is illegal. One way the Vatican hopes the pope’s visit will make a difference in their lives is by making it easier for them to find a place to worship. Church officials said one of the pope’s goals for his visit was to ease the way for the creation of more churches here to better serve the growing number of Catholic migrants who have found a home away from home in the parishes. While the relative religious freedom here has made Abu Dhabi a beacon for the pope to point to in a part of the world where Christians are oppressed and vanishing, a visit to this country is not without its complications for a pope who preaches peace. The United Arab Emirates has joined its ally Saudi Arabia — which does not allow the construction of churches — in a brutal proxy war against the Iran-aligned Houthi rebels of Yemen. The four-year war has pushed Yemen’s small Christian communities into hiding and devastated the country, creating the world’s worst humanitarian crisis and leading to the death by starvation of some 85,000 children. The Saudi-led coalition, which has employed child soldiers from Darfur and is supported by the United States, has been accused of targeting or indiscriminately bombing civilians, striking weddings, funerals and a school bus. The bombing campaign has also wiped out Yemen’s important fishing and agriculture industries. Hours before his departure, the pope told pilgrims in St. Peter’s Square that he was monitoring with great worry the humanitarian crisis in Yemen and its children “who are hungry, they are thirsty, they don’t have medicine.” “The population is exhausted by the long conflict, and many, many children are suffering from hunger but they are not able to get to food,” he said. https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/03/world/middleeast/pope-francis-uae-mideast-muslims.html
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