The final day of the Pope's Visit – back in East Jerusalem to site where Jesus may have died and been buried, then departure from Ben Gurion

At 10:50 am on Friday, the Pope was deep in prayer at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in the Christian Quarter of the Old City of East Jerusalem. Then he lit a candle and greeted a Greek Orthodox and an Armenian cleric, and departed. Applause broke out as he emerged from the darkened interior onto the bright sunlight of the narrow Old City streets, and one man’s voice cried “Viva el Papa!”.

Then, the Pope actually walked a few meters (without his bullet-proofed-windowed Popemobile) up the hill, and entered another Church building.

Israeli GPO schedule
9:15 Meeting at the Greek-Orthodox Patriarch
10:00 Visit to the Church of the Holy Sepulcher
13:30 Leaving Ceremony, Ben Gurion Airport

PA schedule
East Jerusalem Friday, May 15th, 2009
09:10 To the Greek Orthodox Patriarch.
10:00 Tour of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher.
11:00 A visit to the Armenian Patriarchate.
11:10 A visit to the Church of Saint James.
12:40 End of visits and the farewell ceremony with the participation
of Palestinian Muslim and Christian dignitaries.

The Pope in Nazareth, the largest Palestinian Arab city in Israel

hursday – ALL ISRAELI DAY – at Israel’s largest Arab city, with a high percentage of Christians, where the Virgin Mary is believed to have been informed by the Archangel Gabriel that God had chosen her to bear a child, a very special child — and Mary agreed to accept the burden, even though she was not yet married.

Mary’s son, Jesus, was born in Bethlehem, he grew up in Nazareth, and preached throughout the Galilee and beyond, before being judged and condemned to die in Jerusalem (for blasphemy and insurrection). He was then crucified by Roman troops.

The grotto in the Church or Basilica of the Annunciation in Nazareth is where, it is believed, Mary was visited by the Archangel Gabriel. In the photo below, the Pope waves as he arrives for a prayer in the grotto of the Church of the Annunciation in Nazareth.

Pope Benedict XVI waves as he arrives for a prayer in the grotto of the Basilica of the Annunciation in Nazareth

Pope prays in the grotto in Nazareth

Pope Benedict XVI met Israel’s new Prime Minister, Benyamin Netanyahu, in office for the second time after February elections, just days before Netanyahu goes to Washington for an important meeting with the new U.S. President, Barack Obama.

Pope greets Netanyahu

The Pope and Netanyahu spent all of 15 minutes together. The Israeli Government Press Office later reported that “The meeting was characterized by a good atmosphere and continued longer than planned”.

Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu meets Pope Benedict XVI in Nazareth

According to the Associated Press, Netanyahu said “I asked him, as a moral figure, to make his voice heard loud and continuously against the declarations coming from Iran of their intention to destroy Israel”.  Netanyahu later told Israel TV that “I told him it cannot be that at the beginning of the 21st century, there is a state which says it is going to destroy the Jewish state, and there is no aggressive voice being heard condemning this” … [This AP report noted that “While Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has called for Israel’s elimination, his exact remarks have been disputed, with some translators saying he called for Israel to be ‘wiped off the map’.  Others say a better translation would be ‘vanish from the pages of time’ — implying Israel would disappear on its own rather than be destroyed.  Since taking office on March 31, Netanyahu has emphasized the Iranian threat in an apparent attempt to put the Palestinian question on the back burner.]  The AP report added that Netanyahu stated that Benedict said ‘he condemns all such things, anti-Semitism, hate’, adding: ‘I think we found in him an attentive ear’.”

AP also reported that “The Israeli leader called his meeting with Benedict ‘very good and important’, noting that the pope heads a church of 1 billion followers, and Israel wants good relations with them.  ‘Secondly, we spoke also about the historic process of reconciliation between Christianity and Judaism. and the pope is very interested’,”Netanyahu said.  The pope’s ventures into diplomacy reflected what Vatican spokesman the Rev. Federico Lombardi called the focus of his Middle East pilgrimage — ‘peace, peace, peace’.  He said the pope could be a ‘bridge’ among the various positions”.

The Vatican also wanted something, according to AP: After the Pope’s meeting with Netanyahu, “Vatican officials also met with Israelis to discuss bilateral issues, including travel privileges for Arab Christian clergy, Lombardi said. The Vatican has asked Israel to allow 500 priests from Arab countries to receive visas to enter Israel at will. Interior Minister Eli Yishai refused the request on security grounds, a spokesman said, but Netanyahu pledged to re-examine the matter”. This AP report can be read in fullhere.

Earlier, shortly after arriving in Nazareth, the Pope said Mass on the Mount of the Precipice. It was the largest event on his tour of the Holy Land, with an estimated 40,000 to 50,000 attending.

Pope arrives in his Popemobile to say Mass on Mount of Precipice in Nazareth

Pilgrims leave after Mass with the Pope on the Mount of the Precipice in Nazareth

Israeli GPO schedule
09:15 Arrival in Naz0areth, Welcoming Ceremony and the Ceremony of Bread and Salt – Reception by Mayor of Nazareth
10:00 Mass at Mount of the Precipice
15:50 Meeting with Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, Church of the Annunciation
6:30 Meeting with the Faith Heads in Israel, Church of the Annunciation
17:30 Prayer at the Church of the Annunciation

PA Schedule
= NOTHING FOR TODAY =

The Pope to spend the day in East Jerusalem – for some, the core of the conflict

The Pope is not going to Gaza, so Gazan Christians must go to the Pope.

Some 200 Gazan Christians reportedly applied for permits to attend events during the Papal visit, and they were anxiously awaiting news about whether or not they would be allowed out of the besieged coastal strip. At least some of the permits were apparently granted, as this photo shows some Gazan Palestinian Christians moving toward the military watchtower at the forbidding Erez terminal into Israel.

Palestinian Christians walk with their luggage from Gaza toward Erez terminal in preparation for leaving to attend Pope's visit

Maan News Agency reported on Monday that “Israel granted permits to 93 Palestinian Christians to leave Gaza to attend a papal mass in the West Bank city of Bethlehem, and turned down applications for more than 400 others, a church official in Gaza said on Monday. Amin Sabbagh of the Latin Patriarchate in Gaza said that Israel refused to allow anyone under the age of 35 to leave Gaza. Israeli officials have confirmed that they imposed some restrictions on allowing the faithful to leave Gaza, citing ‘security concerns’ … The Catholic Church turned down a petition last month to bring the pope to Gaza. Nonetheless the chair of Gaza’s Popular Committee Against Siege, Jamal Al-Khoudary extended the invitation to the pope one last time on Sunday, urging Benedict to bear witness to the destruction left behind by Israel’s three-week war”. This report can be read in full here.

Time Magazine reported that “Six weeks ago, 250 Christians applied for permission from the Israelis to exit the locked down Palestinian enclave of Gaza for a day to see Pope Benedict XVI as he visits in Israel on his tour of the Middle East. The Pontiff arrived in Tel Aviv Monday, but so far Gaza’s Christians haven’t heard if their permit applications — and prayers — have been answered [Though they were kept waiting until the last possible moment, permits for some of them did come through, as Ma’an reported above] … Another Bethlehem Christian named Nadia says she would like to see the Pope endure the same difficulties as Palestinians do every day while crossing the Israeli checkpoint. ‘The Holy Father would have to stand in line for several hours, then remove his belt and shoes and cross just to get past the security barrier’, she muses. The Christians in Gaza would willingly run such a security gauntlet to see the Pope” … [and they apparently did, if they passed through Erez terminal] … This article can be read in full here .

There has been a debate among Palestinians — Christian and Muslim alike — about whether or not it was good for the Pope to come now, so soon after the devastating Israeli Operation Cast Lead against the Gaza Strip (27 December – 18 January). There was also a big difference of opinion over whether or not the Pope should try to go to Gaza.

Dr. Eyad Sarraj asked recently, while sitting in the garden of his home in Gaza City, “Is the Pope coming to visit Bethlehem? Or is he coming to visit Palestine?” He said he wished the Pope would push to come to Gaza.

The Pope’s only mention of Gaza so far was indirect — he did not even speak the name, but he said later at Mass on Gethsemane “My greeting also goes to all those present, and in a special way to those faithful of the Holy Land who for various reasons were not able to be with us today”.

Schools in East Jerusalem are closed today and tomorrow, both to allow children and teachers to attend some of the Papal visit events, and also to avoid traffic problems.

The photos below shows the site where a stage is being built for the outdoor altar at Gethsemane, at the foot of the Mount of Olives, in East Jerusalem, where the Pope attended or celebrated Mass at the end of the day.

Gethsemane garden at the foot of the Mount of Olives where Pope Benedict XVI will celebrate Mass

Vatican flags are flying at Gethsemane in East Jerusalem in preparation for the Pope's mass on Tuesday 12 May 2009

Workers are preparing the state in Gethsemane

At the Mass he celebrated at Gethsemane, the Pope said, among other things, that Palestinian Christians should stay in the Holy Land and not leave to emigrate abroad.

The Pope stated that “Jews, Muslims and Christians alike call this city their spiritual home. How much needs to be done to make it truly a ‘city of peace’ for all peoples, where all can come in pilgrimage in search of God, and hear his voice, “a voice which speaks of peace” (cf. Ps 85:8)! Jerusalem, in fact, has always been a city whose streets echo with different languages, whose stones are trod by people of every race and tongue, whose walls are a symbol of God’s provident care for the whole human family. As a microcosm of our globalized world, this City, if it is to live up to its universal vocation, must be a place which teaches universality, respect for others, dialogue and mutual understanding; a place where prejudice, ignorance and the fear which fuels them, are overcome by honesty, integrity and the pursuit of peace. There should be no place within these walls for narrowness, discrimination, violence and injustice. Believers in a God of mercy – whether they identify themselves as Jews, Christians or Muslims – must be the first to promote this culture of reconciliation and peace, however painstakingly slow the process may be, and however burdensome the weight of past memories. Here I would like to speak directly to the tragic reality – which cannot fail to be a source of concern to all who love this City and this land – of the departure of so many members of the Christian community in recent years. While understandable reasons lead many, especially the young, to emigrate, this decision brings in its wake a great cultural and spiritual impoverishment to the City. Today I wish to repeat what I have said on other occasions: in the Holy Land there is room for everyone! As I urge the authorities to respect, to support and to value the Christian presence here, I also wish to assure you of the solidarity, love and support of the whole Church and of the Holy See”

While in Jerusalem, the Pope is, significantly, staying not in a hotel (many of the better ones are in West Jerusalem), but in the residence of the Apostolic Delegation on the Mount of Olives in East Jerusalem, not far from the Gethsemane site (where Jesus spent the night praying, after the Last Supper, before his betrayal by Judas for some pieces of silver and his torture and crucifixion the next day.

The Vatican does not recognize the annexation of East Jerusalem by Israel after the June 1967 war.

However, that did not help with the security arrangements which were put into place by the Israeli authorities. In the photo below, according to the caption (and the body language), “A Palestinian man complains to Israeli Border Police after they blocked a street in east Jerusalem near where Pope Benedict XVI will stay during his visit to the Holy Land”.

A Palestinian man complains to Israeli Border Police

A belligerent military occupation is, after all, a belligerent military occupation.

An Israeli Border Police officer guards a street on the Mount of Olives in East Jerusalem as the Pope's convoy passes

Pope Benedict XVI is, apparently, the first Pope ever to visit the Al-Aqsa Mosque, the third-holiest place in Islam, and the elevated plateau on which the Haram as-Sharif compound stands — including Al-Aqsa and the Dome of the Rock. He took off his shoes and visited the Dome of the Rock in his white socks (which can be reported with full confidence because they were visible in a photo when a Vatican aide helped him put his shoes back on after leaving the mosque, and mentioned — though not the color — in the DPA pool report further down below in this posting).

Pope visits Dome of the Rock on the Haram ash-Sharif in the Old City of East Jerusalem

The Pope on the Haram ash-Sharif with Muslim notables – GPO photo
The Pope on the Haram ash-Sharif

One side of that compound is the Western Wall, the holiest site in Judaism, which is believed to be one of the supports for the mourned and longed-for Jewish Temples (First and Second). This is the crux of the religious-territorial conflict between Israel and the Palestinians, supported by Muslims world-wide. Many Jews believe that the remains of the destroyed Temples are under the Haram as-Sharif (perhaps directly under the Dome of the Rock, or between that and Al-Aqsa, or perhaps even under Al-Aqsa itself) — hence, they call it the Temple Mount . And, while the Rabbi of the Western Wall and other Jewish religious authorities believe it is forbidden to Jews to be on the Haram ash-Sharif/Temple Mount, for fear they may inadvertently tread on what once was the Holy of Holies, the Inner Sanctum, the altar of sacrifice of the Temples, there have been increasing attempts in recent years by Jewish national-religious fervent fundamentalists to reassert their claims to the Temple Mount (and some even call for the demolition of Al-Aqsa). This is a very big problem.

In 1980, the late-PLO representative to the European community headquarters in Brussels, Dr. Naim Khader — who was assassinated, for his efforts, by bullets fired at his head and his heart as he left his house in Brussels one morning — worked with European countries to develop a document called the Venice Declaration, a European position supporting Palestinan rights in a search for a peaceful solution to the conflict after two major regional wars (1967 + 1973). In the Venice Declaration, the various European countries choose to develop positions regarding the different aspects of the issue — and the Vatican was responsible for the issue of East Jerusalem.

The Israeli Government Press Office (GPO) schedule for the Pope’s visit today is as follows:
09:15 Meeting with the Mufti, Temple Mount
10:00 Visit to the Western Wall
10:35 Meeting with the Chief Rabbis, Heichal Shlomo
12:00 Visit to the Church of Dormition – site of the Last Supper
12:30 Visit and Prayer at Latin Patriarch
16:15 Mass at the Garden of Gethsemane

The Palestinian Authority schedule for the Pope’s visit today is:
East Jerusalem Tuesday, May 12th, 2009
08:15 To the Dome of the Rock.
08:45 To the Mosque’s Esplanade.
09:00 Courtesy visit to the Grand Mufti.
10:00 Visit to Al Buraaq Wall/ Western Wall.
14:15 Arrival at the Apostolic Delegation.
15:50 Short meeting with the Consuls General in Jerusalem.
16:00 To the Josafat Valley/Gethsemane.
16:30 Holy Mass/ Gethsemane

The merged Israeli + Palestinian Authority schedule for the Pope’s visit today (there are some slight overlaps and/or divergences) is:
08:15 To the Dome of the Rock.
08:45 To the Mosque’s Esplanade.
09:00 Courtesy visit to the Grand Mufti.
09:15 Meeting with the Mufti, Temple Mount [a slight incongruity in the Israeli version, showing a greater rigidity in religously-laden terminology]
10:00 Visit to Al Buraaq Wall/ Western Wall.
10:00 Visit to the Western Wall
10:35 Meeting with the Chief Rabbis, Heichal Shlomo
12:00 Visit to the Church of Dormition – site of the Last Supper
12:30 Visit and Prayer at Latin Patriarch
14:15 Arrival at the Apostolic Delegation.
15:50 Short meeting with the Consuls General in Jerusalem.
16:00 To the Josafat Valley/Gethsemane.
16:15 Mass at the Garden of Gethsemane
16:30 Holy Mass/ Gethsemane

An AFP pool report for the Foreign Press Association (FPA) said that the Pope’s visit to the Haram ash-Sharif/Temple Mount “took place amid high security, the plaza had been completely emptied of civilians but there was a heavy security presence, with barricades, policemen, plainclothes security guys, snipers in the minarets. There was a white surveillance blimp hovering over the compound and a helicopter buzzing overhead. The entire Old City was virtually empty. The pope was greeted at the Dome of the Rock by the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem Mohammed Hussein. He took off his red leather shoes before going inside. After the pope went in two bunches of red, white, green and black balloons rose in the distance. One of the bunches of balloons had a Vatican flag attached to it, the other had a Palestinian flag. The pope was inside at the time so he would not have seen the balloons”.

(AP Photo of sniper on Al-Aqsa Mosque minaret by Jim Hollander, Pool)

Israeli security including a sniper in position on the Al-Aqsa mosque minaret as balloons are released during Pope's visit

The Pope then in silent prayer at the Western Wall below the Dome of the Rock
The Pope stands at Western Wall below the Dome of the Rock the Haram as-Sharif or Temple Mount

A DPA (Deutsche Presse-Agentur) pool report for FPA also stated that “The visit took place amid extremely tight security. Police in blue uniforms and border police in green uniforms with semi-automatic weapons could be seen standing in groups all around the walls of the Old City, with roads in the immediate vicinity all blocked. On the Temple Mount platform itself, also scores of police and borderpolice. Helicopters hover above. The golden dome glisters shines against the very clear blue morning sky. At exactly 9 am, Pope arrives in black car, which stops right outside the Dome of the Rock’s eastern entrance. He gets out the car and enters the building, surrounded by security personnel in black suits. Stays inside just over 10 minutes or so, delivers remarks. Then slowly walks out the southern entrance. Aid kneels down to put his shoes back on, which he had taken off before entering the Dome of the Rock. Surrounded also by clergymen in black robes and with red skullcaps and red scarfs around their waists, he then enters a small building right outside for talks with the Mufti. After about 30 min. he emerges from the meeting, enters the black car and slowly drives off for his next stop, the Wailing Wall”.

According to a transcript of the Pope’s remarks at the Haram ash-Sharif (/Temple Mount) today, the Pontiff said: “The Dome of the Rock draws our hearts and minds to reflect upon the mystery of creation and the faith of Abraham. Here the paths of the world’s three great monotheistic religions meet, reminding us what they share in common. Each believes in One God, creator and ruler of all. Each recognizes Abraham as a forefather, a man of faith upon whom God bestowed a special blessing. Each has gained a large following throughout the centuries and inspired a rich spiritual, intellectual and cultural patrimony. In a world sadly torn by divisions, this sacred place serves as a stimulus, and also challenges men and women of goodwill to work to overcome misunderstandings and conflicts of the past and to set out on the path of a sincere dialogue aimed at building a world of justice and peace for coming generations. Since the teachings of religious traditions ultimately concern the reality of God, the meaning of life, and the common destiny of mankind – that is to say, all that is most sacred and dear to us – there may be a temptation to engage in such dialogue with reluctance or ambivalence about its possibilities for success. Yet we can begin with the belief that the One God is the infinite source of justice and mercy, since in him the two exist in perfect unity. Those who confess his name are entrusted with the task of striving tirelessly for righteousness while imitating his forgiveness, for both are intrinsically oriented to the peaceful and harmonious coexistence of the human family. For this reason, it is paramount that those who adore the One God should show themselves to be both grounded in and directed towards the unity of the entire human family. In other words, fidelity to the One God, the Creator, the Most High, leads to the recognition that human beings are fundamentally interrelated, since all owe their very existence to a single source and are pointed towards a common goal. Imprinted with the indelible image of the divine, they are called to play an active role in mending divisions and promoting human solidarity. This places a grave responsibility upon us. Those who honor the One God believe that he will hold human beings accountable for their actions. Christians assert that the divine gifts of reason and freedom stand at the basis of this accountability. Reason opens the mind to grasp the shared nature and common destiny of the human family, while freedom moves the heart to accept the other and serve him in charity. Undivided love for the One God and charity towards ones neighbor thus become the fulcrum … I have come to Jerusalem on a journey of faith. I thank God for this occasion to meet you as the Bishop of Rome and Successor of the Apostle Peter, but also as a child of Abraham, by whom ‘all the families of the earth find blessing’ (Gen 12:3; cf. Rom 4:16-17). I assure you of the Church’s ardent desire to cooperate for the well-being of the human family. She firmly believes that the fulfillment of the promise made to Abraham is universal in scope, embracing all men and women regardless of provenance or social status. As Muslims and Christians further the respectful dialogue they have already begun, I pray that they will explore how the Oneness of God is inextricably tied to the unity of the human family. In submitting to his loving plan for creation, in studying the law inscribed in the cosmos and implanted in the human heart, in reflecting upon the mysterious gift of God’s self-revelation, may all his followers continue to keep their gaze fixed on his absolute goodness, never losing sight of the way it is reflected in the faces of others. With these thoughts, I humbly ask the Almighty to grant you peace and to bless all the beloved people of this region. May we strive to live in a spirit of harmony and cooperation, bearing witness to the One God by generously serving one another”.

A Reuters pool report for the FPA stated that “Grand Mufti Muhammad Ahmad Hussein, speaking in Arabic through a translator following the Pope’s visit to the Dome of the Rock, said: ‘This was a religious visit (by the Pope) to the holiest place for the Muslim world. During our (my) speech we focused on our sufferings and we asked for justice in this Holy Land. It is our hope that the visit will contribute to peace’. When asked how the pope had responded he said: ‘We felt he was receptive’.”

The Haram ash-Sharif and the Western Wall are both inside the Old City, which is part of East Jerusalem — that part of Jerusalem which was not part of Israel at its founding in 1948, but which was seized by Israel in the June 1967 war, and then incorporated into Greater Jerusalem and the State of Israel. However, the United Nations and most of the rest of the world — and the Vatican itself — consider East Jerusalem as “occupied territory”.

Pope prays at Western Wall after inserting prayer for peace written on paper

Later, at the Western or Wailing Wall, the Pope spoke against “moral relativism”, and in favor of “lasting moral values”. He reaffirmed irrevocable commitment to reconciliation between Christians and Jews.

Israel’s Minister of Tourism, Stas Misezhnikov, said in the same ceremony that “Peace in Jerusalem will bring peace upon the entire earth”.

In a later speech to a gathering of Catholic Bishops, the Pope promoted tourism in the Holy Land:
“I wish to express my appreciation for the service offered to the many pilgrims and visitors who
come to the Holy Land seeking inspiration and renewal in the footsteps of Jesus. The Gospel story, contemplated in its historical and geographical setting, becomes vivid and colorful, and a clearer grasp of the significance of the Lord’s words and deeds is obtained. Many memorable experiences of pilgrims to the Holy Land have been possible thanks also to the hospitality and fraternal guidance offered by you, especially by the Franciscan Friars of the Custody. For this service, I wish to assure you of the appreciation and gratitude of the Universal Church and I express the wish that many more pilgrims will visit in the future”.

But, he did not forget the main purpose of his pilgrimage of faith.

In a prayer written on paper that he inserted into a crevice between the stones of the Western Wall, the Pope expressed this prayer:
“God of all the ages,
on my visit to Jerusalem, the ‘City of Peace’,
spiritual home to Jews, Christians and Muslims alike,
I bring before you the joys, the hopes and the aspirations,
the trials, the suffering and the pain of all your people throughout the world.
God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob,
hear the cry of the afflicted, the fearful, the bereft;
send your peace upon this Holy Land, upon the Middle East,
upon the entire human family;
stir the hearts of all who call upon your name,
to walk humbly in the path of justice and compassion”.

And, later, at the Co-Cathedral of the Latins, the Pope told those gathered that “I am especially grateful for the prayers you offer for my universal ministry, and I ask you to continue to commend to the Lord my work of service to God’s people all over the world. In the words of the Psalmist, I ask you also to “pray for the peace of Jerusalem” (Ps 122:6), to pray without ceasing for an end to the conflict that has brought so much suffering to the peoples of this land”.

"Ave Benedicte…" – Shalom

Israel’s State President Shimon Peres greeted Pope Benedict XVI, head of the Roman Catholic Church, in Latin.

The Pope was given a red-carpet reception in Israel upon his arrival from Jordan at Israel’s Ben Gurion International airport on Monday morning.

Just before the Latin greeting, Shimon Peres told the Pope: “I welcome you and offer you a blessing: “Shalom, Shalom lekha.” [Peace, Peace to you].

The Vatican flag -- and a bird -- fly near the Jaffa Gate outside the Old City in East Jerusalem

The main events in the Papal visit to Israel can be viewed on a live webcast on a site specially set up by the Israeli Foreign Ministry, in several languages, here .

In the welcoming address, Peres also said to the Pontiff: “Since the days of Abraham our forefather, we have believed that man should aspire to be a desirable guest and a gracious host. Abraham’s tent was open to all directions. It was easy for the pure air and wind to enter from north, south, east, and west”.

The Israeli government, when it wants to be, can be the best host. But is its tent open to all directions, allowing pure air and wind to enter from the four major points of the compass? Or is it closed behind The Wall and its massive security infrastructure, which makes crossing any border something like sheer hell for many people.

Oh, the longing for the days when it was possible to drive from Jerusalem to Beirut for lunch and some shopping, or to Damascus for dinner…

Can those days can come again? Peres told the Pope: “We have made peace with Egypt and Jordan, and we are in negotiations to make peace with the Palestinians, and even to arrive at a comprehensive regional peace. Your visit here brings a blessed understanding between religions and spreads peace near and far. Historic Israel and the renewed Israel together welcome your arrival as paving the great road to peace from city to city”.

The Pope, speaking in his German-accented English, told the audience at the airport that “I appreciate the opportunity that has been made available to me to come on pilgrimage…I take my place in a long line of Christian pilgrims to these shores… I come to pray at the holy places,to pray for peace in the holy land and around the world…We share the same priorities to give religion its right place in the modern world and to respect all individuals … Tragically, the Jewish people have experienced the terrible circumstances of ideologies that deny the fundamental dignity of every human person … It is right and fitting that during my stay in Israel I will have the opportunity to honor the memory of the six million Jewish victims of the Shoah and pray that humanity will never again witness a crime of such magnitude … Sadly, anti-semitism continues to raise its ugly face around the world … This is totally unacceptable. Every effort must be made to combat anti-Semitism where ever it is found, and to promote respect and esteem for the members of every people, tribe, language and nation across the globe”.

The Pope said “Even though the name Jerusalem means ‘city of peace,’ it is all too evident that, for decades, peace has tragically eluded the inhabitants of this holy land … in their struggle to achieve a just and lasting solution to conflicts that have brought so much suffering … In union with people of goodwill everywhere, I plead with all those responsible to explore every possible avenue in the search for a just resolution of the outstanding difficulties, so that both peoples may live in peace in a homeland of their own within secure and internationally recognized borders … I hope and pray for a climate of greater trust that will enable progress…”

The Pope called for freer access to Jerusalem.

He said that “The eyes of the world are upon the peoples of this region as they struggle to achieve a just and lasting solution to conflicts that have caused so much suffering … The hopes of countless men, women and children for a more secure and stable future depend on the outcome of negotiations for peace between Israelis and Palestinians”.

He was speaking with the Royal Jordanian airplane standing on the tarmac behind him, and the Royal Jordanian flight crew, including its stewardesses, lined up alongside.

The Pope concluded with a few words to the Catholic and Christian communities in the Holy Land: “I pray that your continuing presence in Israel and the Palestinian territories will bear much fruit in promoting peace and mutual respect among all the peoples who live in the lands of the Bible … May God give his people strength. May God enable his people to live in peace”.

As the Pope was about to get into a black limousine guarded by men in Black, Shimon Peres told him “I shall see you this evening”, and Benyamin Netanyahu said “I’ll see you in Nazaretz”. [Then, Netanyahu flew to Egypt for a brief visit with President Mubarak.] The Pope then boarded a military helicopter painted in desert-camouflage colors for the ride to Mount Scopus in Jerusalem. A few minutes later, military escort planes could be heard flying over north-eastern Jerusalem.

Pope being welcomed to Israel by Shimon Peres - AP photo

The Israeli Government activities for the Pope on Monday, as communicated by the Government Press Office (GPO), which is part of the Prime Minister’s Office:
Arrival reception at Ben Gurion Airport – 11:00 am estimated
Reception Ceremony at Mount Scopus – 12:00 noon
Ceremony at President’s Residence – 16:00 pm
Visit to Yad Vashem – 17:30 pm
Meeting of Religious Leaders at Notre Dame – 19:00

The Pope’s schedule in East Jerusalem, as communicated from the Palestinian Presidency Press Office in Ramallah (with a temporary media center at the Ambassador Hotel in East Jerusalem — UPDATE: WHICH HAS JUST BEEN SHUT DOWN BY ORDER OF THE ISRAELI POLICE,  OR MAYBE JUST THE PRESS CONFERENCE SCHEDULED FOR 13:00 HAS BEEN CANCELLED, WHICH PERHAPS MAY BE RELOCATED TO UM KAMEL’S PROTEST TENT DOWN THE HILL. The cancellation is all the more surprising because the two speakers are both important religious figures in Jerusalem, Sheikh Mohammad Hussein, Grand Mufti of Jerusalem and Palestine Patriarch Michel Sabbah, Former Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, who were supposed to be discussing “the Pope’s meeting at the Notre Dame Center of Jerusalem and the interfaith dialogue in general” …:
East Jerusalem Monday, May 11th, 2009
12:30 Arrival at the Apostolic Delegation.
18:30 To the Notre Dame of Jerusalem Center.

Pope arrives at residence of Israel's State President

The Pope and Shimon Peres plant an olive tree at the Israeli presidential residence - AP Photo/Oded Balilty, Pool

The merged and annotated schedule for today is:
Arrival reception at Ben Gurion Airport – 11:00 am estimated
Reception Ceremony at Mount Scopus – 12:00 noon
Arrival at the Apostolic Delegation – 12:30
Ceremony at President’s Residence – 16:00 pm
It was announced on Sunday that Shimon Peres called Noam Shalit, the father of kidnapped soldier Gilad Shalit, and invited him to take part in his meeting with Pope Benedict XVI at the President’s Residence in Jerusalem. Pope Benedict agreed ahead of time to meet with Noam Shalit and to work personally to help in the effort to bring Gilad Shalit home. The meeting of President Peres, Pope Benedict XVI, and the Shalit family will be held immediately following the political meeting between President Peres and the Pope tomorrow at 16:10 at the President’s Residence. The Office of the President attaches great importance to the meeting between the Pope and the Shalit family, as the Pope represents over one billion Catholic believers worldwide. He routinely travels all around the world to meet with political and religious leaders, and his assistance can be a great asset in the struggle to bring Gilad home.
Visit to Yad Vashem – 17:30 pm
To the Notre Dame of Jerusalem Center – 18:30.
Meeting of Religious Leaders at Notre Dame – 19:00

Pope observes moment of silence during ceremony at Yad Vashem's Hall of Remembrance

According to the Israeli Government Press Office (GPO) summary and translation of today’s Hebrew Press, Israel’s largest-selling newspaper, Yediot Ahronot, “reminds its readers that Pope Benedict XVI, as Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, ‘opposed the approach that championed a negative attitude towards Jews and condemned the Jewish state, and was one of the architects of the establishment of relations between the Vatican and the State of Israel’. Yisrael Hayom suggests that ‘It is difficult to categorize’ Pope Benedict XVI beyond defining him as a staunch conservative, and notes that ‘There have been ups and downs’, in the Jewish People’s relations with the Roman Catholic Church” The author rejects calls to either boycott, or turn a cold shoulder to, the Papal visit and reminds his readers that an active dialogue with the Vatican bolsters Israel’s standing in the eyes of Catholics the world over”. [The GPO wrote that Aviad Klingberg wrote the article in Yediot Ahronot, and Dan Margalit wrote the article in Yisrael Hayom.]

ONE-UPSMANSHIP EPISODES

Today there were two episodes of one-upsmanship:

(1) At the Pope’s arrival in Jerusalem at the Mount Scopus helipad, behind Haddasah Hospital (Mount Scopus), where the Pope was greeted by the relatively-new mayor of Jerusalem, Nir Barakat (the AP pool report submitted to the Foreign Press Association (FPA) reported that “As the pope left the helicopter, surrounded by clergy and dignitaries, loudspeakers played ‘Jerusalem of Gold’, a song that commemorates Israel’s capture of east Jerusalem in the 1967 Mideast war”.    Barakat later stated that “I presented him with an ancient map with Jerusalem at the center of the world”, but the AP pool report said that “Mayor Nir Barkat welcomed Benedict, who stood by his side on a podium, and gave the pontiff an etching reproducing an ancient map depicting Jerusalem at the center of the world”.

(2) A second AP pool report for the FPA said that at the end of an otherwise totally politically – and religiously – correct interfaith gathering at Notre Dame Church just outside the Old City, the appointed head of the Islamic Courts of the West Bank and Gaza, Sheikh Taysir Tamimi,  “commandeered the microphone and began to criticize Israel in Arabic. He was not scheduled to speak. Some people clapped, but many appeared uncomfortable and the Latin Patriarch, Fouad Twal, walked across the stage and tapped him on the hand as he implored him to stop. Tamimi finished the speech after several minutes and sat down. It was not clear whether the Pope understood the tirade, and he did not react. Some quotes from Tamimi’s speech: He welcomed the pope to Jerusalem, which he called ‘the eternal political, national and spiritual capital of Palestine’. He referred to Muslim history in Jerusalem. Muslims and Christians must work together against Israel, he said: ‘We struggle together and we suffer together from the injustice of the Israeli occupation and its oppressive practices, and we look forward to freedom and independence’. He referred to Israel’s West Bank separation barrier as the ‘racist wall’, saying it ‘turned it (Palestine) into a giant prison and keeps Muslims and Christians from praying in their churches and mosques’. On Gaza: ‘in its (Israel’s) aggression in the Gaza strip it violated human rights in a way unprecendented in this era’. [Tamimi said] ‘His holiness the pope, I call on you in the name of the one God to condemn these crimes and pressure the Israeli government to stop its aggression against the Palestinian people’. He sat down, some people clapped, and then everyone left”. A little while later, the Israeli Government Press Office (GPO) sent out an email containing, in both Italian and in English, what was reported as a “Statement from Papal Spokesman Father Federico Lombardi”, which read: “The intervention of Sheikh Tayssir Attamimi was not scheduled by the organizers of the meeting. In a meeting dedicated to dialogue this intervention was a direct negation of what a dialogue should be. We hope that such an incident will not damage the mission of the Pope aiming at promoting peace and also interreligious dialogue, as he has clearly affirmed in many occasions during this pilgrimage. We hope also that interreligious dialogue in the Holy Land will not be compromised by this incident”.

[n.b., the Latin Patriarch, Archbishop Fouad Twal, who is reported here to have tried to stop Sheikh Tamimi’s “unauthorized” statement, was quoted in Haaretz last week as saying “The thing that worries me most is the speech that the Pope will deliver here … One word for the Muslims and I’m in trouble; one word for the Jews and I’m in trouble. At the end of the visit the Pope goes back to Rome and I stay here with the consequences.”]

Both Haaretz and the Jerusalem Post reported later, somewhat unconvincingly, that the Pope walked out after Tamimi’s “unauthorized” statement. Haaretz reported that “al-Tamimi accused Israel of slaughtering women, children and senior citizens. The speech was delivered in Arabic, without simultaneous translation, but after the pope was informed of the political nature of al-Tamimi’s speech, he left the conference … ‘Israel destroyed our home, exiled our people, built settlements, ruined the Muslim holy sites, and slaughtered women, children and senior citizens in Gaza’, he continued. At this point, the conference’s organizers tried to persuade al-Tamimi to end his spontaneous speech, but to no avail … Al-Tamimi shook the pope’s hand as he left the podium and the meeting broke up as scheduled immediately afterwards. The director general of Israel’s Chief Rabbinate, Oded Wiener, said that ‘Sheikh Tamimi embarrassed the pope’. He said Tamimi, a familiar and fiery figure in Palestinian public life, had pressured the Catholic organisers to be allowed to speak and that the Jewish members would no longer take part in a long-standing, three-way interfaith dialogue until the sheikh was barred from attending. ‘The Chief Rabbinate will not continue it as long as Tamimi is part of the Palestinian delegation’, Wiener said … The incident further marred the start of the German-born pope’s five-day tour of Israel and the Palestinian territories, after criticism by some Jews that a speech at a Holocaust memorial did not go far enough to mend Catholic-Jewish rifts”. This Haaretz report can be read in full here.

UPDATE: Journalists who attended the interfaith dialog in Notre Dame assure me that Archbishop Twal had indeed acceeded to Tamimi’s request to speak — though it was Twal who then tried to stop Tamimi from speaking mid-stream, or at least he visibly and publicly tried to curtail Tamimi’s remarks.  [The next day, these journalists attended the Mass with the Pope at Gethsemane and said that Archbishop Twal had in fact been quite the hero of the day at that event, making remarks not so different from Tamimi’s, although perhaps more eloquently, and less stupidly.  Then, the day after that, the Pope endorsed Twal’s remarks at Gethsemane by saying, at Mass in Bethlehem’s Manger Square, “I am grateful to Patriarch Fouad Twal for the sentiments which he has expressed on your behalf”.  The “your” refers to “my brothers and sisters in the faith, in these Palestinian territoires [sic – the Pope’s text uses the plural of territory, despite the preferred UN usage of the singular, according to the reasoning of the Oslo Accords, endorsed by the International Court of Justice in its Advisory Opinion on The Wall]”.

Haaretz published a Reuters photo of Tamimi making his “unauthorized” statement at the Notre Dame Church’s interfaith dialog:

Sheikh al-Tamimi making unauthorized statement at Notre Dame interfaith meeting during Papal visit

The Jerusalem Post reported that Tamimi “staged an identical verbal attack against Israel during Pope John Paul II’s visit in March 2000”.  The JPost wrote that this time, “A leading Palestinian cleric commandeered an evening devoted to interfaith dialogue with Pope Benedict XVI on Monday to rant against Israel for ‘killing Gaza’s children’, ‘bulldozing Palestinian homes’ and ‘destroying mosques’ … He also called for the immediate return of all Palestinian refugees, and called on Christians and Muslims to unite against Israel. Tamimi invoked the name of Saladin, the Muslim sultan who recaptured Jerusalem from the Crusaders in 1187. Tamimi said that unlike Israel, Saladin upheld the religious freedoms of all faiths … When Tamimi finished, applause could be heard from a few dozen in an audience of a few hundred … Following the diatribe and before the meeting was officially over, the pope exited the premises. However, he shook Tamimi’s hand before walking out … The Foreign Ministry and Tourism Ministry released a joint statement saying it was “very unfortunate” that the sheikh took advantage of the event to ‘wildly incite against Israel’.” The JPost report can be read in full here

AFP summarized the major sources of angst in the Israeli sector of the Pope’s visit: “[H]e will pointedly not visit the area of the memorial where a caption under a photo of Pius XII says the war-time pope failed to protest against the Holocaust — a stance that has angered the Vatican which disputes the claim. Benedict unleashed a torrent of criticism in January when he lifted the excommunication of Holocaust-denying British bishop Richard Williamson and three other ultra-conservative bishops in what he called a ‘discreet gesture of mercy’. There is also concern among Jews over the Pius beatification and Benedict’s membership of the Hitler Youth, although he has said he was enrolled against his will after membership became compulsory in 1941”. This AFP report can be read in full here.  [Apparently the Pope reversed his decision to rescind the excommunication of Williamson, according to recent references in wire service reports which I do not have the time t– or, frankly, the interest — to follow up at the moment… ]