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– Germany Next Target of Terrorism?
Pope prays for God to stop 'murderous
hand' of terrorists
By Associated Press
LES COMBES, Italy - Pope Benedict XVI prayed Sunday for God to stop the
``murderous hand'' of terrorists, stepping up his condemnation of the
recent attacks in Europe and the Middle East blamed on Islamic
extremists.
At the same time, Benedict's spokesman said the pope was placing immense
importance on a scheduled meeting in Cologne, Germany, next month with
members of Germany's Muslim community.
| "return
to yourselves. Discover your origins. Revive your roots. Revive
those authentic values that made your history glorious and made
your presence among other continents blessed.'' |
The pope, who is traveling to Cologne for the church's World Youth Day,
added the meeting with Muslims to his itinerary after deciding to visit
Cologne's synagogue, clearly trying to make a statement about the need
for dialogue among religions during his first foreign trip.
``It's a very strong signal, that at the beginning of his pontificate,
there is this desire for a dialogue among the three great monotheistic
religions that are inspired by, and have reference to Abraham,''
spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls said.
Benedict referred to the recent ``abhorrent terrorist attacks'' in
Egypt, Britain, Turkey and Iraq during his noontime blessing delivered
for the second Sunday in a row from his Alpine retreat in Italy's
northwestern Valle d'Aosta region, where he is vacationing.
``While we grant to divine goodness the dead, the wounded and their dear
ones - victims of such acts that offend God and man - we invoke the
Almighty to stop the murderous hand of those who, driven by fanaticism
and hatred, commit such acts and ask him to convert their hearts and
minds to reconciliation and peace,'' Benedict said.
Benedict also returned to a topic he has been emphasizing in his three
months as pope: the need for Europeans to reaffirm the Christian roots
of the continent.
He quoted Pope John Paul II as urging Europeans to ``'return to
yourselves. Discover your origins. Revive your roots. Revive those
authentic values that made your history glorious and made your presence
among other continents blessed.'''
Benedict said he wanted to send the same message to Europe's youth
during the World Youth Day ceremonies, which he will attend Aug. 18-21.
``Let us pray that the new generations, borrowing from Christ's vital
sap, know that they are part of a European society that is excited by a
renewed humanism in which faith and reason cooperate in a fertile
dialogue for the promotion of the man and the construction of an
authentic peace,'' he said.
Benedict has been in Les Combes since July 11 and is due to remain until
July 28, when he will move to the papal summer retreat in Castel
Gandolfo in the Alban hills south of Rome.
During his vacation, he is finishing a book he started three years ago,
Navarro-Valls said. He would not say what the subject was, only to deny
Italian media speculation that it focused on St. Benedict, a patron
saint of Europe and a figure so close to the pope that he chose Benedict
as his name.
Benedict also has been preparing the various speeches that he will
deliver in Cologne and is working on his first encyclical, the spokesman
said.
Benedict also has done some sightseeing. Earlier this week, he made an
impromptu visit up Mont Blanc, posing for photographs with stunned
tourists atop the Helbronner cable-car station, located in the snow
11,358 feet above sea level, Navarro-Valls said.
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