Pope Francis extended his hand to
the world’s Shiite Muslims on Saturday, meeting top cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali
Sistani in a landmark moment in modern religious history.
The two elderly, respected men of
religion met at Sistani’s humble home in the shrine city of Najaf early on
Saturday, the second day of the first-ever papal visit to Iraq.
The 84-year-old pontiff is
defying a second wave of coronavirus cases and renewed security fears to make a
“long-awaited” trip to Iraq, aiming to comfort the country’s ancient Christian
community and deepen his dialogue with other religions.
He landed at the Najaf airport,
where posters had been set up featuring a famous saying by Ali, the fourth
caliph and the Prophet Mohammed’s relative, who is buried in the holy city.
“People are of two kinds, either
your brothers in faith or your equals in humanity,” read the banners.
A convoy of cars carried him into
the Old City, which was under extremely tight security. He stepped out in one
of Najaf’s tiny alleyways and an AFP correspondent saw him cross the threshold
into Sistani’s office.
No press were allowed inside the
meeting as the 90-year-old grand ayatollah is highly reclusive and almost never
seen in public.
The visit is one of the
highlights of Francis’s four-day trip to war-scarred Iraq, where Sistani has
played a key role in tamping down tensions in recent decades.
It took months of careful
negotiations between Najaf and the Vatican to secure the one-on-one meeting.
“We feel proud of what this visit
represents and we thank those who made it possible,” said Mohamed Ali Bahr
al-Ulum, a senior cleric in Najaf.
‘High moral authority’
Pope Francis, a strong proponent
of interfaith efforts, has met top Sunni clerics in several Muslim-majority
countries, including Bangladesh, Morocco, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates.
Sistani, meanwhile, is followed
by most of the world’s 200 million Shiites — a minority among Muslims but the
majority in Iraq — and is a national figure for Iraqis.
“Ali Sistani is a religious
leader with a high moral authority,” said Cardinal Miguel Angel Ayuso Guixot,
the head of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue and a specialist
in Islamic studies.
Sistani began his religious
studies at the age of five, climbing through the ranks of Shiite clergy to
grand ayatollah in the 1990s.
While Saddam Hussein was in
power, he languished under house arrest for years, but emerged after the US-led
invasion toppled the repressive regime in 2003 to play an unprecedented public
role.
In 2019, he stood with Iraqi
protesters demanding better public services and rejecting external interference
in Iraq’s domestic affairs.
On Friday in Baghdad, Pope
Francis made a similar plea.
“May partisan interests cease,
those outside interests who don’t take into account the local population,”
Francis said.
Sistani has had a complicated
relationship with his birthplace Iran, where the other main seat of Shiite
religious authority lies: Qom.
While Najaf affirms the
separation of religion and politics, Qom believes the top cleric — Iran’s
supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei — should also govern.
‘Great prestige’
Iraqi clerics and Christian
leaders said the visit could strengthen Najaf’s standing compared to Qom.
“The Najaf school has great
prestige and is more secular than the more religious Qom school,” Ayuso said.
“Najaf places more weight on
social affairs,” he added.
In Abu Dhabi in 2019, the Pope
met Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayeb, the imam of the Al-Azhar mosque in Cairo and a key
authority for Sunni Muslims.
They signed a text encouraging
Christian-Muslim dialogue, which Catholic clerics hoped Sistani would also endorse,
but clerical sources in Najaf told AFP it is unlikely.
While the Pope has been
vaccinated and encouraged others to get the jab, Sistani’s office has not
announced his vaccination.
Iraq is currently gripped by a
resurgence of coronavirus cases, recording more than 5,000 infections and more
than two dozen deaths daily.
Following his visit to the grand
ayatollah, the pope will head to the desert site of the ancient city of Ur —
believed to be the birthplace of the Prophet Abraham, common patriarch of the
Christian, Jewish and Muslim faiths — where he will host an interfaith service,
with many of Iraq’s other religious minorities in attendance.
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