Saturday, 16 May 2015

Pope Francis Describes Mahmoud Abbas An Angel Of Peace

Pope Francis on Saturday praised Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
during a meeting at the Vatican that underscored the Holy See's warm
relations with the Palestinians.

Francis, who said Abbas "is an angel of peace'', during the
traditional exchange of gifts at the end of an official audience in
the Apostolic Palace then presented the Palestinian President with a
medallion.

He explained that "the medallion represents the angel of peace
destroying the bad spirit of war.''

Francis said he thought the gift was appropriate "since you are an
angel of peace.''

During his 2014 visit to Israel and the West Bank, Francis called both
Abbas and Israeli President Shimon Peres as men of peace.

Abbas is in Rome for the canonisation of two 19th-century nuns from
what was then Ottoman-ruled Palestine scheduled for Sunday.

The new saints, Mariam Bawardy and Marie Alphonsine Ghattas, are the
first from the region to be canonised since the early days of
Christianity.

Abbas on Saturday offered Francis relics of the two new saints.

Church officials are holding up the new saints as a sign of hope and
encouragement for Christians in the Middle East at a time when violent
persecution from Islamic extremists had driven many Christians from
the region of Christ's birth.

Abbas' visit also comes days after the Vatican finalised a bilateral
treaty with the "state of Palestine" that made explicit its
recognition of Palestinian statehood.

The Vatican said it had expressed "great satisfaction" over the new
treaty during the talks with the Palestinian delegation. It said the
pope, and later the Vatican secretary of state, also expressed hopes
that direct peace talks with Israel would resume.

"To this end, the wish was reiterated that with the support of the
international community, Israelis and Palestinians may take with
determination courageous decisions to promote peace," a Vatican
statement said.

It added that interreligious dialogue was needed to combat terrorism.
--Reuters/NAN

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