POPE URGED TO LEAD CATHOLIC - MUSLIM DIALOGUE

Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict XVI receives a copy of the Koran. He's all smiles, isn't he? (John Paul II Cultural Center, Washington, D.C., April 17, 2008.) He received another copy of what he called this "dear document" a few weeks later in the Vatican.

WASHINGTON (AFP)

At a meeting with the representatives of five faiths, U.S. Muslim leaders said they urged Pope Benedict XVI to help establish a permanent dialogue between the two faiths.

"I told the pope: 'I met you two years ago at the Vatican and asked you then to lead efforts to establish permanent dialogue with Muslims,'" Imam Hassan Al-Qazwini, the religious director of the Islamic Center of America said at an impromptu news conference after meeting the pope.

"I repeated that call today. Muslims and Catholics form over 50 percent of the world's population and we are in desperate need of dialogue," he said.

Muzammil Siddiqi, chairman of the Islamic Law Council of North America, said he had also called for more dialogue with the Church, and urged the pope to use his influence to "bring stability to Lebanon."

"He said he would do his best," Siddiqi said.

Benedict met with leaders of the Buddhist, Hindu, Jain, Jewish and Muslim faiths at an inter-religious meeting at the John Paul II Inter-cultural Center in Washington.

"Today in classrooms throughout the country, young Christians, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists and indeed children of all religions sit side by side, learning with and from one another," he told them.

"May others take heart from your experience, realizing that a united society can indeed arise from a plurality of peoples, provided that all recognize religious liberty as a basic civil right."

Benedict began a six-day visit to the United States on Tuesday. On Wednesday he became the first pope in 30 years to visit the White House, where he and President George W. Bush discussed the plight of Christians in war-torn Iraq, among other issues.

As published by worldwide media | 18 April 2008
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