George Conger,
Peace in the Middle East and the resolution of property and tax
disputes with the Roman Catholic Church will top the agenda of
President Shimon Peres's September 6 meeting with Pope Benedict XVI.
On Friday, Vatican Radio announced the two will meet next month at
Castel Gandalfo, the Pope's summer palace outside Rome.
Peres will travel to Italy on September 5 and will also meet with his
counterpart, President Giorgio Napolitano and Prime Minister Romano
Prodi.
While the trip will be Peres' first since assuming the Presidency, as
foreign minister and prime minister the veteran politician has been a
frequent guest of the Vatican. In April 2006, while out of public
office, he had a private meeting with Pope Benedict to discuss the
political situation in the region.
Benedict wrote Peres in July, congratulating him on his election and
stating that he hoped his presidency would serve as a vehicle for
peace.
In Nov 2005 Benedict met with then President Moshe Katsav in Rome and
the Israeli leader extended a formal invitation to visit Israel.
Benedict responded positively, but no date has yet been set. A papal
visit to Israel is understood to be contingent on the successful
resolution of the long running legal dispute over the tax and property
status of Catholic institutions in Israel.
The papal audience comes at the end of a summer of uneven
Jewish-Catholic relations, and will take place three days after a
meeting in Jerusalem of the joint Israeli-Vatican Bilateral Permanent
Working Commission to resolve the property disputes.
Last month the Chief Rabbinate of Israel wrote Benedict asking for
clarification on his July decision to permit wider use of the 1962
Latin 'Tridentine' rite, which includes Good Friday prayers for the
"conversion of the Jews." Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Tarcisio
Bertone later told reporters the conversion prayer question was under
study.
Jewish groups have also expressed concern over the Pope's August 5
meeting with Polish priest, Fr. Tadeusz Rydzyk, the director of Radio
Maryja. The Council of Europe's Commission on Racism and Intolerance
criticized the station in 2005, saying it had been "openly inciting to
anti-Semitism for several years."
Polish newspapers reported Fr. Rydzyk had been permitted to kiss the
Pope's ring during an August audience. In response to questions raised
by Jewish groups, the Vatican issued a statement on August 9 saying the
"kiss" did not "imply any change in the Holy See's well-known position
on relations between Catholics and Jews."
However, Vatican and Israeli officials say relations have never been
better. On August 16, Oded Ben-Hur, the Israeli ambassador to the
Vatican, told the Catholic News Service "officially and
institutionally, relations are constantly improving."
Original
Source
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Peres to meet with pope, Italian PM next month
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