Saturday, May 24, 2014

Official meetings with the authorities

Upon his arrival at the Queen Alia international airport in Aman, at 1:00pm local time today, the Holy Father, Pope Francis was welcomed by a Prince Ghazi bin Muhammed, on behalf of King Abdullah II; by the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem and President of the Assembly of Catholic Ordinaries of the Holy Land, His Beatitude Fouad Twal; and by the Custos of the Holy Land, Father Pierbattista Pizzaballa, OFM.

Also present at the airport, among others, were the Apostolic Nuncio, His Excellency, Giorgio Lingua; the Greek-Melkite Archbishop of Petra and Filadelfia, His Excellency, Yaser Rasmi Hanna Al-Ayyash; the Latin Archbishop of Bagdad, His Excellency, Jean Benjamin Sleiman; the Latin Vicar for Jordan, Monsignor Maroun Elias Lahlam; and the Secretary General of the Institute for Inter-religious Dialogue in Buenos Aires, Mister Omar Ahmed Abboud.

The Holy Father then left the airport and traveled to the Reale Al-Husseini Palace in Amman where the official Welcoming Ceremony took place.


The Welcoming Ceremony took place at 1:45 local time at the entrance to the Reale Palace in Amman.  There, King Abdallah II bin Al Hussein and Queen Rania welcomed the Holy Father, Pope Francis.  After the presentation of military honors and when the respective National Anthems had been played, the King accompanied the Pope inside the Palace.

The Holy Father remained there in private conversation with the Jordanian King and afterwards, met the members of the Royal family and exchanged official gifts before presenting the members of the Papal delegation.


Having concluded the courtesy visit to the King of Jordan, Pope Francis then met with Jordanian Authorities, a group of approximately 300 persons including the King, Members of the Diplomatic Corps and representatives of the major religions.  Following words of welcome expressed by King Abdullah II bin Al Hussein, the Holy Father spoke the following words:


Address of the Holy Father, Pope Francis
for the meeting with the Authorities of the Kingdom of Jordan

Your Majesties,
Your Excellencies,
Dear Brother Bishops,
Dear Friends,

I thank God for granting me this opportunity to visit the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan in the footsteps of my predecessors Paul VI, John Paul II and Benedict XVI. I am grateful to His Majesty King Abdullah II for his warm words of welcome, as I recall with pleasure our recent meeting in the Vatican. I also greet the members of the Royal Family, the government and the people of Jordan, this land so rich in history and with such great religious significance for Judaism, Christianity and Islam.

Jordan has offered a generous welcome to great numbers of Palestinian and Iraqi refugees, as well as to other refugees from troubled areas, particularly neighboring Syria, ravaged by a conflict which has lasted all too long. Such generosity merits, Your Majesty, the appreciation and support of the international community. The Catholic Church, to the extent of its abilities, has sought to provide assistance to refugees and those in need, especially through Caritas Jordan.

While acknowledging with deep regret the continuing grave tensions in the Middle East, I thank the authorities of the Kingdom for all that they are doing and I encourage them to persevere in their efforts to seek lasting peace for the entire region. This great goal urgently requires that a peaceful solution be found to the crisis in Syria, as well as a just solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

I take this opportunity to reiterate my profound respect and esteem for the Muslim community and my appreciation for the leadership of His Majesty the King in promoting a better understanding of the virtues taught by Islam and a climate of serene coexistence between the faithful of the different religions. You are known as a man of peace and a peacemaker: thank you! I am grateful that Jordan has supported a number of important initiatives aimed at advancing inter-religious dialogue and understanding between Jews, Christians and Muslims. I think in particular of the Amman Message and the support given within the United Nations Organization to the annual celebration of World Interfaith Harmony Week.

I would also like to offer an affectionate greeting to the Christian communities welcomed by this Kingdom, communities present in this country since apostolic times, contributing to the common good of the society of which they are fully a part. Although Christians today are numerically a minority, theirs is a significant and valued presence in the fields of education and health care, thanks to their schools and hospitals. They are able to profess their faith peaceably, in a climate of respect for religious freedom. Religious freedom is in fact a fundamental human right and I cannot fail to express my hope that it will be upheld throughout the Middle East and the entire world. The right to religious freedom includes on the individual and collective levels the freedom to follow one’s conscience in religious matters and, at the same time, freedom of worship… it also includes the freedom to choose the religion which one judges to be true and to manifest one’s beliefs in public (Ecclesia in Medio Oriente, 26). Christians consider themselves, and indeed are, full citizens, and as such they seek, together with their Muslim fellow citizens, to make their own particular contribution to the society in which they live.

Finally, I cordially invoke peace and prosperity upon the Kingdom of Jordan and its people. I pray that my visit will help to advance and strengthen good and cordial relations between Christians and Muslims. And may the Lord God preserve us from the fear of change which Your Majesty referred to.

I thank you for your courteous and warm welcome. May the Almighty and Merciful God grant happiness and long life to Your Majesties, and may he bless Jordan abundantly. Salaam!

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