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By Stacy Meichtry
Religion News Service
VATICAN CITY—Iraqi
President Jalal Talabani met with Pope Benedict XVI on Nov. 10 and pledged
to guarantee the rights of religious minorities amid concern that Iraq’s
proposed constitution institutionalizes Islamic law.
“I explained to His Holiness that the Iraqi constitution will consider
all Iraqis—Christians included—equal and will respect all
religions,” Talabani said at a news conference after the meeting.
“All kinds of freedoms will be guaranteed for all,” he added
without going into detail.
Religious freedom in Iraq has been a top concern for Vatican officials
following the recent approval of Iraq’s draft constitution, which
regards Islam as Iraq’s official religion and “a fundamental
source of legislation.”
Iraqi Christians represent about three percent of Iraq’s population
with 800,000 faithful, most of whom belong to the Eastern-rite Chaldean
Church, which is in communion with Rome.
More than a dozen Chaldean bishops are currently in Rome conducting a
synod expected to advise the pope on Christianity in Iraq.
Talabani said his 20-minute private meeting with Benedict centered on
Iraqi democracy and quoted the pope as saying the constitution represented
“progress” in Iraq.
According to a draft of the constitution that was approved during an October
referendum, Iraq guarantees “the full religious rights of all individuals
to freedom of religious belief and practice.”
But the document also calls for judges and experts in “Islamic jurisprudence”
to sit on Iraq’s high court —- a clause that many critics
regard as an opening to place Islamic clerics in control of Iraqi law.
“It’s very dangerous to say that (Iraqi law) must be compatible
with Islamic law,” said Chaldean Archbishop Louis Sako of Kirkuk,
in Iraq, who joined Talabani at the conference.
“Either Islam or democracy. You have to choose,” Sako added.
Muslim countries that base their legal systems on the Shariah, or Islamic
law, often outlaw the converting of Muslim citizens to other religions.
Some interpretations of the Quran suggest if such converts refuse an opportunity
to recant, they should be put to death.
According to Dhimmi law, an Islamic code that applies to Jews and Christians,
non-Muslims are allowed to practice their faith but are still subject
to Islamic rule. The tension often occurs when Christians act on biblical
commands to spread the gospel, and share their faith with Muslims.
The Vatican did not release a statement after the meeting, which took
place with strict security measures that shut down traffic along the Via
della Conciliazione, the main conduit into Vatican City.
Talabani expressed sorrow for the recent killings of two lawyers defending
former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, on trial for crimes against humanity.
“I am very sorry that some colleagues, some lawyers — because
I too am a lawyer — were killed,” Talabani said, adding, “We
are ready to provide them with security, with protection, with bodyguards,
but unfortunately they do not want to ask us, the government.”
The Vatican was an outspoken critic of the war in Iraq under Benedict’s
predecessor, John Paul II.
Following a meeting with Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, Talabani
said, “War is not the best way, but it was the only way to topple
Saddam Hussein.”
Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Angelo Sodano has sent a telegram
to King Abdullah II of Jordan, expressing the pope’s condemnation
of the triple bombings that killed up to 59 people in Amman, Jordan, on
Nov. 9.
Cardinal Sodano said Benedict was “deeply saddened” by the
attacks, which he described as “cruel acts of violence and disrespect
for law and human life.”
The terrorist group Al-Qaida in Iraq issued a statement that claimed responsibility
for the bombings.
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