Despite heavy shadows, Lebanon awaits the Pope with hope
September 13, 2012: If you didn’t know Pope Benedict was coming to Lebanon you might
be forgiven – especially if you’re not Christian or from these parts. But once you
arrive in Beirut, especially at the international airport, you can’t fail to miss
the posters with close ups of the smiling pope and messages welcoming him in Arabic,
French, English and Italian. Messages like “Pax vobis” the Latin for “peace be with
you” reports Tracey McClure of the Vatican radio from Lebanon. And that is the message
that Pope Benedict will be bringing with him to this region, so full of hope and desire
for change from the Arab Spring yet so troubled by conflict and rife with mistrust
and misunderstanding between people of different ethnic groups and religious faiths.
Coming as a heavy shadow over the pope’s arrival: the death September 11th
of the American Ambassador to Libya, Chris Stevens and security guards in an attack
at the Benghazi consulate. Muslims enraged by an amateur anti-Islamic film attacked
US consular offices and demonstrated in Libya, Egypt and Tunisia. One wonders what
such events will mean for dialogue and relations between Muslims and Christians in
the Middle East – a theme which Pope Benedict will be addressing on his three day
visit.
But even the land of contrasts, Lebanon offers a very different picture
– despite lingering tensions since its 1975-1990 civil war, the country’s 18 different
sects generally respect each other and enjoy similar civil rights and freedoms. Here
in Beirut Wednesday night thousands turned out for another kind of demonstration:
one of love and hope as Muslims joined Christians to pray and entrust to Our Lady
Pope Benedict’s weekend visit. Crossing the war period’s Green Line, the site of bitter
and bloody battles between them, Christians and Muslims found themselves together,
praying and calling for a different future where barriers such as these will remain
only vague memories.