New Direction

  • Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Reuters Showcase

Rights in Russia

Rights in Russia

Russia's oldest human rights group fights "foreign agent" tag.  Full Article 

Brutal Killing

Brutal Killing

British police arrest two more over London attack.  Full Article 

Anti-Gay Ban Lifted

Anti-Gay Ban Lifted

Boy Scouts of America votes to end century-old ban on gay scouts.  Full Article |  

Boston Suspect Killing

Boston Suspect Killing

FBI reviews death of Chechen man shot during Florida questioning  Full Article 

Tornado Aftermath

Tornado Aftermath

In deeply religious Oklahoma, prayer brings solace after tornado.  Full Article 

Reuters India Mobile

Reuters India Mobile

Get the latest news on the go. Visit Reuters India on your mobile device.  Full Coverage 

Pope calls for religious freedom in Muslim states

Related Topics

Pope Benedict XVI greets the faithful as he arrives to lead a mass in Floriana in Valletta April 18, 2010.Pope Benedict on Thursday said all states must guarantee the freedom for everyone to practise their faith publicly, a clear criticism of some Muslim countries where religious rights are restricted. REUTERSAlessandro Bianchi/Files

Pope Benedict XVI greets the faithful as he arrives to lead a mass in Floriana in Valletta April 18, 2010.Pope Benedict on Thursday said all states must guarantee the freedom for everyone to practise their faith publicly, a clear criticism of some Muslim countries where religious rights are restricted.

Credit: ReutersAlessandro Bianchi/Files

VATICAN CITY | Thu Nov 11, 2010 8:38pm IST

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope Benedict on Thursday said all states must guarantee the freedom for everyone to practise their faith publicly, a clear criticism of some Muslim countries where religious rights are restricted.

The pope issued the call in a document of nearly 200 pages called an "apostolic exhortation", in which he offered his reflections on a synod of bishops that met in the Vatican in 2008 on the theme the "Word of God".

He said the Catholic Church respected all religions and a separate section of the document was dedicated to relations with Muslims.

"All the same, dialogue would not prove fruitful unless it included authentic respect for each person and the ability of all freely to practise their religion," he said.

"Respect and dialogue require reciprocity in all spheres," he said, adding that this had to include the right to profess religion "privately and publicly and (for) freedom of conscience to be effectively guaranteed to all believers".

"Reciprocity" is the term the Roman Catholic Church uses in demanding full rights for Christians in Islamic states where laws prohibit them from practising their faith openly. It has often asked for reciprocity with Saudi Arabia.

At least 3.5 million Christians of all denominations live in the Gulf Arab region, the birthplace of Islam and home to some of the most conservative Arab Muslim societies in the world.

The freedom to practise Christianity, or any religion other than Islam, is not always permitted in the Gulf and varies from country to country. Saudi Arabia, which observes an austere form of Sunni Islam, has the tightest restrictions.

The Vatican says Christians in predominantly Muslim countries should be allowed to practise their faith openly, just as Muslims can in predominantly Christian countries in Europe.

In Saudi Arabia, home to Islam's holiest sites, any form of non-Muslim worship takes place in private. Converting Muslims is punishable by death, although such sentences are rare.

Services and prayer meetings are often held in diplomats' homes but access is limited, so Christians meet to worship in hotel conference rooms, at great risk.

The Vatican has expressed concern about the fate of Christians in predominantly Muslim Iraq, where 52 hostages and police were killed on Sunday when security forces stormed a church that had been raided by al-Qaeda-linked gunmen.

In the document, the pope re-stated Vatican opposition to the use of violence in the name of religion.

(Editing by Andrew Dobbie)

Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.