September 15, 2006
Islam: Pope Sparks Controversy With Jihad Remarks
by Jeffrey Donovan
Pope Benedict's comments have caused a furor in the Muslim world (file photo) (AFP)
PRAGUE, September 15, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- A chorus of Muslim leaders has
lashed out at Pope Benedict XVI over remarks he made this week that
they say are deeply offensive to Islam.
Benedict, in a speech in his native Germany, quoted a medieval Christian emperor who said Islam had only brought the world "evil and inhuman" things," such as "the command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." The remark was a small part of a lengthy speech on the rapprochement of faith and reason but Islamic leaders from Egypt to Pakistan have called it an outrage.
Benedict's remark was certainly curious, given the fact that it comes just two months before his first scheduled trip as Pope to a Muslim country, Turkey.
And it has forced the Vatican press office into damage control, with spokesman Federico Lombardi seeking to clarify the pope's comments after a wave of outrage from across the Muslim world.
"It certainly wasn't the intention of the pope to carry out a deep examination of jihad and on Muslim thought on it, much less to offend the sensibility of Muslim believers," Lombardi said. "On the contrary, in the Holy Father's speech, there clearly appears a warning to Western culture to avoid [having] contempt for God and cynicism that considers offending that which is sacred to be a civil right."
Byzantine QuotationSpeaking on September 12 at Germany's Regensburg University, where he taught theology in the 1970s, the Bavarian-born pope chose to quote a written criticism of Islam by Emperor Manuel II Palaeologus. Manuel ruled the Orthodox Christian empire from what is now Istanbul in the 1300s.
Benedict quoted a conversation that the emperor wrote about having with "an educated Persian." The quote read: "Show me just what Muhammad brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as command to spread by the sword the faith he preached."
Benedict then repeatedly quoted Manuel's argument that spreading the faith through violence is unreasonable, adding, "Violence is incompatible with the nature of God and the nature of the soul."
The quotations from the Byzantine emperor appeared in the speech as an illustration of the rapprochement of biblical religion and Greek traditions of rational inquiry -- a rapprochement Benedict called decisive for Christian thought.
"Clearly the pope is concerned about the fact that some people act in a violent way claming that God is behind their actions," says British author Gerard O'Connell, a veteran Vatican watcher based in Rome.
"For the pope, this would be unreasonable; it would be contrary to the nature of God," O'Connell continues. "Now, why he would choose [to cite] the text of the emperor -- I don't think any of us knows."
Muslim World OutragedIndeed, the reaction from the Muslim world has been swift.
Pakistan's National Assembly, the parliament's lower house, unanimously passed a resolution condemning the pope's comments. The resolution said the pope's statement "has hurt sentiments of Muslims" and called on him to retract it.
Indian students protesting Benedict's statements on September 15 (epa)
Din Syamsuddin, chairman of Muhammadiyah, the second-largest Islamic organization in Indonesia, told Reuters the remarks could hurt "harmonious" relations between Muslims and Catholics.