Egyptian Prelate Cautions Against “Islamophobia”
By Carmen Elena Villa, Vatican City, 20 October 2010, Zenit.org.
On the list of 24 men who will be made cardinals next month, one is an Egyptian
was already in Rome when today’s announcement was made: His Beatitude Antonios
Naguib.
Patriarch Naguib is one of the synod fathers discussing the Middle East at the
synodal assembly under way in the Vatican through Sunday.
He is the patriarch of Alexandria of the Copts in Egypt, a service he has
carried out since 2006. He is also the president of the Conference of Catholic Bishops in Egypt.
On Tuesday 19th October, the patriarch spoke at a press conference after the morning’s
interventions at the synod.
Stigmatizing Muslims
Patriarch Naguib warned of the danger of Islamophobia, when Islamism i s
equated with terrorism: “How many Muslims are there in the world?” he
asked, to which he himself responded: 1.2 billion.
“If we said that 10% are terrorists, we would have 120 million” and
“if there were 120 million terrorists in the world there would be no form
of life.”
“Here is the message,” he said. “We know that the issue can be
resolved, that it is possible to find bridges, gather ideas, help to mature, to
combat. This is something feasible.”
The Middle East, the 75-year-old patriarch added, has suffered “black
days, when Christians were persecuted and they sought refuge in nearby Muslim
countries,” as both creeds have lived together for 14 centuries. “We
live well, we are close to Muslims.”
The future cardinal pointed to an example from his community: “A Muslim
woman who goes shopping, goes by her Christian neighbor and knocks o n the door
to say, ‘Please, can you look after the children until I get back?'”
“Is there a more powerful dialogue than this?” the Egyptian patriarch
asked the journalists. “I don’t say there aren’t difficulties, but I say
that we must face the problems with rationality and understand the situation to
be able to find the most appropriate solutions.”
Hopes for change
Patriarch Naguib opined that the faithful might not feel directly that the
synod resolves their problems.
“This is our task,” he said and the fruits ultimately depend on the
Holy Spirit as well as the “courage of the bishops, their work and the
ability to communicate the message that comes from the Holy Father.”
Responding to a question about trafficking in weapons, the patriarch asserted,
“If every month the world saved what is spent in one day on weapons, it
would be able to combat poverty throughout the world.”
“With economic stability, the sense of anger would diminish, of wanting to
seek revenge on the world for no reason,” he added.
In any case, the patriarch said he doubted the synod would address this point:
“The Church doesn’t have a political role. Hers is, rather, a pastoral
role.”
Celibacy
Another journalist asked about married priests, since the Eastern Code of Canon
Law allows men who have married to be ordained.
The patriarch affirmed his respect for the practice of the Latin Church and
asserted that admitting married priests in the rite “will not resolve the
problem of vocations and will not resolve the good or bad behavior of a priest.”
What is important, he added, is to bear the discipline with the coherence and
fidelity with which one lives one’s own vocation.
Finally, referring again to the situation of the Church in the Middle East, the Coptic Patriarch pointed out the importance of the value of prayer for the
Church, which “helps us to carry forward our mission in the land in which
the Lord has wished to place us.”