The Timaru Herald

Pope pauses at wall to bless Palestinia­n cause

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Jerusalem – Pope Francis has made a personal bid for peace by inviting the Israeli and Palestinia­n presidents to the Vatican to pray for an end to their ‘‘increasing­ly unacceptab­le’’ conflict.

And he came face-to-face yesterday with daily Palestinia­n reality in Bethlehem, making an unschedule­d stop by a towering separation barrier Israel is erecting across the West Bank to talk with families and refugees.

But as he arrived to begin the Israeli leg of his three-day visit to the Middle East, the 77-year-old pontiff expressed deep sadness over a deadly shooting attack in Brussels that left four people dead, two of them Israelis, calling for an end to anti-Semitism and intoleranc­e.

As he clambered out of a Jordanian military helicopter at Tel Aviv airport, Israeli and Vatican flags snapped jauntily in the breeze as Francis was greeted on the red carpet by Israeli President Shimon Peres and other top officials.

Although Francis has said his three-day pilgrimage, which has already taken him to Jordan and the occupied West Bank, has ‘‘purely religious’’ motives, his every gesture was closely scrutinise­d with Israel and the Palestinia­ns keen to score a few political points.

Earlier, Francis grabbed headlines in Bethlehem with an unschedule­d stop by the West Bank barrier, hopping out of his jeep to spend a few minutes in prayer, resting his forehead against wall.

Dressed in his white cassock and flanked by anxious Palestinia­n security guards, he walked over to the 8-metre-high barrier, which is topped by a guard tower.

He rested his hand and forehead on the ‘‘Free Palestine’’ daubed wall, and then paused several minutes in front of a scrawled appeal for his help: ‘‘Pope, we need someone to speak about justice.’’

It was a powerful show of support which was warmly welcomed by the Palestinia­ns.

Despite expectatio­ns he would steer clear of the thorny politics of the intractabl­e Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, the Argentine pontiff extended a personal invitation to Abbas and Israeli counterpar­t Peres to join him at his home in the Vatican for a ‘‘heartfelt prayer’’ for peace.

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 ?? Photo: REUTERS ?? Touching gesture: Pope Francis says a small prayer while touching the controvers­ial wall that divides Israel from the West Bank.
Photo: REUTERS Touching gesture: Pope Francis says a small prayer while touching the controvers­ial wall that divides Israel from the West Bank.

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