Pope Francis in UAE: The courage
of encounter
Bishop Paul Hinder, Vicar Apostolic of Southern Arabia. |
As the Christians and Muslims in the United Arab Emirates
prepare to welcome Pope Francis, the Vicar Apostolic of Southern Arabia provides
some background information on the ground-breaking visit.
By Linda Bordoni - Abu Dhabi
It was a miracle in itself that Bishop Paul Hinder managed
to find time to actually sit down and talk to the Vatican News team the day
before Pope Francis was due to arrive in Abu Dhabi, the first time ever a Pope
sets foot on the Arabian Peninsula’s soil.
Bishop Hinder, who is the Vicar Apostolic of Southern
Arabia, told me that he and his priests and collaborators had only six weeks to
prepare for the momentous occasion.
But he had a smile on his face and a look of gentle patience
as he answered questions in four different languages before rushing back to his
office to catch up with some very pressing deadlines as hundreds of people
queued in the courtyard outside his window to collect free tickets for Tuesday
morning’s papal Mass.
I asked Bishop Hinder, who heads Abu Dhabi’s St. Joseph’s
Catholic Cathedral, to tell me about the people who make up his flock.
“My faithful”, he told me, “are all migrants of different
social status.” They come from all over the world representing some 100
different nationalities.
Most of them, he said, come from Asia, mainly the
Philippines and India, but there are also Africans, Europeans, and Americans…
:“It is a multi-lingual, multi-racial, multi-coloured Church.”
I asked him what their life is like here, in a country that
is so foreign in so many different ways.
Abu Dhabi, he said, is similar in some ways to the so-called
Western world: well-developed and with high standards in many regards.
However, it is profoundly different in that it is a deeply
Islamic society in which only some 20% of the population are citizens while the
remaining 80% are foreign migrants, here to work.
He didn’t elaborate, but I gathered that although many spend
the years of a life-time here, actively contributing to the development and
wealth of the nation, they remain “expats” or “foreigners”, never fully
integrating into the fabric of Emirati society.
Amongst them, he continued, the majority are Muslims but
there are also Christians, who are those most overjoyed for the Pope’s visit.
Bishop Hinder said it has been enormously stressful to have
to organize “an event that is very special” in such a short time, but that
fortunately most of the work has been done by the government.
He wistfully points out that the “Catholic” part of the visit
is quite short, taking place on Tuesday morning with a visit to St Joseph’s
Cathedral, then the Mass, “and then it is already time for the departure”.
Background to the visit
Bishop Hinder explains that, although the visit came upon
them so suddenly, the invitation was actually issued at least one and half
years ago (Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed visited Pope Francis in the Vatican in
2016).
Bishop Hinder said that he too had spoken to Pope Francis on
the occasion of a private audience during which he told the Pope: “It would be
nice if you could come” pointing out, however, that it was not for him to make
the official invitation.
So, he said, the invitation came from the Crown Prince and
from the government, but the occasion was provided by the interreligious event
(the Global Conference on Human Fraternity), and also to the Pope’s special
relationship with the Grand Imam of Al Azhar who will be at the Conference.
A complicated but long-standing relationship
To my question on whether new territory is being charted or
if Pope Francis is treading footsteps that have already been trod, Bishop
Hinder said it’s new in the sense that no Pope has been here before. On the
other hand, he continued, it’s not completely new because it is already written
in the history of both sides.
He explained that the nation had chosen to adopt an attitude
of tolerance at the end of the 1950's thanks to Sheikh Shakhbut’s far-sighted
vision that pushed him to cultivate an excellent relationship with Christians
and allow the first Catholic church to be built in Abu Dhabi in 1965. This
course, he said, continued with Sheikh Zayed, the Founder of the Nation and
with the present rulers.
Meanwhile, on the side of the Church, Bishop Hinder said,
“ever since Vatican II steps have been undertaken for major mutual
understanding – of course with ups and downs in the history of the
relationship– as always is the case in complicated relationships!”.
St. Francis and the Sultan of Egypt
In fact the relationship, Bishop Hinder noted, has roots
that go far back in time to when St. Francis, the founder of his own Capuchin
order, made what is known to be perhaps the very first, prophetic step in the
history of Christian-Muslim relations, when he travelled to Egypt to meet and
to talk to the Sultan, who in turn, offered him hospitality and friendship.
“It is a happy coincidence that in 2019 we are celebrating
800 years of this event when St. Francis met the Sultan of Egypt, and by the
way, it was during a time of war, and St. Francis had the courage to cross the
borders and the war front”, he said.
“I think”, he concluded, there is an analogy with Pope
Francis who is not afraid to cross borders and say ‘we have to be in
touch, never mind what others think, never mind what happens, because there is
no other way to face each other than to look each other in the eyes and
exchange words’”.
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