Card. Filoni on significance of Pope's visit to
Azerbaijan
(Vatican Radio) On
Sunday morning Pope Francis leaves the Georgian capital, Tbilisi, and flies
east, headed for Baku, the Azerbaijani capital and largest city on the Caspian
Sea.
There he will meet with Sheik
Allashukur Pashazade, head of the majority Muslim community which makes up
around 85% percent of the rapidly developing nation. He’ll take part in an
interreligious encounter with leaders of all the faith groups, but he’ll also
celebrate Mass at the only Catholic parish in the country, which serves the few
hundred local and foreign members of this tiny community.
Pope John Paul II set up the
mission in Baku, run by Salesian priests and supported by sisters of Mother
Theresa’s Missionaries of Charity, just ahead of his own historic pastoral visit
to the former Soviet nation in 2002.
As head of the Vatican’s
Congregation for the Evangelisation of Peoples, Cardinal Fernando Filoni looks
after this tiny Catholic community today. He talked to Philippa Hitchen about
the significance of Pope Francis’ visit there….
Cardinal Filone says there
are two levels to this papal visit; the first level is the invitation from the
government, building on Pope John Paul II’s visit which opened, in a very
structural form, the presence of Catholics in Azerbaijan.
The second level, he says, is
religious and includes all the components of Azerbaijan, the Shiite Muslim
majority, Christians belonging to the Russian Orthodox Church, Jews and others.
For the Catholics, of course, he adds, this visit means the Holy Father does
not think only of the big communities but instead “all of the communities,
especially the small ones, have a place in the heart of the Church and of the
Holy Father”.
Asked about the relationship
between this tiny Catholic community and the vast majority of Muslims, the
cardinal says “the relationship is very good”, as he witnessed during his own
2012 visit there. The leader of the Muslim community, Sheik Allashukur
Pashazade, the Russian Orthodox Archbishop Aleksandr, and the Apostolic
Prefect, Salesian Father Vladimír Fekete, together with the president of the
Jewish community, Ikhiilov, meet quite frequently, he says.
While the government of
Azerbaijan is keen to maintain these peaceful relationship, the cardinal says,
the different communities enjoy freedom of worship and religious rights
Commenting on Pope Francis’
recent call for peace in the contested Nagorno-Karabakh region during his June
visit to Armenia, Cardinal Filoni says “I am sure the Holy Father will appeal
again also in Azerbaijan. It is an appeal for peace, understanding, comprehension,
and for solving the problems through contact and relationships”.
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