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Chủ Nhật, 31 tháng 3, 2019

Pope Francis: In the footsteps of St. Francis of Assisi -800 years later


Pope Francis: In the footsteps of St. Francis of Assisi -800 years later
St. Francis of Assisi encounters Sultan al-Malik-al-K'mall (Courtesy Pere Daniel Nourissat, Morocco)

The Catholic Church in Morocco has noted that, among other things, that for them, the visit of Pope Francis is symbolic because it marks the 800th anniversary of the encounter between St. Francis and Sultan al-Malik al-K'mall.
Paul Samasumo –Rabat, Morocco,
The visit of Pope Francis in Morocco coincides with the 800th anniversary of the encounter between St. Francis of Assisi and the Sultan al-Malik al-K'mall, who initiated the desire for dialogue and the establishment of harmonious relations between Catholicism and Islam. Another symbol that the Church in Morocco is drawing with this visit is that it coincides with the Jubilee of the 800 years of Franciscan presence in Morocco (1219 - 2019).
At the invitation of the King of Morocco, Mohammed VI and the Bishops of Morocco, Cristóbal López Romero, Archbishop of Rabat, and the Archbishop of Tangier, Santiago Agrelo Martínez, Pope is currently in Rabat for a weekend visit.
St Francis of Assisi encounters Sultan al-Malik al-K'mall
Eight hundred years ago, St. Francis of Assisi and his companion, Illuminatus, who it is said could speak ‘some’ Arabic set out to meet the Muslim Sultan al-Malik al-K'mall. He was the Sultan of Palestine, Syria, and Egypt:
Sultan al-Malik al-K'mall was a devout Muslim could have had St Francis of Assisi killed for trying to convert him. The Sultan spared the life of St Francis. It is not exactly known what St. Francis and the Sultan al-Malik al-K'mall discussed, but historians say Francis returned home a changed man and impressed about his experience with the Sultan. 
The Catholic Church in Morocco has a long and ancient history
In a media briefing about the visit of Pope Francis to Rabat, Père Daniel Nourissat of the Archdiocese of Rabat, says the presence of Christianity in North Africa goes back to the end of the Second Century. There are ancient traces of Christianity, before the arrival of Islam, in places such as Tangier and others. After the establishment of Islam in the Maghreb, small Christian communities survived until the thirteenth century, in some areas, despite the gradual disappearance of the ecclesiastic hierarchy.
In 1219, during St. Francis of Assisi’s very lifetime, the first Franciscans entered Morocco, at the Sultan of Marrakech’s request, to ensure his captives’ would continue to have the freedom of worship. In 1225, the Holy See appointed for the territories under Almohad ’s dominion, a Dominican Bishop. From the fourteenth to the Seventeenth Century, Spanish missionaries continued to exercise their apostolate among Christian captives.
In 1955 there were 200 Christian Churches in Morocco
Following the rapid expansion of the Catholic Church, in 1923 Pope Pius XI created two Apostolic Vicariates: One in Rabat, for the French Protectorate zone, and another in Tangier, for the Spanish Protectorate zone and the Tangier international zone. Resident General  Hubert Lyautey, a French Army general and colonial administrator, made sure that the Church respected Morocco’s “protectorate” status and did not seek to make Muslims become Christians.
In 1955, there were 200 Christian Churches for the  500,000 Europeans who were in Morocco.
Pope Saint John Paul II meets 80 000 young Moroccans
In the19 60s and 1970s, there were strong initiatives concerning Inter-religious dialogue. All these initiatives eventually culminated in the historic event for the Church in Morocco and the Islamic-Christian dialogue when Pope Saint John Paul II visited Casablanca on 19 August 1985. At that event, Pope Saint John Paull II addressed a memorable meeting, in Casablanca, 0f 80,000 young Moroccans at the Mohammed V stadium.
Nevertheless, the years 1975 to 1990 also saw the massive departure of Christians from Morocco as well as with the departure of many religious congregations and the closing down of many Churches, sometimes demolished or sold. Many were mostly handed over to the State. The Dioceses and the Moroccan authorities ensured that these Churches and institutions became a cultural or community space. Twelve boarding schools for Catholic children became Moroccan schools following the Moroccan school system.
The Protestant also has its history
The Protestant Church also has its own history in Morocco. The first Protestant Church having been founded in 1874 in Essaouira/Mogador. By the middle of the 19th century, an Anglican community was established, building a non-Muslim cemetery around 1850 and erecting, in 1906 in Casablanca, the Saint John’s church, which still exists.
In 1913, the first organised French Protestant community was formed in Casablanca.
The status of the Catholic Church in Morocco
In 1984, King Hassan II, recalling the spirit of brotherly understanding that had always characterised the relationship between Christians and Muslims in Morocco, gave to the Catholic Church of Morocco its status. By Royal Dahir (that is, a provision with legislative force), allowed the Catholic Church to exercise its spiritual mission publicly and freely.
Although numbering only about 33 0000, the Catholic Church in Morocco, today, is very active and includes a growing number of Christians mostly from sub-Saharan countries of Africa.


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