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Pope prays during visit to Istanbul mosque

Benedict's outing added to schedule as 'sign of respect' to Muslims

Image: Pope Benedict XVI visits the Blue Mosque
Patrick Hertzog / AFP - Getty Images
Pope Benedict XVI visits the Blue Mosque in Istanbul on Thursday. Benedict, only the second pope in history after John Paul II to set foot in a Muslim house of worship, turned towards Mecca at the suggestion of the Muslim cleric accompanying him.
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Pope Benedict Visits Turkey Ð Day Two
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Pope Benedict XVI urges unity, honors site holy to Christianity during a visit to Turkey.
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updated 1:14 p.m. ET Nov. 30, 2006

ISTANBUL, Turkey - Pope Benedict XVI prayed alongside an Islamic cleric in one of Turkey’s most famous mosques Thursday in a dramatic gesture of outreach to Muslims after outrage from the pontiff’s remarks linking violence and the teachings of the Prophet Muhammad.

The pope bowed his head for nearly a minute after Mustafa Cagrici, the head cleric of Istanbul, said: “Now I’m going to pray.”

“This visit will help us find together the way of peace for the good of all humanity,” the pope said before leaving the 17th century Blue Mosque in only the second papal visit to a Muslim place of worship. Benedict’s predecessor, John Paul II, visited a mosque in Syria in 2001.

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The mosque visit was added to Benedict’s schedule as a “sign of respect” during his first papal trip to a Muslim nation, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman, said last week.

'Let us pray for brotherhood'
The pope removed his shoes before entering the carpeted expanse of the mosque, which is officially known as the Sultan Ahmet Mosque after the Ottoman sultan Ahmet I, who ordered its construction. But it’s widely called the Blue Mosque after its elaborate blue tiles.

The pope received a gift of a glazed tile decorated with a dove and a painting showing a view of the Sea of Marmara off Istanbul. The pope gave the imam a painting showing four doves.

“Let us pray for brotherhood and for all humanity,” the pope said in Italian.

The pope has offered wide-ranging messages of reconciliation to Muslims since arriving in Turkey on Tuesday, including appeals for greater understanding and support for Turkey’s steps to become the first Muslim nation in the European Union.

But Benedict also has set down his own demands.

After a deeply symbolic display of unity with Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, the spiritual leader of the world’s Christian Orthodox, the pope again repeated his calls for greater freedoms for religious minorities and described the divisions among Christians — including the nearly 1,000-year rift between Catholics and Orthodox — as a “scandal to the world.”

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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