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Iraqi Cardinal: Secular State Is ‘Only Future’ for Mideast Christians
26 Apr 2021
ROME Iraqi Cardinal Louis Raphaël Sako has reiterated his call for the creation of non-confessional states in the Middle East that give equal standing to all citizens, regardless of their religion.
“I think the only future for countries in the Middle East is to set up a secular regime, and to respect religion,” Cardinal Sako said this weekend, during a virtual panel discussion titled, “The Future of Christianity in the Middle East,” organized by Fellowship and Aid to the Christians of the East (FACE).
Sako, who is the Chaldean Patriarch of Baghdad, was elevated to the rank of cardinal by Pope Francis in 2018, a move viewed by many as recognition of his leadership during the years of harsh persecution of Christians under the Islamic State terror group.
Opinion: It’s a quarter past midnight for Christians in the Middle East Special to National Post © Provided by National Post Pope Francis speaks at a square near the ruins of the Syriac Catholic Church of the Immaculate Conception, in northern Mosul on March 7, 2021, during his historic visit to Iraq.
By Peter Subissati Many adjectives have been used to qualify Pope Francis’ whirlwind visit to Iraq. While most have opted for “historic,” “belated” is perhaps more apt, for it comes precisely when much of Middle Eastern Christendom is on its knees. One of the most powerful images of the visit occurred when Pope Francis addressed his flock from the bombed-out carcass of a church destroyed by ISIL. The choice of Mosul could not have been more symbolic, as the formerly vibrant city, which once stood at the ancient crossroads of cultures and religions, is now an ethnically homogenous city in ruins.