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Thursday March 27, 2008

Vatican: Convert Who Slammed Islam Doesn't Express Pope's Views

Associated Press

Vatican City - The convert from Islam who denounced what he called "inherent" violence in Islam a day after Pope Benedict XVI baptized him was not expressing the pope's views, a Vatican spokesman said Thursday.

Magdi Allam, an Egyptian-born deputy editor of Corriere della Sera newspaper and frequent commentator on Islamic terrorism, "has the right to express his own ideas, which remain his personal ideas, without obviously becoming in any way the official expression of the positions of the pope or the Holy See," said the Rev. Federico Lombardi, the chief Vatican spokesman.

Benedict baptized Allam, 55, in St. Peter's Basilica on Saturday night during an Easter vigil ceremony televised worldwide.

Lombardi told Vatican Radio that "to welcome into the church a new believer obviously does not signify marrying all his ideas and views, particularly on political or social subjects."

Allam sparked anger in the Muslim world when he wrote in Corriere della Sera a day after his baptism that Islam is "physiologically violent and historically conflictual."

Among those criticizing the Vatican for allowing Allam to convert in such a high-profile way was a Muslim scholar, Aref Ali Nayed, who participated in recent Vatican talks to improve Catholic-Muslim relations.

Nayed, who directs the Royal Islamic Strategic Studies Center in Amman, Jordan, denounced what he called "the Vatican's deliberate and provocative act."

Nayed also expressed dismay that the baptism was held while "sincere Muslims and Catholics are working very hard to mend ruptures."

Earlier this month, Nayed participated in two days of talks at the Vatican to prepare for an audience in November between the pontiff and Muslim religious leaders and scholars.

Lombardi said the Vatican holds Nayed in "very high esteem" and expressed satisfaction that he still was wants to pursue dialogue.

The Vatican wants to mend relations with moderate Islam and has placed importance on the upcoming audience with representatives of 138 Muslim scholars who wrote to the pope last year calling for greater Muslim-Christian dialogue.

That dialogue "is of extreme importance, and shouldn't be interrupted," Lombardi said. "It takes priority over episodes that can be the object of misunderstanding."

A speech by the pope in 2006 citing a medieval emperor's words about Islam and violence angered many in the Muslim world. Benedict later expressed regret that the speech had caused anger.

Allam has built his career as commentator and book author on attacking Islamic extremism and supporting Israel.

On Tuesday, the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano described his baptism as a papal "gesture" aimed at stressing religious freedom and harboring "no hostile intentions" toward Islam.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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His comments clearly reflect religious freedom. And when PB baptizes someone himself rather than letting a minion do it, he takes his chances.

On the specific issue of Mr. Allam's comments, this article makes it sound like he said the most provocative things right AFTER converting. If he had said those things the day BEFORE the pope decided to personally baptize him, then it would be a bit different, though it is true, the pope did risk some being upset by such a public gesture. Then, the pope seems to get personally involved in other cases of VIPs (Tony Blair, for example), so this may not have been an intentional slap to Islam.

God bless.

The Popes desire to get along with the Muslim people is one thing, and has nothing to do with a personal desire of Allam to become RC with his wife and family. For the Muslims to complain about Allams personal religious business seems petty, and argumentative.

Quote: Allam said Islam is physiologically violent and historically conflictual.

This seems truthful at least in some families. I've read stories of women beaten, girl children beaten, some killed to save the honor of the family. That seems physiologically violent to me. Who would deny this? Apparently the Pope does.

What a person does, no matter what religion, doesn't give their "spiritual leader" any say about it. Just because the Big Dude baptized Allam personally doesn't mean Allam has to change what he does. Allam is/was outspoken about Islam, and that probably won't stop just because of his conversion.

Henrietta, what you describe happens and never should. But he implied Islam is full of things like that and I've seen no evidence to support an idea like that.

Muslims are forbidden to seek peace with those trying to drive them from their homes for the sake of religion. In contrast my copy of the Catechism of the Catholic Church describes a martyr as one who witnesses for peace even unto death. So in terms in doctrine I suppose Islam could seem more conflictual than Catholicism.

Catholicism is older than Islam and perhaps more mature. Or maybe it just doesn't have the power any more in this world of instant communication to impose its will. For whatever reason it's currently behaving better, on average, than Islam.

I understand what you're saying nnmns, but he was brought up as a Muslim wasn't he? I think I read that in another news source. That would put him in the middle of Islam and also their culture, which I imagine is intertwined with their religious behavior.

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