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Putin To Meet Pope Francis In Rome by Nobody: 1:50pm On Nov 25, 2013
Putin to Meet Pope Francis in Rome

By Barbie Latza Nadeau
November 25th 20135:45 am

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The two world leaders, vastly different in temperament, are expected to hold a closed-door meeting in Rome on Monday to discuss the fate of Syria.

The last time Russian president Vladimir Putin came to Rome, he visited Silvio Berlusconi with a wink and a nod to their long-standing bromance. The two were so close, Berlusconi even named a bed after him in his Roman love nest, where he allegedly entertained top-dollar call girls on the sheets gifted from his Russian pal.


Putin’s visit on Monday will have a slightly different agenda as the Russian president meets Pope Francis for the first time. And it almost certainly won’t be as lighthearted as his previous sojourns in the eternal city.


Putin’s state visit marks the first serious foray into international affairs by the popular pope, who has won the hearts of Catholics and non-Catholics alike through simple acts of humanity. The agenda is likely to focus on Syria, which has been a bane to the pope since taking office last March. Francis initiated the bi-lateral meeting back in September when he wrote a harsh letter to the Russian president ahead of the G20 meeting, scolding the G20 leaders for neglecting the troubles in Syria. “The meeting of the Heads of State and Government of the 20 most powerful economies, with two-thirds of the world’s population and 90 percent of global GDP, does not have international security as its principal purpose. Nevertheless, the meeting will surely not forget the situation in the Middle East and particularly in Syria,” the pope wrote to Putin. “It is regrettable that, from the very beginning of the conflict in Syria, one-sided interests have prevailed and in fact hindered the search for a solution that would have avoided the senseless massacre now unfolding.”


The pope has been adamant that Russian intervention is the only way to temper the bloodbath resulting from the Syrian civil war, and those close to the Vatican say their closed-door meeting will focus primarily on what Russia is expected to do in the eyes of the Holy See. Vatican experts are likening the meeting to the December 1, 1989, bilateral meeting between Pope John Paul II and Mikhail Gorbachev just days after the fall of the Berlin Wall. Recently released transcripts from that private meeting shed light on the power of the papacy.


The encounter between Francis and Putin is also expected to help ease tense relations between the Catholic Church and the Russian Orthodox Church, who have been squabbling for decades over allegations that after the breakup of the Soviet Union, Catholics tried to lure Russian Orthodox followers away. There has also been a nasty property dispute between Greek Catholics, whom the Russian Orthodox Church alleges stole properties belonging to it. After Francis was elected, the patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church sent the pontiff a letter inviting Catholics to help fight the persecution of Christians all over the world. There are just 700,000 Catholics in Russia, making it a minority religion, but it is quite clear that the dialogue is not intended to focus on religious similarities or differences.





No doubt after a few hours with the pope, Putin will long for the days when his visits to Rome were far more pleasurable.

It will also be quite clear that the two men share little in the way of neutral territory. Putin, well known for his opulent lifestyle, stands in sharp contrast to Francis, who has pared down the spoils of the papacy to the bare minimum. And the two seemingly differ even with regard to their views toward homosexuality. Oddly, it will be the pope who seems more tolerant of same-sex unions when the two meet—after all, as he famously has said he doesn’t feel he is in any position to judge gays. “If someone is gay and he searches for the Lord and has good will, who am I to judge?” he told reporters on his papal plane in July. Putin, on the other hand, has prohibited the promotion of “gay pride” in Russia. In September, anti-gay political groups in Italy even posted signs in support of Putin’s homophobic policies, with “I am with Putin” written over a photo of the Russian leader in military garb.


No doubt after a few hours with the pope, Putin will long for the days when his visits to Rome were far more pleasurable. He will be briefly visiting Berlusconi and former prime minister Romano Prodi on his quick trip to Rome. There is no word whether Putin will make good on his offer just last week to issue a diplomatic Russian passport to the beleaguered Berlusconi to live in Russia should his legal troubles in Italy become too much to handle after his recent conviction for tax fraud. According to the Italian press, the Russian passport Putin is offering would allow Berlusconi to “move freely” around Europe, perhaps even settling permanently in Antigua, Bermuda, or San Moritz, now that his own international travel privileges have been curtailed while he waits to serve out a year of community service for his tax fraud conviction. Putin reportedly even suggested that if Berlusconi took him up on the offer, he would make Berlusconi the Russian ambassador to the Holy See, which would allow him to live in Rome under full diplomatic protection. With luck, Putin and the pope will have far more urgent matters than that on their agenda to discuss.

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/11/25/putin-to-meet-pope-francis-in-rome.html
Re: Putin To Meet Pope Francis In Rome by Nobody: 1:58pm On Nov 25, 2013
Pope meeting Putin, could help mend Catholic-Orthodox relations
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By Philip PullellaNovember 7, 2013 10:06 AM


View gallery

Pope Francis looks on during his Wednesday general audience in Saint Peter's square at the Vatican November …

By Philip Pullell


VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope Francis will receive Russian President Vladimir Putin on November 25, an encounter that could help mend strained relations between the Vatican and the Russian Orthodox Church.

Russian-Vatican relations have been fraught since the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union, with Moscow accusing the Roman Catholic Church of trying to poach believers from the Russian Orthodox Church, a charge the Vatican denies.

But Putin is the first Kremlin leader since the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution to publicly profess religious faith - to the Orthodox church - and has several times advocated ending the long feud between the two major Christian churches.

Putin and the pope will hold their first meeting on November 25, a Vatican spokesman said on Thursday.

Putin, who also met his two immediate predecessors, could invite the pope to visit Russia, diplomats said.

Popes Benedict and John Paul had standing invitations from the Russian government but could not go because they received no matching invitation from the Orthodox Church. Francis would need the same to go to Russia.

Another dispute between the churches concerns the fate of many church properties that Soviet leader Joseph Stalin ordered confiscated from Eastern Rite Catholics, who worship in an Orthodox liturgy but owe their allegiance to Rome.

Stalin gave the Catholic property to the Russian Orthodox Church, but after the fall of communism, the Eastern Rite Catholics took back many sites, leading to a rise in tensions.

The Russian Orthodox Church, which has resurged since the collapse of the Soviet Union, has some 165 million members in former Soviet republics including Russia and other states.

Francis is the first non-European pope in 1,300 years. His predecessors came from countries - Italy, Poland and Germany - that were caught up in the 20th century's two global conflicts as well as in the Cold War that followed World War Two.

Diplomats have said that Francis, an Argentine with no European political baggage, would have a far better chance of improving ties with the Russian Orthodox Church.

There have been signs of a general warming between the western and eastern branches of Christianity.

On March 20, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew became the first worldwide spiritual leader of Orthodox Christians to attend a papal inaugural Mass since the Great Schism split western and eastern Christianity in 1054.

(Editing by James Mackenzie and Mark Heinrich
http://news.yahoo.com/pope-meeting-putin-could-help-mend-catholic-orthodox-150601080.html?soc_src=mediacontentsharebuttons

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