Head of BiH Islamic community meets Pope Benedict XVI

17/11/2008

Grand Mufti Mustafa Efendija Ceric, head of Bosnia and Herzegovina's Islamic community, attended a three-day meeting of the Catholic-Muslim Forum in Vatican City.

By Jusuf Ramadanovic for Southeast European Times in Sarajevo -- 17/11/08

photo

Grand Mufti Mustafa Efendija Ceric met with the pope earlier this month. [AFP]

The first meeting of the Catholic-Muslim Forum took place in Vatican City from November 4th through 6th. Two delegations -- one Muslim, one Catholic -- each consisting of 29 religious experts and leaders, attended. Among them was the head of the Islamic community in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Grand Mufti Mustafa Efendija Ceric.

The forum's creators were the Pontifical Council for Inter-religious Dialogue and the 138 Muslim representatives who, on October 13th 2007, sent an open letter to the pope and to other heads of Christian churches and ecclesiastic communities.

On the third day of the seminar, the participants had an audience with the pontiff. "This meeting is a clear sign of our mutual respect," said Pope Benedict XVI. During his speech, he characterised the seminar as another step towards better understanding between Muslims and Christians.

Among those in the papal audience was Efendija Ceric. In his statement to the Sarajevo-based daily Dnevni Avaz, he conveyed his impressions from the conversation with the pope.

"I told the pope that BiH is a country of good people and invited him to visit our country and Sarajevo," said Efendija Ceric, who also conveyed greetings to the pontiff from the Catholic cardinal of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Vinko Puljic.

Related Articles

Loading

The Islamic leader said he was returning to Sarajevo with much more optimism for the future of Europe. "This is a landmark for resolution of differences in the European context," he said. He added that "the beginning of this dialogue based on common words, initiated by Muslims, is a promising one."

The Catholic and Muslim religious leaders declared in Vatican City they would jointly fight violence and terrorism, particularly those crimes "committed in the name of religion".

Their final declaration calls for the protection of religious minorities from "any form of mockery or ridicule".

Forum participants resolved to convene every two years.

This content was commissioned for SETimes.com
Loading

Vote

Loading
  • Email to a friend
  • icon Print Version
  • Share/Save/Bookmark.

Destination: Balkans

Destination: Balkans

Visa-free travel: the road ahead

Visa-free travel: the road ahead

Europe votes -- EP elections 2009

Europe votes -- EP elections 2009

Turkey: The Promise and the Challenge

Turkey: The Promise and the Challenge

The Hague's Most Wanted

The Hague's Most Wanted

Building Kosovo

Building Kosovo
Loading
Loading
Loading
Loading

Poll

Cypriot President Demetrios Christofias and Turkish Cypriot leader Mehmet Ali Talat agreed this week on a new border crossing. Is momentum picking up in reunification talks?

Yes
No
Not sure

View results

We welcome your comments on SETimes's articles.

It is our hope that you will use this forum to interact with other readers across Southeast Europe. In order to keep this experience interesting, we ask you to follow the rules outlined in the comments policy. By submitting comments, you are consenting to these rules. While SETimes.com encourages discussion on all subjects, including sensitive ones, the comments posted are solely the views of those submitting them. SETimes.com does not necessarily endorse or agree with the ideas, views, or opinions voiced in these comments. SETimes.com welcomes constructive discussion but discourages the use of copy-pasted materials, unaccompanied links and one-line slogans. This is a moderated forum. Comments deemed abusive, offensive, or those containing profanity may not be published.

SETimes's Comments Policy