Pope calls on all religions to unite against terrorism and end conflict

SYDNEY - Pope Benedict XVI yesterday called for all religions to unite against terrorism and resolve conflicts peacefully.

SYDNEY -Pope Benedict XVI yesterday called for all religions to unite against terrorism and resolve conflicts peacefully.

He also heard an Islamic leader urge Christians to overcome "misconceptions and prejudices" about Muslims.

"In a world threatened by sinister and indiscriminate forms of violence, the unified voice of religious people urges nations and communities to resolve conflict through peaceful means and with full regard for human dignity," the pope told a meeting with Muslims, Jews and members of other non-Christian faiths.

The pope, in Australia for the church's World Youth Day, also said the Catholic Church was open to learn from other religions, a comment seen in the context of moves to improve relations with other faiths, particularly Islam.

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Catholic-Muslim relations nosedived in 2006 after the pope delivered a lecture in Regensburg, Germany, that was taken by Muslims to imply that Islam was violent and irrational.

Muslims around the world protested and the pope sought to make amends when he visited Turkey's Blue Mosque and prayed towards Mecca with its imam.

Sheikh Mohamadu Saleem, executive member of the Australian National Imams Council, told the pope: "Muslims should become more inclusive and universal in their understanding of their religions. At the same time, significant segments of the Christian and other religious communities should overcome their misconceptions and prejudices of Islam and Muslims."

After the fallout from the Regensburg speech, 138 Muslim scholars and leaders wrote to the German-born pontiff and other Christian leaders last year. In March, the Vatican and Muslim leaders agreed to establish a permanent official dialogue, the Catholic-Muslim Forum, to improve often difficult relations.

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