Source: Catholic Herald News
Egypt’s Catholic leaders have welcomed the military overthrow of the country’s Islamist president and expressed confidence that Christians and Muslims can work together to build a “real democracy”.
Fr Hani Bakhoum Kiroulos, spokesman for the Catholic Coptic Church, said: “What has happened is absolutely not a military coup – our armed forces have responded to the desire of the people.
“Millions of people took to the streets because they were unable to live under such a regime. They expressed their views and demanded freedom, and the military took action accordingly,” he told the American Catholic News Service.
Fr Kiroulos said the preceding four days of protests, in which the military deposed Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi, had united Christians and Muslims.
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Source: Catholic Herald News
Egypt’s Catholic leaders have welcomed the military overthrow of the country’s Islamist president and expressed confidence that Christians and Muslims can work together to build a “real democracy”.
Fr Hani Bakhoum Kiroulos, spokesman for the Catholic Coptic Church, said: “What has happened is absolutely not a military coup – our armed forces have responded to the desire of the people.
“Millions of people took to the streets because they were unable to live under such a regime. They expressed their views and demanded freedom, and the military took action accordingly,” he told the American Catholic News Service.
Fr Kiroulos said the preceding four days of protests, in which the military deposed Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi, had united Christians and Muslims.
“The Church isn’t just a collection of buildings, but a mass of people – and we are part of the Egyptian people and with the majority who’ve expressed their will,” Fr Kiroulos said.
“If the Egyptian people suffer, we will suffer too. But we hope [they] can now all join together, Christians and Muslims, in creating a new country and a better future,” he said.
The head of Egypt’s armed forces, General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, announced the takeover after giving Morsi a 48-hour ultimatum to overcome a nationwide paralysis, worsened by mass protests in Cairo, Alexandria and other towns.
The move was welcomed as a “defining moment in the nation’s history” by Egypt’s Coptic Orthodox Pope Tawadros II, who appeared beside the general during his televised address, along with the country’s grand imam, Sheik Ahmed el-Tayeb.
In a brief address, the Orthodox leader said he backed the “map for the future” drawn up by the new Supreme Council, adding that the armed forces reflected “the values of the people” and would be “honest advocates of the national interest”.
Fr Kiroulos said the presence of religious leaders alongside al-Sisi had been a “very important sign of Egyptian unity”.
“Our own Catholic Church has enjoyed very good unofficial relations with the army,” said the priest, who is secretary to Coptic Catholic Patriarch Ibrahim Isaac Sedrak. “By contrast, we received no help or support from President Morsi, only smiles. Although our relations started well, and he showed some concern for Christians, this never went beyond an official level.”
In an interview with Fides, the news agency of the Vatican’s Congregation for the Evangelisation of Peoples, Patriarch Sedrak said Catholics had been celebrating that “the people of Egypt have peacefully regained their country”, adding that he was confident the country would not “repeat the mistakes made in the past” and would move toward “full restoration of democratic order”.
He said at least five million Egyptians would go on supporting the “radical beliefs” of Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood, adding that he also feared “feelings of revenge”.
“We must convince them there is a place for them in the country and no one rejects them – but they should behave as Egyptians, as fellow citizens with other Egyptians, and not aim at establishing a religious despotism,” the patriarch said.
“They should not be excluded from the political scene. But they must behave like a political party and not as a means of imposing a religious hegemony,” he added.
The 200,000-member Coptic Catholic Church has 14 dioceses in Egypt.
The Coptic Orthodox Church makes up at least a 10th of Egypt’s population of 81 million.
How refreshing it is to one's spirit to see our Sister Church making a definitive statement of
support for what has occurred in Egypt over the past week. It is also empowering to all
Christians to have a leader of the Roman Catholic Church in Egypt confirm that we are NOT
talking about a coup, but a democratic move to oust an incompetent and disastrous
Government. Here in Australia the media is making a great fuss about democracy having been overthrown in Egypt They are also publishing and broadcasting Egyptian news with a pro-Morsi slant time and again. For example, what was the military responding to shots being fired AT them FROM a supposedly peaceful crowd, has been translated by our own Australian Broadcasting
Corporation as a 'massacre' of pro-Morsi supporters Anyone reading this comment, feel free to object verbally and strongly about this unjust bias perpetrated by those media totally ignorant of what has really been happening in Egypt and only seeking sensationalist headlines to increase
viewing figures and print circulation! But Almighty God sees and knows! Amen.