After historic whirlwind visit, Pope leaves Iraq for Rome

Pope Francis on Monday wrapped up his historic whirlwind tour of Iraq that sought to bring hope to the country’s marginalized Christian minority with a message of coexistence, forgiveness and peace.
The
pontiff and his traveling delegation were seen off with a farewell ceremony at
the Baghdad airport, from where he left for Rome following a four-day papal
visit that has covered five provinces across Iraq.
As
the pope’s plane took off, Iraqi President Barham Salih was at hand on the
tarmac, waving goodbye.
At
every turn of his trip, Francis urged Iraqis to embrace diversity — from Najaf in
the south, where he held a historic face-to-face meeting with powerful Shiite
cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, to Nineveh to the north, where he met
with Christian victims of the Islamic State group’s terror and heard their
testimonies of survival.
The
pontiff’s visit witnessed scenes unimaginable in war-ravaged Iraq just a few
years ago.
In
Iraq’s south, Francis convened a meeting of Iraqi religious leaders in the
deserts near a symbol of the country’s ancient past — the 6,000-year-old
ziggurat in the Plains of Ur, also thought to be the birthplace of Abraham, the
biblical patriarch revered by Jews, Christians and Muslims. The gathering
brought religious representatives across the country rarely seen together, from
Muslims, Christians, Yazidis and Mandaeans. The joint appearance by figures
from across Iraq’s sectarian spectrum was almost unheard-of, given their
communities’ often bitter divisions.
The
pope called on them to work together and make peace.
In
the city of Najaf, Francis held a private meeting with the notoriously
reclusive al-Sistani, among the most influential and revered Shiite clerics,
and together they delivered a powerful message of peaceful coexistence and
affirmed the rights of Iraqi Christians. It was a powerful message the Vatican
hopes can preserve the place of the thinning Christian population in the
tapestry.
Al-Sistani
is one of the most senior clerics in Shiite Islam, deeply revered among Shiites
in Iraq and worldwide. His rare but powerful political interventions have
helped shape present-day Iraq. Their meeting in al-Sistani’s humble home, the
first ever between a pope and a grand ayatollah, was months in the making, with
every detail painstakingly negotiated beforehand.
In
the northern city of Mosul, once at the heart of the IS militants’ so-called
Islamic “caliphate” and still devastated years after the Islamic State group’s
onslaught, Francis prayed in a square containing the remnants of four churches
— Syriac Catholic, Armenian Orthodox, Syriac Orthodox and Chaldean — nearly
destroyed in the war to oust IS from the city.
Later,
in the Christian town of Qaraqosh, where an entire Christian community was
forced out by the brutality of IS militants, Francis urged Christians to
forgive their oppressors and rebuild their lives.
People
gathered in crowds to catch a glimpse of the pope wherever he went, fueling
coronavirus concerns. Few wore facemasks, especially during Francis’ stops in
northern Iraq on Sunday. That day ended with an open-air mass in a stadium that
drew nearly 10,000 people. Security was tight and most events were strictly
controlled.
Public
health experts had expressed concerns ahead of the trip that large gatherings
could serve as superspreader events for the coronavirus in a country suffering
from a worsening outbreak where few have been vaccinated. The pope and members
of his delegation have been vaccinated but most Iraqis have not.
Iraq is in the midst of another wave of the coronavirus, spurred by a new, more infectious strain that first appeared in the U.K. Authorities in Iraq recorded 4,068 new infections on March 6, according to Health Ministry figures, up significantly from infection rates at the start of the year. In total 13,500 people have died among a total 720,000 infections.