Pope continues Jordan visit

Pope Benedict visited a mosque in Jordan today as part of his weeklong trip to the Middle East aimed at easing the Vatican’s …

Pope Benedict visited a mosque in Jordan today as part of his weeklong trip to the Middle East aimed at easing the Vatican’s relations with Muslims and Jews.

The pontiff toured the King Hussein Bin Talal Mosque, which occupies 60,000 square meters and serves 6,000 worshippers, after viewing Mount Nebo, a hilltop with religious significance to Christians, Jews and Muslims on his second day in Jordan.

"Muslims and Christians, precisely because of the burden of our common history, so often marked by misunderstanding, must today strive to be known and recognized as worshippers of God's faithful to prayer, eager to uphold and live by the almighty's decrees," the Pope said at the mosque.

A member of Jordan's royal family thanked the pontiff for expressing "regret" for comments he made at Germany's University of Regensburg in 2006. The Pope had cited a 14th- century text saying that the Prophet Mohammed brought things that were "evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached."

"I thank your Holiness for the regret you expressed after the Regensburg lecture, for the hurt caused by this lecture to Muslims," Ghazi bin Muhammad bin Talal, a cousin of Jordan's King Abdullah, said in a speech at the Amman mosque. "Muslims also especially appreciate the clarification by the Vatican that what was said in the lecture did not reflect your Holiness's own opinion but rather was simply a citation in an academic lecture."

During the rest of his trip, the Pope will visit the site renowned as the scene of Jesus's baptism on the Jordan River, celebrate masses in Jerusalem, Nazareth and Bethlehem and meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Shimon Peres.

The Vatican canceled the Pope's planned meeting with an Israeli Arab mayor after the country's tourism minister accused the mayor of promoting terrorism.

In Jordan, the Islamic Action Front, a bloc affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood, said the pope was "not welcome" because he hasn't apologized for comments linking Islam and the Prophet Muhammad to violence.

In the four years since he was chosen pope, Benedict has also angered Jews by promising to lift the excommunication of a bishop who denies the Holocaust took place and allowing priests to carry out a Latin liturgy that includes a prayer calling for the conversion of Jews.

The pope has made gestures to both Jews and Muslims, including a 2006 visit to the  Auschwitz death camp in Poland and a 2005 tour of the Cologne synagogue destroyed in Kristallnacht, the coordinated 1938 attack on Jews in Germany. In 2006, he became the first pope to turn toward the holy city of Mecca, while praying alongside Mufti Mustafa Cagrici in Istanbul.