A Muslim-born journalist whose 2008 baptism by Pope
Benedict XVI made him Italy’s most famous convert announced Monday he was
leaving the Catholic Church over the new pontiff’s overtures to Islam.
Magdi Allam, a former deputy editor of leading daily
Corriere della Sera who was born in Egypt, voiced his irritation over what he
described as the “papolatry” surrounding the onset of Pope Francis’
pontificate.
“My conversion to catholicism, by the hand of
Benedict XVI on the eve of Easter on March 22, 2008, came to an end when his
pontificate did,” he wrote in Il Giornale newspaper.
Continue after the cut...
“I am convinced that Islam is an intrinsically
violent ideology,” Allam wrote, predicting that “Europe will end up under
Islam’s boot”.
Pope Francis, who was elected earlier this month,
said he wanted to intensify the dialogue with other religions, including Islam.
“The legitimisation of Islam as a true religion, of
Allah as a true God, of Mohammed as a true Prophet, of the Koran as a holy
scripture and of mosques as places of worship… have driven me away from the
Church,” Allam wrote.
Allam also said he disagreed with the church’s
insistence on priestly celibacy, sexual abstinence outside of marriage and
other issues.
Allam’s views on Islam and the pope’s decision to
conduct the baptism himself had earned the Vatican scathing criticism at the
time, forcing the Holy See to distance itself from the journalist.
“Beyond … the phenomenon of extremists and Islamist
terrorism at the global level, the root of evil is inherent to a
physiologically violent and historically conflictual Islam,” Allam wrote the
day after his baptism. (Vanguard)
No comments:
Post a Comment