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Monday, August 4, 2008

Pope sends best wishes to China for successful Olympics


Pope sends best wishes to China for successful Olympics




Pope Benedict sent China best wishes for a successful Olympics on Sunday, saying the Games should be an example of human dignity and peaceful coexistence.

"I am following this great sporting event, the most important and anticipated on the world level, with great fondness," he told several thousand people in northern Italy where he is on two weeks of private holidays near the Austrian border.

The Pope said he wanted to send greetings to China as well as organisers and athletes, hoping that each would do their best "in the genuine Olympic spirit" to make the Games a success.

It was significant that the Pope sent specific greetings to China, whose Communist government does not allow its Catholics to recognise his authority and forces them to be members of a state-backed Catholic organisation.

"I hope they offer the international community a valid example of co-existence among people of different backgrounds in the respect of mutual dignity," he said in this bi-lingual town in the northern Alto-Adige region that was once part of Austria.

"May sport once again be a symbol of fraternity and peace among peoples," he said, after his traditional Sunday prayer in front of the cathedral of Bressanone, which is also known by its German name Brixen.



IMPROVING RELATIONS

In another sign of a thawing in once icy relations between the Vatican and Beijing's Communist government, the Pope is expected to be represented at Friday's opening ceremony by a Hong Kong bishop.

Pope Benedict has made improving relations with China a main goal of his pontificate and hopes that diplomatic ties could be restored.

China's 8 to 12 million Catholics are split between a church approved by the ruling Communist party and an "underground" one loyal to the Pope.

China says that before restoring ties that were broken off two years after the 1949 Communist takeover, the Vatican must first sever relations with Taiwan, which Beijing considers a renegade province.

Benedict, 81, is at the mid-point of a two-week private holiday on the grounds of the town's seminary.

He has made only two public appearances since his arrival, spending most of his time reading, writing, putting the final touches on the second part of a book on Jesus and the speeches he will deliver during a trip to France next month.

Benedict, who used to vacation here as a cardinal before his election in 2005, has been joined here by his older brother Georg, who is a Roman Catholic monsignor.

He thanked the crowd for allowing him to "go back in time" in his memories.

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