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Vatican studying possible papal trip to Turkey, Lebanon

By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY — A plan for Pope Leo XIV to visit Lebanon as well as Turkey in late November and early December is being studied, a Vatican official said.

Lebanon’s Cardinal Bechara Rai, patriarch of the Maronite Catholic Church, told Al Arabiya television Aug. 19 that the pope could visit Lebanon “by the end of the year.”

The cardinal said that preparations had already begun but that the dates for the visit had not been confirmed.

The Vatican press office did not respond to a request to comment on Cardinal Rai’s announcement.

The visit to Lebanon could be part of a trip Pope Leo said he hopes to make to Turkey in late November.

In July, Pope Leo had told a Catholic-Orthodox pilgrimage from the United States that he had hoped to travel to Turkey to mark the 1,700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea, which first developed the common Christian creed.

Pope Francis had been planning to travel in May to Iznik, the modern site of the ancient city of Nicaea, to mark the anniversary with Orthodox Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople.

Because it would be his first trip to Turkey as pope, Pope Leo’s November trip is likely to include a stop in the capital, Ankara, for meetings with government officials and a visit to the Phanar, the patriarchate’s headquarters in Istanbul.

St. John Paul II, Pope Benedict XVI, and Pope Francis all made visits to the patriarchate to join in the Nov. 30 celebrations of the feast of St. Andrew, the patron saint of the patriarchate.

Cutline for featured image: The bell tower of the Italian Santa Maria Catholic Church in Istanbul, Turkey, is pictured. (OSV News photo/Dilara Senkaya, Reuters)

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