Maronite leader says Pope Leo will carry message of ‘peace’ to Lebanon

Lebanon’s Maronite patriarch, Cardinal Beshara Rai, speaks during an interview with AFP at the Maronite Patriarchate in Bkerke, north of Beirut, on Oct. 15, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 15 October 2025
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Maronite leader says Pope Leo will carry message of ‘peace’ to Lebanon

  • Rai said that the US-born pope “will bring peace and hope to Lebanon during his visit“
  • “He comes at a time when the war in Gaza has ceased... and we are living in Lebanon under a ceasefire, despite violations occurring“

BKERKE, Lebanon: Pope Leo XIV will carry a message of peace to Lebanon and the Christians of the Middle East when he visits next month, Maronite Patriarch Bechara Al-Rai told AFP on Wednesday.
The Vatican said last week that Pope Leo will travel to Turkiye and Lebanon in a six-day trip beginning late November, his first since becoming head of the Catholic Church.
Rai, who heads the Maronite Church, religiously diverse Lebanon’s most influential Christian sect, hailed the pontiff’s visit at a time of truce in the conflict between Israel and Lebanon, as well as the war in Gaza.
In an interview with AFP from the Maronite Patriarchate headquarters in Bkerke, north of Beirut, Rai said that the US-born pope “will bring peace and hope to Lebanon during his visit.”
“He comes at a time when the war in Gaza has ceased... and we are living in Lebanon under a ceasefire, despite violations occurring,” he added.
After more than a year of hostilities between Israel and the Iran-backed Hezbollah Islamist group, a ceasefire agreement was signed in November.
The truce remains in effect despite Israel carrying out near-daily strikes on Lebanon, claiming to target Hezbollah members and infrastructure.
A few days ago, a ceasefire also came into effect in the Gaza Strip after a devastating two-year war between the Palestinian militant group Hamas and Israel.
“I believe that during this visit, he will focus on peace, and he will ask Lebanon to continue on its path toward peace,” said Rai, whose Church is in full communion with Rome.

- ‘Preserve Lebanon’ -

The latest conflict killed more than 4,000 people in Lebanon and devastated Beirut’s southern suburbs and the country’s south and east, areas where Hezbollah holds sway.
Last week, Pope Leo said that his trip to Lebanon from November 30 to December 2 presents “the opportunity to announce once again the message of peace... in a country that has also suffered so much.”
Rai, who has long called for Lebanon to be kept out of regional conflicts, stated that he believes the visit “will remind all Lebanese, Christians and Muslims alike, of their responsibility to preserve Lebanon.”
“The value of Lebanon lies in the fact that each of its groups maintains its role and identity. Coexistence means that Christians have their identity and Muslims have theirs. The pope does not come to say, ‘abandon your identity’, but rather, ‘Live your identity’,” he added.
“This is how the Vatican understands Lebanon, with its cultural and religious pluralism.”
Pope Leo XIV is the third pontiff to visit Lebanon, after John Paul II in 1997 and Benedict XVI in 2012, who received a tremendous popular reception.
His trip comes in the wake of a series of crises that have ravaged Lebanon, from a crushing economic crisis that began in 2019, to the horrific port explosion the following summer, to the recent war.
“The visit is a great relief for Christians in Lebanon,” Rai said, as well as for “Christians in Syria, Iraq, Iran, and the Holy Land,” who have gone through wars, conflicts, and waves of displacement.


Netanyahu orders two Palestinian-Israelis to be stripped of citizenship, deported

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Netanyahu orders two Palestinian-Israelis to be stripped of citizenship, deported

JERUSALEM: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday he had ordered two Palestinian citizens of Israel convicted on terror charges to be stripped of their citizenship and deported to areas under Palestinian control.
It is the first time such measures are being taken under a 2023 law, which allows for the revocation of Israeli citizenship or residence permits from perpetrators of anti-Israeli attacks whose families subsequently received compensation from the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority.
“This morning I signed the revocation of citizenship and deportation of two Israeli terrorists who carried out stabbing and shooting attacks against Israeli civilians and were rewarded for their heinous acts by the Palestinian Authority,” Netanyahu said in a statement released by his office.
“I thank Coalition Chairman Ofir Katz for leading the law that will expel them from the State of Israel, with many more like them to follow,” it added.
The statement was released as Netanyahu was heading to Washington where he will meet US President Donald Trump on Wednesday.
Netanyahu, who heads one of the most right-wing governments in Israel’s history, did not identify the two men, but Israeli media named them as Mohammed Hamad Al-Salhi and Mohammed Halasah.
The Palestinian Prisoners Club advocacy group confirmed their names to AFP and said they hailed from Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem.
Salhi was released from prison in 2024 after 23 years behind bars and holds Israeli citizenship, the Club said.
It also said that Halasah holds an east Jerusalem residency card — an ID document issued to Palestinians by the Israeli authorities — which does not confer Israeli citizenship.
A relative contacted by AFP that Halasah had previously held Israeli citizenship but was stripped of it months ago.
The same source said said Halasah was sentenced to 18 years in prison while he was still a minor and has served about half of his sentence.
Israeli media reported that Salhi’s deportation could be carried out soon, while Halasah’s would only be applied upon his release from prison at the end of his sentence.
Under the law, such deportees will be expelled to areas controlled to the Palestinian Authority in the occupied West Bank or to the Gaza Strip.
Adalah, an Israeli group defending the rights of the Arab minority, said at the time the law was passed that it “explicitly and exclusively targets Palestinians as part of Israel’s entrenchment of two separate legal systems based on Jewish supremacy.”
In early 2025, the Palestinian Authority announced it was ending payments to the families of those killed by Israel or imprisoned in Israeli jails, including many detained for attacks on Israelis.
But the Israeli government claims the system, which it dubs as the “Pay for Slay” program, still exists in other forms.