Pope, Orthodox leader to jointly celebrate early Church milestone

Pope Leo XIV waves as he boards the papal plane ahead of his first apostolic journey to Turkey and Lebanon, at Fiumicino Airport, near Rome, Italy, on November 27, 2025. (REUTERS/)
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Updated 28 November 2025
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Pope, Orthodox leader to jointly celebrate early Church milestone

  • Leo was invited to join an ecumenical prayer service by the Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople, leader of the world’s Orthodox Christians
  • They will celebrate the 1,700th anniversary of the First Council of Nicaea, which drew up a foundational statement of faith still central to Christianity today

ISTANBUL, Turkiye: Pope Leo XIV joins the leader of the world’s Orthodox Christians Friday to celebrate 1,700 years since one of the early Church’s most important gatherings, on the second day of his visit to Turkiye.
The American pope began his four-day visit on Thursday, flying into Ankara where he held talks with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, urging him to embrace Turkiye’s role as mediator in a world gripped by conflict.
“Mr President, may Turkiye be a source of stability and rapprochement between peoples, in service of a just and lasting peace,” the pontiff told the Turkish leader as he kicked off the first overseas trip of his papacy.
Tight security meant the papal convoy swept through nearly empty streets in Ankara on a visit that has drawn little attention in this Muslim-majority nation of 86 million, whose Christian community numbers only around 100,000.
“This land is inextricably linked to the origins of Christianity, and today it beckons the children of Abraham and all humanity to a fraternity that recognizes and appreciates differences,” he said, before being flown to Istanbul where he will stay until Sunday when he travels to Lebanon.
On Friday, the 70-year-old pontiff will spend the morning with Catholic leaders before going to Iznik to celebrate the 1,700th anniversary of the First Council of Nicaea, a gathering of bishops who drew up a foundational statement of faith still central to Christianity today.

Invited by the Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople, leader of the world’s Orthodox Christians, Leo will join an ecumenical prayer service overlooking the ruins of a 4th-century basilica built on the site where the First Council took place.
Despite doctrinal differences that led to the Great Schism of 1054, resulting in a split between the Roman Catholic church in the west and the Eastern Orthodox church in the east, they still maintain dialogue and hold joint celebrations.
They have recently made efforts to find a common date on which to celebrate Easter — at present the Catholics follow the Gregorian calendar, while the Orthodox follow the Julian calendar.

‘More credible when we’re united’ 

“When the world is troubled and divided by conflict and antagonism, our meeting with Pope Leo XIV is especially significant,” Patriarch Bartholomew told AFP in an interview.
“It reminds our faithful that we are more powerful and more credible when we are united in our witness and response to the challenges of the contemporary world.”
The pope’s trip comes as the Orthodox world appears more fragmented than ever, with the war in Ukraine accelerating the split between the Moscow and Constantinople patriarchates.
While Catholics recognize the pope as the head of the Church, the highly fragmented Orthodox are organized into self-governing church bodies that elect their own heads, although Bartholomew holds an honorary primacy in the Orthodox world.
The Eastern Church further fragmented over Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea and its war in Ukraine.
In 2018, the Moscow Patriarchate cut ties with Bartholomew after he recognized the Ukrainian Orthodox Church’s independence from Russia, dealing a huge blow to Moscow’s spiritual authority.
Although Patriarch Kirill, who heads the Russian Orthodox Church, has not been invited to Iznik, Leo must tread carefully to avoid irritating Moscow, which fears the Vatican could bolster Constantinople’s primacy in the Orthodox world, further eroding Russia’s influence.
Pope Leo is the fifth pontiff to visit Turkiye, after Paul VI in 1967, John Paul II in 1979, Benedict XVI in 2006 and Francis in 2014.
 


Report highlights role of British Muslim charitable giving in supporting UK public services

Updated 05 December 2025
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Report highlights role of British Muslim charitable giving in supporting UK public services

  • The study, “Building Britain: British Muslims Giving Back,” finds that donations from British Muslims are helping to bolster overstretched service

LONDON: British Muslim charitable giving is playing an increasingly significant role in supporting frontline public services across the UK, according to a new report by policy and research organization Equi.

The study, “Building Britain: British Muslims Giving Back,” finds that donations from British Muslims are helping to bolster overstretched services, including local councils, the NHS and welfare systems, at a time of growing financial pressure.

The report estimates that Muslim donors contribute around £2.2 billion ($2.9 billion) annually, making them the UK’s most generous community.

This figure is around four times the national giving average and rises to almost 10 times the average among higher earners.

According to the findings, Muslim-led charities are providing a wide range of support, including housing assistance, emergency cash grants, food provision and mental health services, easing demand on statutory services.

Equi points to evidence from 2023 showing that housing support delivered by the National Zakat Foundation helped prevent evictions that would have cost councils an estimated £28.8 million, with every £1 of charitable spending generating £73 in public sector savings.

The report also highlights a generational shift, with younger British Muslims increasingly directing their donations toward domestic causes such as homelessness, child poverty and mental health challenges.

Despite their growing impact, Muslim charities face a number of barriers, including de-banking, restrictive funding rules, securitization measures and what the report describes as limited recognition from government. Equi argues that these challenges are constraining the sector’s ability to maximize its contribution.

“British Muslim giving is not just generosity but a lifeline for public services that needs recognizing,” said Equi Managing Director Prof. Javed Khan.

“From preventing evictions to supporting mental health, these donations are saving millions for the taxpayer and strengthening communities across Britain. The evidence is clear that Muslim-led action is delivering frontline support where the state is struggling,” he added.

Equi is calling on policymakers to engage more closely with Muslim-led charities and to move beyond what it describes as symbolic recognition.

The report recommends measures such as UK-based match-funding schemes and greater faith literacy within policymaking, which it says could unlock billions of pounds in additional domestic spending while maintaining the UK’s global humanitarian commitments.

The study concluded that with greater collaboration between government and Muslim charities, charitable giving could play an even more transformative role in strengthening public services and social cohesion across the country.