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Egypt mourns Coptic pope

March 20, 2012

Senior clerics in the Egyptian Orthodox Church have led a funeral Mass for Coptic Pope Shenouda III, who was remembered for promoting harmony between religions in the Muslim-majority country.

https://p.dw.com/p/14O9S
Priests stand next to coffin with body of Pope Shenouda III
Image: picture-alliance/dpa

Thousands of people gathered in Cairo on Tuesday to mourn the death of Egypt's Coptic Pope Shenouda III, who led the country's Orthodox Christian community for 40 years.

Senior figures in the church led the funeral Mass at St. Mark's Cathedral, as deacons chanted hymns, recited prayers and burned incense. Many congregants wept, while tens of thousands more followed the service from outside the cathedral.

"I ask you to preserve peace," said Bishop Pefnotios, reading out a letter written by Shenouda before his death. "I ask Jesus to send you a good patron, to settle your needs and watch over the salvation of your souls."

Visiting dignitaries also attended the service, including Abune Paulos, patriarch of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church.

"He had completed all that he had been called for," Paulos said. "He lived a good, true life, now he is resting."

Keeping the peace

Shenouda died on Saturday at age 88, and Egypt's military ruler Mohamed Hussein Tantawi declared Tuesday a national day of mourning. After the memorial service, Shenouda's body was to be buried at the St. Bishoy monastery in the desert northwest of Cairo.

In his 40 years at the helm of the church, Shenouda promoted religious harmony and won the admiration of many in Egypt's Muslim majority. He was praised for urging more protections for the Coptic minority behind the scenes while publicly maintaining peace among Copts frustrated with underrepresentation and perceived discrimination.

Egyptian Copts grieve for Pope Shenouda III ‎ # Pope 14b # 20.03.2012 # Journal # englisch # nicht im Mediacenter

Christianity in Egypt predates the arrival of Islam, and most of the country's estimated 10 million Christians belong to the Coptic Orthodox Church. Tensions between the two religions have risen since the uprising last year that ousted longtime dictator Hosni Mubarak.

Egyptian media has reported that board members of the church's local councils would vote to elect three candidates to take Shenouda's place. The final leader is to be chosen by a young child picking a name out of a hat. The process could take months to be completed.

acb/msh (AP, Reuters, dpa)