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Pope in Bahrain: From a few Catholics to a multitude

Bahrain strives to present itself as a model for religious tolerance, with Hindu, Sikh and Buddhist temples as well as Christian churches

Before Bahrain established the Gulf’s first church in the 1930s, priests would visit from Iraq to perform services for a small Catholic community.

Now, its ranks swollen by foreign workers, mostly from India and the Philippines, the community is preparing to welcome the pope, the leader of the world’s 1.3 billion Catholics.

Pope Francis’s visit this week, his second to the Arabian peninsula, will be especially emotional for Najla Uchi, whose father Salman built the Sacred Heart church that opened on Christmas Eve, 1939.

After lighting candles at her home in Manama, capital of the tiny Gulf nation, Uchi pulls out folders of old photos of her father and a medal he was awarded for building the church.

“My father left his hometown, the Iraqi capital Baghdad, a long time ago,” she told AFP. “He came to Bahrain and settled here.”



More than 80 years after its consecration, the Sacred Heart is on the pontiff’s itinerary in the Muslim-majority monarchy whose Catholics now number about 80,000.

Last December, Bahrain also opened the cavernous Cathedral of Our Lady of Arabia, which stands near an oil well and is the peninsula’s biggest Catholic church.

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Before the Sacred Heart, Uchi said, priests “used to come from Iraq once a month to perform various ceremonies for the Christians in Bahrain.”

“When I was growing up in Bahrain, Christian families were few. But today, when we attend Sunday mass, there are thousands of Christians in church.”

A general view shows Our Lady Arabia Cathedral during its inauguration in Awali south of the Bahraini capital Manama on December 9, 2021. The church, which cost more than US$14.5 million and can seat up to 2,300 people, is the largest Roman Catholic cathedral in the Arabian Peninsula. It will serve as the center of pastoral services in the whole Apostolic Vicariate of Northern Arabia which covers Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia. (Photo by Mazen Mahdi / AFP)

Bahrain strives to present itself as a model for religious tolerance, with Hindu, Sikh and Buddhist temples as well as Christian churches.

“Life in Bahrain was simple, we grew up among neighbours of different families in Manama,” Uchi said. “Religious, ethnic or linguistic differences were not a barrier between us.”

Last year, after Bahrain established ties with Israel in 2020, a synagogue that had been closed after disturbances in 1947 reopened in Manama, allowing Jews to worship in public for the first time in decades.

‘Our hearts rejoice’

The pontiff first visited the Arabian peninsula to head to the United Arab Emirates in 2019, when he held an open-air mass for about 170,000 people.

“I am so happy to meet him in Bahrain,” said Uchi. “I went to meet him when he visited the UAE.”

About two million Catholics live in the Arabian peninsula, the cradle of Islam, including one million in the UAE, according to the Apostolic Vicariate of Southern Arabia in Abu Dhabi.

A woman walks past a cutout image of Pope Francis displayed at the Sacred Heart Church in the capital Manama, on October 7, 2022, ahead of a visit by the pontiff this week. Before Bahrain established the Gulf’s first church in the 1930s, priests would visit from Iraq to perform services for a small Catholic community. Now, its ranks swollen by Asian workers, the community is preparing to welcome the pope. (Photo by AFP)

Christians can worship in all the Gulf countries apart from Saudi Arabia, where practicing any religion other than Islam is banned.

After arriving on Thursday and meeting Bahrain’s King Hamad, Pope Francis will hold a mass for about 28,000 people at Bahrain National Stadium on Saturday.

A multinational choir of 100 people will sing in English, Tagalog, Arabic, Hindi and Latin at the mass, to be held at Bahrain National Stadium.

The pope will also address the interfaith conference Bahrain Forum for Dialogue and meet the grand imam of Egypt’s prestigious Al-Azhar mosque, as well as members of the Muslim Council of Elders.

Some human rights groups also hope Francis will press Bahrain’s Sunni leader, King Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa, to halt repression against Shiite Muslims, crackdowns on opposition figures and activists, and other abuses.

Bahrain’s authorities have repeatedly rejected the accusations.

Pope Francis will become the first pontiff in history to visit Bahrain, in a trip that is hoped will cement ties with Islam but is also marked by accusations of human rights abuses in the Gulf state. (Photo by AFP)

A government spokesperson told AFP that “Bahrain, as a multi-cultural society and home to peoples of many faiths, prides itself on its values of tolerance and its long history of peaceful co-existence.”

The spokesperson added that while the freedoms of religion and worship, and to peacefully express views and opinions, are protected under the constitution, Bahrain has a duty to investigate and, where appropriate, prosecute individuals who “incite, promote or glorify violence or hatred.”

Bahrain’s Father Charbel Fayad said “the visit has a great strategic dimension by strengthening Bahrain’s role… (in) building (religious) bridges between East and West”.

Catholic worshipper Mona Koro, a Jordanian living in Bahrain, told AFP: “Our hearts rejoice… For His Holiness to preside over the Divine Liturgy… We feel lucky.”

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