Vatican change of heart over
barbaric Crusades
Since 03-22-06
From Richard Owen in Rome
The Times March 20, 2006
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,13509-2093921,00.html#cid=OTC-RSS&attr=World
THE Vatican has begun moves to rehabilitate the Crusaders by sponsoring a
conference at the weekend that portrays the Crusades as wars fought with the
“noble aim” of regaining the Holy Land for Christianity.
The Crusades are seen by many Muslims as acts of violence that have underpinned
Western aggression towards the Arab world ever since. Followers of Osama bin
Laden claim to be taking part in a latter-day “jihad against the Jews and
Crusaders”.
The late Pope John Paul II sought to achieve Muslim- Christian reconciliation by
asking “pardon” for the Crusades during the 2000 Millennium celebrations. But
John Paul’s apologies for the past “errors of the Church” — including the
Inquisition and anti-Semitism — irritated some Vatican conservatives. According
to Vatican insiders, the dissenters included Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope
Benedict XVI.
Pope Benedict reached out to Muslims and Jews after his election and called for
dialogue. However, the Pope, who is due to visit Turkey in November, has in the
past suggested that Turkey’s Muslim culture is at variance with Europe’s
Christian roots.
At the conference, held at the Regina Apostolorum Pontifical University, Roberto
De Mattei, an Italian historian, recalled that the Crusades were “a response to
the Muslim invasion of Christian lands and the Muslim devastation of the Holy
Places”.
“The debate has been reopened,” La Stampa said. Professor De Mattei noted that
the desecration of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem by Muslim forces in 1009 had
helped to provoke the First Crusade at the end of the 11th century, called by
Pope Urban II.
He said that the Crusaders were “martyrs” who had “sacrificed their lives for
the faith”. He was backed by Jonathan Riley-Smith, Dixie Professor of
Ecclesiastical History at Cambridge University, who said that those who sought
forgiveness for the Crusades “do not know their history”. Professor Riley-Smith
has attacked Sir Ridley Scott’s recent film Kingdom of Heaven, starring Orlando
Bloom, as “utter nonsense”.
Professor Riley-Smith said that the script, like much writing on the Crusades,
was “historically inaccurate. It depicts the Muslims as civilised and the
Crusaders as barbarians. It has nothing to do with reality.” It fuels Islamic
fundamentalism by propagating “Osama bin Laden’s version of history”.
He said that the Crusaders were sometimes undisciplined and capable of acts of
great cruelty. But the same was true of Muslims and of troops in “all
ideological wars”. Some of the Crusaders’ worst excesses were against Orthodox
Christians or heretics — as in the sack of Constantinople in 1204.
The American writer Robert Spencer, author of A Politically Incorrect Guide to
Islam, told the conference that the mistaken view had taken hold in the West as
well as the Arab world that the Crusades were “an unprovoked attack by Europe on
the Islamic world”. In reality, however, Christians had been persecuted after
the Muslim conquest of Jerusalem.
CONFLICT OVER THE HOLY LAND
# Historians count eight Crusades, although dates are disputed: 1095-1101,
called by Pope Urban II; 1145-47, led by Louis VII; 1188-92, led by Richard I;
1204, which included the sack of Constantinople; 1217, which included the
conquest of Damietta; 1228-29 led by Frederick II; 1249-52, led by King Louis IX
of France; and 1270, also under Louis IX
# Until the early 11th century, Christians, Jews and Muslims coexisted under
Muslim rule in the Holy Land. After growing friction, the first Crusade was
sparked by ambushes of Christian pilgrims going to Jerusalem. The Byzantine
Emperor Alexius appealed to Pope Urban II, who in 1095 called on Christendom to
take up arms to free the Holy Land from the “Muslim infidel”