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Speaking in Jakarta, the pontiff said “mutual respect” was the key to harmony in the majority-Muslim country, where a pluralist tradition has been put to the test by extremist groups.
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Sept. 4, 2024Updated 7:08 a.m. ET
Pope Francis on Wednesday praised Indonesia’s founding principles of unity in diversity in his first public address in the country but also stressed vigilance against intolerance and extremism.
Francis met with President Joko Widodo on Wednesday morning in Jakarta, the capital, a day after he landed in the country after a 13-hour-long flight from Rome. The pope, in his customary white robes, and Mr. Joko, who was wearing a traditional Islamic hat, stood on the footsteps of the country’s Dutch colonial-era presidential palace as Indonesian honor guards paraded and a marching band played hymns.
Indonesia is the first stop on Francis’s 11-day tour of Asia-Pacific, a grueling physical test for the 87-year-old pope who has made reaching out to Asia a priority of his pontificate.
Francis, the first pope to visit the Arabian Peninsula, has also pushed interfaith harmony as one of his key missions. He plans to do so again in Indonesia, which has the world’s biggest population of Muslims.
In a speech at the presidential palace, Francis compared Indonesia’s religious, ethnic and cultural mix to its biodiversity. Tolerance and mutual respect, he said, helped bring the country together “just as the ocean is the natural element uniting all Indonesian islands.”
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