Political, religious leaders call for peace across the world

Pope Benedict XVI delivers his blessing to the faithful gathered in St. Peter's Square on Tuesday at the Vatican, from the velvet-draped loggia of St. Peter's Basilica, during the Urbi

? As the faithful marked Christmas Day, political and religious leaders called for peace and reconciliation amid flickers of hope in places long plagued by conflict.

In Iraq, Christians made their way past checkpoints on Tuesday to fill Baghdad churches in numbers unthinkable a year ago. And in the West Bank town of Bethlehem, where tradition says Jesus was born, Christians celebrated in an atmosphere of hope raised by the renewal of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

For them, and for all those in the “tortured regions” of the world, Pope Benedict XVI prayed that political leaders would find “the wisdom and courage to seek and find humane, just and lasting solutions.”

Benedict, delivering his Christmas Day address from the central balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica, urged the crowd to rejoice over the celebration of Christ’s birth, which he hoped would bring consolation to all people “who live in the darkness of poverty, injustice and war.”

In violence-ridden Baghdad, venturing out in large numbers late at night is still unthinkable, so the Iraqi capital’s Christians celebrated Midnight Mass in the middle of the afternoon on Christmas Eve.

On Tuesday some 2,000 went out to the Mar Eliya Church in the east of Baghdad where Iraq’s Cardinal Emmanuel III Delly, leader of the ancient Chaldean Catholic Church, celebrated Mass.

He told the congregation that Iraq is “a bouquet of flowers of different colors, each color represents a religion or ethnicity but all of them have the same scent.”

He congratulated Muslims for their Eid al-Adha holiday, falling near Christmas, and Muslim clerics – both Sunni and Shiite – attended the service in a sign of unity.

“May Iraq be safe every year, and may our Christian brothers be safe every year,” Shiite cleric Hadi al-Jazail told AP Television News outside the church. “We came to celebrate with them and to reassure them. … This national gathering is beautiful against the sectarian fighting, and God willing from this lesson we’ll all pray for peace.”

Christian pilgrims in Bethlehem filled the ancient Church of the Nativity, waiting in line to see the grotto that marks the traditional birthplace of Jesus.

The large numbers and the cacophony of languages was evidence that more visitors were there this year than in the past several years.

The outbreak of the Palestinian uprising against Israel in late 2000 and the fighting that followed had clouded Christmas celebrations in Bethlehem for years, battering the tourism industry that is the city’s lifeline.

Kiel Tilley, 23, a science teacher from Charlevoix, Mich., said the relaunch of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks at a U.S.-sponsored conference last month reassured him before his trip to Bethlehem. “The peace process made me feel safer.”

In Afghanistan, British soldiers stationed in Helmand province found a little joy far from home at a meal where they wore red Santa hats and opened gift boxes. And U.S. service members went to early Christmas Mass at a base in Kabul.

During a service at Canterbury Cathedral, the Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, the spiritual leader of the 77 million-member Anglican Communion, urged his flock to protect the environment – saying that “human greed” threatened to distort the Earth’s fragile balance.

In Puerto Rico’s colonial district of Old San Juan, locals sang and rattled maracas along cobblestone streets, celebrating a Puerto Rican-style caroling known as the “parranda.” People hosted revelers with holiday cookies and coquito, a sweet seasonal drink made from rum and coconut.