19-04-2025
Analyst: Moroccan Government Has Never Persecuted Christians
Doha – Morocco's rich Christian heritage dating back to Roman antiquity has flourished into a diplomatic cornerstone with the Vatican, according to Catholic news website Aleteia. The North African country continues to safeguard religious minorities despite its overwhelmingly Muslim demographic.
The ancient territory now encompassing modern Morocco boasts Christian vestiges stretching back nearly two millennia. Volubilis, once the bustling capital of Roman Mauritania Tingitane, harbored early Christian communities forged by 'merchants, soldiers, and officials of the Roman Empire,' geopolitical analyst Jean-Baptiste Noé divulged to Aleteia.
'The Moroccan government has never persecuted Christians,' Noé illuminated in his analysis. This religious accommodation demarcates Morocco from numerous Muslim-majority states where Catholic worship confronts hostility or impediments.
This receptiveness has spawned formidable diplomatic bonds between Morocco and the Holy See. Relations formally crystallized in 1976, culminating in King Hassan II's watershed visit to the Vatican in April 1980 – the first by a Muslim head of state to converge with the newly installed Pope.
This diplomatic watershed galvanized another landmark rendezvous when Pope John Paul II ventured to Casablanca in August 1985. The Pope addressed over 100,000 young Moroccan Muslims at the city's stadium after traversing the streets alongside Hassan II in parallel vehicles.
During this unparalleled congregation, the Pope articulated 'the importance of creation, God, respect for divine law, and prayer' – topics that transcended religious boundaries while demonstrating interfaith harmony at a time when the Islamic world grappled with the early tremors of extremism.
Morocco has adroitly circumvented the tumult that has besieged adjacent territories. 'Even though Morocco experienced an Islamist electoral victory in the 2010s, it has always managed to keep at bay the upheavals and tensions that other countries experience, such as Egypt or neighboring Algeria,' Noé chronicled.
This constancy has enshrined Morocco's singular position in Vatican diplomatic calculus. Pope Francis sojourned to the country in March 2019, conferring with King Mohammed VI and communing with the local Catholic flock.
Months later, he consecrated Archbishop Cristobal Romero of Rabat as cardinal – an unprecedented accolade that Noé deciphered as 'a sign that dialogue with the Muslim world is one of the major points of the pontificate.'
The analyst deduced that this appointment bestowed upon Morocco 'a new influence in the ecclesiastical geography,' asserting that 'for two thousand years, this region has occupied a special place in the Catholic Church.'
Evidence of Christian acceptance manifests physically throughout the country. The Cathedral of Notre-Dame of the Assumption in Tangier was constructed in 1961, five years after the country's independence (1956).
The analyst describes this as 'proof of the religious tolerance of the Sharifian kingdom where the king is nevertheless commander of the faithful.' Rabat's Saint Peter's Cathedral, inaugurated in 1921, exhibits a distinctive art deco architectural style.
These edifices loom as palpable attestations to Morocco's persisting function as an interreligious conduit in a region frequently typified by schism.
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