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Pope Francis and leader of Russian Orthodox Church to meet in Cuba Pope Francis and leader of Russian Orthodox Church to meet in Cuba
(about 9 hours later)
Pope Francis and the leader of the Russian Orthodox Church will hold a historic meeting in Cuba, the Vatican has said. As feuds go, it was one of the longer-lasting ones. But after 1,000 years of mutual loathing and suspicion, the Vatican has announced that Pope Francis will mend fences with the Russian Orthodox Church by meeting its leader, Patriarch Kirill of Moscow.
The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, announced the meeting with Patriarch Kirill of Moscow will take place on 12 February.   The heads of the world’s two biggest Christian churches will shake hands in Havana, on 12 February when their paths briefly cross in the Caribbean. It will mark Patriarch Kirill’s seventh anniversary as head of the Russian Orthodox Church and the first time a Russian Patriarch has ever met a Pope.
The unprecedented meeting will be the first between a Pope and a Russian Orthodox Patriarch in history. Vatican experts hailed the news as “hugely important”. And it adds to the feeling that Pope Francis is on a bit of a roll, after bringing about last year’s rapprochement between Cuba and the US, and boosting diplomatic ties with China and Iran.
The encounter is expected to be a milestone in relations between the two churches and a significant step towards healing the 1,000-year-old rift between the Western and Eastern branches of Christianity, which split in the Great Schism of 1054. Holy See spokesman Father Federico Lombardi said at the planned two-hour meeting at Havana airport on 12 February, Pope Francis and Patriarch Kirill will swap presents and sign a joint declaration. He would give no clues on the nature of the declaration, but said it would be “highly significant”. Cuba’s President, Raoul Castro, will also be present.
Pope Francis is due to visit Mexico between 12 and 18 February. He will stop in Cuba on the way and meet with Patriarch Kirill. Pope Francis has constantly stressed the need to protect Christians in Middle East war zones. Metropolitan Hilarion, foreign policy chief of the Russian Orthodox Church, said yesterday that, for this reason, greater cooperation between the Holy See and the Russian Church was vital. 
The Vatican said the encounter will include a “personal interview” at the International Airport José Martí in Havana and will conclude with the signing of a “joint declaration”. “The situation in the Middle East, in northern and central Africa and in other regions where extremists are perpetrating a genocide of Christians requires immediate action and an even closer cooperation between Christian churches,” he said.
The meeting, which was announced jointly at the Vatican and in Moscow, marks a major development in the Vatican's long effort to bridge the divisions in Christianity. Relations between Patriarch Kirill and the Holy See have worsened in the past few years because of the conflict in Ukraine. The Orthodox Church has accused Catholics there of evangelism and fomenting Ukrainian nationalism. But enmity between Rome and the highly conservative Russian church, which traces its origins back to the baptism of Prince Vladimir in 988 AD, has existed for centuries. This is due largely to the Great Schism nearly a millennium ago that split Christianity into Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches.
In November 2014, Pope Francis had said he had told Patriarch Kirill: "I'll go wherever you want. You call me and I'll go." The defining moment came when Pope Leo IX and Patriarch Michael I of Constantinople issued tit-for-tat excommunications after the four Eastern patriarchs refused to recognise the supreme authority of the Pope.
In the joint statement, the two churches said the meeting "will mark an important stage in relations between the two churches. The Holy See and the Moscow Patriarchate hope that it will also be a sign of hope for all people of good will." Things went from bad to even worse with the sacking of Constantinople by the Fourth Crusade in 1204, which was seen as a direct military assault by Rome against the Byzantine Empire, and the Constantinople church. It wasn’t until 900 years later, in 1965, that Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras I of Constantinople “first among equals” of the Orthodox leaders removed the mutual excommunications, although key differences remained, including as whether clergy could marry and the centralised power of the Vatican.
Additional reporting by various agencies Signs of Pope Francis’s intention to further heal the near 1,000-year rift came in 2014 when the Argentine visited Jerusalem to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the meeting that led to the excommunications being lifted. It was the current Patriarch of Constantinople, Bartholomew I, who asked Francis to join him in Jerusalem in 2014.
But the forthcoming meeting with Patriarch Kirill is the real breakthrough that Pope Francis sought. He has previously said to him: “Wherever you want, you call me and I’ll come.”
Veteran Vatican watcher Robert Mickens said of the Cuba meeting: “This is a huge event. It’s the first time a Pope has ever met the Russian Patriarch and, after improving relations with Constantinople, relations with the Russian Church were still very poor.”
Mr Mickens said that Pope Francis’s breakthrough had come because he was willing to compromise on the vexed issue of the Pontiff’s supreme status. “More than any other Pope he’s shown he’s willing to renegotiate the Pope’s primacy,” he said.