ISRAEL AT WAR - DAY 58

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Peres, Abbas to pray for peace at Vatican on June 8

Presidents of Israel, Palestinian Authority take up invitation from Pope Francis to come to Rome

Pope Francis seen with President Shimon Peres at a ceremony held at the president's residence in Jerusalem, on May 26, 2014. (photo credit: Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)
Pope Francis seen with President Shimon Peres at a ceremony held at the president's residence in Jerusalem, on May 26, 2014. (photo credit: Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

VATICAN CITY, Rome — President Shimon Peres and his Palestinian counterpart Mahmoud Abbas will pray for peace at the Vatican on June 8, the Holy See said Thursday.

Pope Francis had invited the pair to his home for a “heartfelt prayer” for peace during his three-day trip to the region, and the meeting “will take place on June 8, during the afternoon,” a date “accepted by both parties,” the Vatican said in a note.

Despite expectations Francis would steer clear of the thorny politics of the intractable Israeli-Palestinian conflict during his trip, the Argentine pontiff extended a personal invitation to the two men at the end of a mass in Bethlehem on Sunday.

“I offer my home in the Vatican as a place for this encounter of prayer… to join me in heartfelt prayer to God for the gift of peace,” he said.

“Building peace is difficult, but living without peace is a constant torment,” he added.

Last month, US-led peace talks between Israeli and Palestinian negotiators collapsed in bitter recriminations. That ended a nine-month bid to reach a solution and left no political initiative on the horizon.

The meeting had to be scheduled to take place before the 90-year-old Israeli president retires at the end of July.

“The meeting in the Vatican is to pray together, it’s not a mediation,” the pope said during the return flight to Rome.

“It is a prayer without discussions,” said the pontiff, who has made interfaith dialogue a cornerstone of his 14-month-old papacy.

Peres is known for his close relationship with Abbas and has frequently pushed for a peaceful resolution of the decades-long conflict.

Earlier this month, he told an Israeli television channel that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had blocked a peace agreement he had secretly negotiated in Jordan with Abbas in 2011.

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