(JTA) — Pope Francis received the president of Bar-Ilan University at the Vatican and was honored with the Israeli school’s highest award.
On Monday, Rabbi Daniel Hershkowitz bestowed the Award of Distinction on the pope in recognition of his lifelong efforts promoting peace and fighting for human rights.
“We are the sons of Abraham, and we have the privilege and the responsibility to guide humankind on the path to peace,” Francis told the Bar-Ilan delegation of 25 academics, as well as businesspeople from South America and Spain.
Hershkowitz told the pope that former Israeli President Shimon Peres asked that Bar-Ilan serve as a home base for dialogue among religions, an initiative that Francis and Peres have agreed to work together to advance. The pope welcomed the development.
The reception with Francis and presentation of the award marked the official opening of a year of festivities in celebration of the Ramat Gan school’s 60th anniversary.
“Peace and harmony were born much before religions were. The concepts of harmony and unity are shared by our respective religions,” Hershkowitz told the pontiff. “Unfortunately, however, we are living in a world that is filled with hostility and animosity. Our very presence here signals a new beginning, a vista of opportunity. We are ever so aware of the need for dialogue and harmony, peace and coexistence.”
The Palestinian Authority and the Palestine Liberation Organization reportedly protested to the Vatican over the pope’s agreement to see representatives of Bar-Ilan over what they called the university’s right-wing positions and support for settlers and settlements, Haaretz reported.
JTA has documented Jewish history in real-time for over a century. Keep our journalism strong by joining us in supporting independent, award-winning reporting.