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Pope Leo XIV flies to Turkey Thursday for the first trip abroad of his papacy, which includes a meeting with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and comes amid acute tensions in the region.
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The trip, which includes a second leg to Lebanon, begins in the Turkish capital Ankara, where the first American pope is expected to arrive shortly after midday.
There he will address authorities, civil society and the diplomatic corps before heading to Istanbul in the early evening.
Leo's first steps abroad will be scrutinised by the world's media, with more than 80 journalists accompanying him on his papal plane.
Since his election in May as the leader of the world's 1.4 billion Catholics, the pope has shown himself to be adept at handling the media, talking to reporters weekly.
In a sign of his desire to reach a wide audience, Leo will deliver all his speeches during the trip in English, his native language, rather than the Italian he usually uses.
His first address in Turkey is expected to focus on dialogue with Islam in a country where Christians account for only 0.1 percent of the 86 million inhabitants -- most of them Sunni Muslims.
On the doorstep of a conflict-ridden Middle East, the pope who upon his election called for "unarmed and disarming" peace is expected to address the crises troubling the region.
But between the colonnades of Ankara's monumental presidential palace, Leo will have to tread delicately if he plans to address the sensitive issue of human rights, the wave of arrests of Erdogan's opponents, or the status of Turkey's Christians, who continue to struggle against inequality and exclusion.
Despite the rise of religious nationalism in Turkey and the conversion of the Hagia Sophia -- a church for more than 1,000 years -- from a museum into a mosque in 2020, the Vatican seeks to maintain a dialogue with Ankara, which is considered a key player for peace efforts in the region.
- 'Promoting unity' -
The Holy See also acknowledges Turkey's efforts in taking in more than 2.5 million mostly Syrian refugees, according to authorities.
On the subject of refugees and migrants, Leo has followed in the footsteps of his predecessor Francis, most recently criticising the "extremely disrespectful" treatment of migrants by the government of US President Donald Trump.
In Ankara, Leo will also pay his respects on Thursday at the mausoleum dedicated to the founder of modern Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, a national sanctuary symbolising the secular Republic.
Invited by the Patriarch of Constantinople, Bartholomew I, leader of the world's Orthodox Christians, Leo will take part in a prayer on the shores of Lake Iznik that was initially to include former Pope Francis, who died in April.
"Bartholomew and I have already met several times, and I think this will be an exceptional opportunity to promote unity among all Christians," Leo told journalists late Tuesday.
Catholics and Orthodox Christians have been divided since a schism in 1054.
Catholics recognise the universal authority of the pope as the head of the Church, while Orthodox Christians are organised into local Churches with their own leaders.
Leo's trip comes as the Orthodox world appears even more fragmented than ever, with the war in Ukraine accelerating the split between the Moscow and Constantinople patriarchates.
The pope is the fifth pontiff to visit Turkey, after Paul VI in 1967, John Paul II in 1979, Benedict XVI in 2006 and Francis in 2014.
On Sunday, Leo will head to religiously diverse Lebanon, a nation that has been crushed by a devastating economic and political crisis since 2019 and which has been the target of repeated bombings by Israel in recent days, despite a ceasefire.