Pope Francis hopes an unprecedented meeting of the Israeli and Palestinian presidents at the Vatican tomorrow can help end “eternal negotiations” and lead to peace but he has no wish to meddle in Middle East politics, the Vatican said yesterday.

Israel’s Shimon Peres and Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas will pray for peace together following a surprise invitation made by Pope Francis during his visit to the Holy Land last month.

“This is a moment to invoke God for the gift of peace. This is a pause in politics,” said Father Pierbattista Pizzaballa, a Church official in charge of Catholic sites in the Holy Land and a key organiser of tomorrow’s encounter.

“This is also an invitation to politicians to pause and look heavenward,” Pizzaballa told a Vatican briefing. “Everyone wants something to happen, something to change. Everyone is tired of these eternal negotiations that never end.”

The two Presidents will spend about two hours in the Vatican gardens at an intricately planned service that will include prayers and meditations by Jews, Christians and Muslims in each other’s presence.

This is a moment to invoke God for the gift of peace

The Pope, Peres and Abbas will read individual invocations for peace, shake hands and plant an olive tree in the gardens. Patriarch Bartholomew, the spiritual head of the Orthodox Church, will also attend.

Francis’ invitation is one of his boldest political gestures since his election in March, 2013, but the Vatican has played down suggestions that the move is a bid by the Pontiff to directly enter the Middle East peace process.

“The Pope does not want to get into the political questions of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that we all know about in the smallest of details from A to Z,” Pizzaballa said.

The meeting is taking place more than a month after US-led peace talks collapsed amid bitter mutual recrimination and Pizzaballa said the pope hoped the Sunday encounter could inject the leaders with a new will for peace.

“Pope Francis will never get involved in discussions about borders or settlements but his intention is to help create the social and religious atmosphere where it [peace] can come about,” he said.

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