Volume 3, Number 156
 
'There's a Jewish story everywhere'
 

Tuesday, July 14, 2009


Obama, Pope Benedict XVI discuss Middle East

 

exactly?  Did they discuss stem cells and what was the content of that part of the conversation?

MR. McDONOUGH:  Well, we didn't get a full readout of it, and in any case we'd be disinclined to suggest what the Holy Father said.  I will say this:  that the President received a copy of a document produced by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith at the Vatican, which the Holy Father gave him.  He was very appreciative that he gave it to him.  It was a paper on -- let me just get you the title here -- "An Instruction on Certain Bioethical Questions."  He looks forward to reading it.
 
My sense is that they discussed abortion and stem cells.  They discussed a range of those issues.  And I think the President was eager to listen to the Holy Father, was obviously eager to learn more about his views on this, and I think he underscored there what he underscored at Notre Dame, has underscored over the course of the last several years -- namely, that he is eager to find common ground on these issues and to work aggressively to do that.
 
Q Was it a conversation that you think is likely to change the President's views on certain controversial issues like abortion or --
 
MR. McDONOUGH:  Well, the President, as he said in Notre Dame, has thought long and hard about these issues and he has his views on it.  And so on one level I think part of the effort to find common ground is an effort to use language that is more hospitable to both sides on this question, as he himself has done.  But at the end of the day, it may just be that there's issues that they can't come to agreement on, but I think he believes that you can be -- that you can disagree without being disagreeable. 
 
Would you add anything to that, Robert?
 
MR. GIBBS:  I think that's -- I think that hits all the benchmarks.
 
Q Did you say -- I thought I heard you say "roughly 30 minutes" -- that you're referring to the time they spent one on one?
 

MR. GIBBS:  That's my impression, that it was one on one.  Obviously the First Lady was -- had a chance to spend some time in there, as did the girls, Mrs. Robinson, and their godmother.  I think the President obviously was tremendously grateful for his family getting a chance to share the same experience in meeting the Holy Father that he did.  So I know it's quite an experience and lamented a little bit that the girls had spent a little bit more time looking around the Vatican prior to the President getting there than he had a chance to.
 
Q Was it a blessing?
 
MR. McDONOUGH:  You know, the President, as I suggested, asked the Holy Father to pray for Senator Kennedy.  We didn't ask him this specifically, but it'd be my hunch that the President and the Holy Father had a chance to pray together.
 
Q But we don't know for sure.
 
MR. GIBBS:  We'll go double-check on that.  Anything else?
 
Q The Archbishop --
 
MR. McDONOUGH:  I'm sorry?

Q The Archbishop of Tegucigalpa -- is it limited to calling on all sides to quit violence or has he taken a stand on legitimacy of the coup or anything or is he just --
 
MR. McDONOUGH:  You know, I'd have to go and double-check that, but we've been struck and the President has been struck on -- at the fact that the Archbishop has been obviously using his good offices to call for calm, to call for a resolution of this crisis.
 
Q Can I ask another very serious question?  Has the South African President extended a formal invitation to President Obama to the soccer World Cup next year?
 
MR. McDONOUGH:  I do not know the answer to that, but I'll get you an answer.  I have a personal interest in that question, as well.
 
Q We do too.  (Laughter.)
 
MR. McDONOUGH:  It's not just AFP, by the way.  (Laughter.)
 
Q So where is the mosaic going to hang?
 
MR. McDONOUGH:  That's a good question.  I'll get you an answer on that.
 
All right.  Thanks, everybody.
 
MR. GIBBS:  I just talked to the President.  He said that he asked the Pope to pray for his family.  That was the specific thing he asked -- another thing he specifically asked the Pope.
 
Q Did they pray together or did they --
 
MR. GIBBS:  Not that I'm aware of, no.
 
Q There was no blessing then, was there?
 
MR. GIBBS:  I don't think anything formal that I'm aware of.
 
Q Anything what?
 
MR. GIBBS:  Nothing formal.  He, again, asked that the Pope pray for his family.
 
Q I see.
 
MR. GIBBS:  All right.  Thanks, guys.
 
Q Thanks, Robert.

Preceding transcript provided by the White House


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