Pope Leo tours Istanbul's famous Blue Mosque, declines to pray alongside imam

Pope Leo XIV visited Istanbul’s renowned Blue Mosque on Saturday, choosing to emphasize strengthening relationships with Orthodox patriarchs and advocating for bold moves towards unity between Eastern and Western churches, rather than engaging in prayer.

During his visit, the Pope respectfully removed his shoes, revealing white socks, as he explored the 17th-century mosque. He admired the mosque’s towering tiled domes and the Arabic inscriptions adorning its columns, guided by an imam who highlighted these features to him.

Initially, the Vatican announced that Pope Leo would partake in a “brief moment of silent prayer” within the mosque. However, this did not occur. According to Asgin Tunca, an imam at the mosque, an invitation was extended to the Pope to pray, acknowledging the mosque as “Allah’s house,” but the Pope respectfully declined.

Matteo Bruni, the Vatican spokesman, later clarified the Pope’s actions, stating, “The Pope experienced his visit to the mosque in silence, in a spirit of contemplation and listening, with deep respect for the place and the faith of those who gather there in prayer.”

Pope Leo XIV, center, walking with Muezzin Musa Asgın Tunca, left, Dr. Emrullah Tuncel, second from left, and Imam of Mosque Sultanahmet Fatih Kaya, inside the illuminated Sultan Ahmed Mosque in Istanbul.

Pope Leo XIV, accompanied by Muezzin Musa Asgın Tunca, Dr. Emrullah Tuncel, and Imam of Mosque Sultanahmet Fatih Kaya, explored the historic Sultan Ahmed Mosque in Istanbul, Turkey, on November 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Domenico Stinellis)

Subsequently, the Vatican released a revised version of its trip bulletin, omitting any mention of the previously intended “brief moment of silent prayer,” without offering further details.

Leo, history’s first American pope, was following in the footsteps of his recent predecessors, who all made high-profile visits to the Sultan Ahmed Mosque, as it is officially known, in a gesture of respect to Turkey’s Muslim majority.

Papal visits to Blue Mosque often raise questions

But the visits have always raised questions about whether the pope would pray in the Muslim house of worship, or at the very least pause to gather thoughts in a meditative silence.

When Pope Benedict XVI visited Turkey in 2006, tensions were high because Benedict had offended many in the Muslim world a few months earlier with a speech in Regensburg, Germany that was widely interpreted as linking Islam and violence.

The Vatican added a visit to the Blue Mosque at the last minute in a bid to reach out to Muslims. He observed a moment of silent prayer, head bowed, as the imam prayed next to him, facing east.

Benedict later thanked him “for this moment of prayer” for what was only the second time a pope had visited a mosque, after St. John Paul II visited one briefly in Syria in 2001.

There were no doubts in 2014 when Pope Francis visited the Blue Mosque: He stood for two minutes of silent prayer facing east, his head bowed, eyes closed and hands clasped in front of him. The Grand Mufti of Istanbul, Rahmi Yaran, told the pope afterwards, “May God accept it.”

With Leo, though, even the Vatican seemed caught off guard by his decision not to pray. The Holy See had to correct the official record of the visit after it originally kept the planned reference to him pausing for prayer.

Speaking to reporters after the visit, the imam Tunca said he had told the pope: “It’s not my house, not your house, (it’s the) house of Allah.” He said he invited Leo to worship “But he said, ‘That’s OK.’”

“He wanted to see the mosque, wanted to feel (the) atmosphere of the mosque, I think. And was very pleased,” he said.

There was also another change to the official program, after the Vatican said the head of Turkey’s Diyanet religious affairs directorate would accompany Leo at the mosque. He didn’t come and a spokesman from the Diyanet said he wasn’t supposed to, since he had welcomed Leo in Ankara.

Pope Leo XIV and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I walk outdoors under umbrellas with aides during a rainy day in Istanbul.

Pope Leo XIV and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I leave a doxology service at the Patriarchal Church of Saint George in Istanbul, Turkey, on Nov. 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco)

Hagia Sophia left off itinerary

Past popes have also visited the nearby Hagia Sophia landmark, once one of the most important historic cathedrals in Christianity and a United Nations-designated world heritage site.

But Leo left that visit off his itinerary. In July 2020, Turkey converted Hagia Sophia from a museum back into a mosque, a move that drew widespread international criticism, including from the Vatican.

After the mosque visit, Leo held a private meeting with Turkey’s Christian leaders at the Syriac Orthodox Church of Mor Ephrem. In the afternoon, he prayed with the spiritual leader of the world’s Orthodox Christians, Patriarch Bartholomew, at the patriarchal church of Saint George.

There, they prayed the doxology, a hymn of praise and glory to God, and signed a joint declaration vowing to take courageous steps on the path to unity including to find a common date for Easter.

Eastern and Western churches split in the Great Schism of 1054, a divide precipitated largely by disagreements over the primacy of the pope. While ties have warmed, they remain divided and other schisms have formed.

“It is our shared desire to continue the process of exploring a possible solution for celebrating together the Feast of Feasts every year,” the joint statement said, referring to Easter.

The Vatican said in his remarks to the patriarchs gathered, Leo pointed to the next Holy Year to be celebrated by Christians, in 2033 on the anniversary of Christ’s crucifixion, and invited them to go to Jerusalem on “a journey that leads to full unity.”

Leo’s final event was a Catholic Mass in Istanbul’s Volkswagen Arena for the country’s Catholic community, who number 33,000 in a country of more than 85 million people, most of whom are Sunni Muslim.

The Airbus software update doesn’t spare pope

While Leo was focusing on bolstering relations with Orthodox Christians and Muslims, trip organizers were dealing with more mundane issues.

Pope Leo XIV and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I stand before an ornate gold iconostasis during a service in Istanbul.

Pope Leo XIV and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I ttend the Doxology at the Patriarchal Church of Saint George in Istanbul, Turkey, on Nov. 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Emrah Gurel)

Leo’s ITA Airways Airbus A320neo charter was among those caught up in the worldwide Airbus software update, ordered by the European Union Aviation Safety Agency. The order came after an analysis found the computer code may have contributed to a sudden drop in the altitude of a JetBlue plane last month.

The Vatican spokesman, Matteo Bruni, said Saturday that ITA was working on the issue. He said the necessary monitor to update the aircraft was on its way to Istanbul from Rome along with the technician who would install it.

Leo is scheduled to fly from Istanbul to Beirut, Lebanon, on Sunday afternoon for the second leg of his inaugural trip as pope.

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