Pope Francis will visit Jordan during a trip to the Holy Land next year, the state Petra news agency reported today, citing a senior Vatican source.
"During his (August) visit to the Vatican, King Abdullah II invited His Holiness to visit Jordan," Petra quoted Vatican foreign affairs official Dominique Mamberti as saying in Amman.
"We are currently looking at the preparations in detail for the visit, which should take place next year.
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He said Pope Francis considers Jordan to be "a holy land, and one that respects religious pluralism... Necessary to create a climate of peace not only in the Arab world but also across the entire Middle East."
During an audience at the Vatican on October 17, Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas invited Pope Francis to the Middle East, saying he would "walk in the footsteps of Jesus Christ".
The invitation from Abbas followed one from Israeli President Shimon Peres earlier in the year.
Francis had already said he would like to visit the Middle East in 2014, but the Vatican has not yet officially confirmed the trip, despite a report by Israel's Channel 2 television that it will take place in March.
Francis has said he would like to visit the patriarch of Constantinople, Bartholomew I, spiritual leader of the world's Orthodox Christians.
Last month, Abbas was the fourth Middle East leader to meet Pope Francis after Peres, Lebanese President Michel Sleiman and the Jordanian monarch.