Audio By Carbonatix
Bishop Tawadros has been chosen as the new pope of Egypt's Coptic Christians, becoming leader of the largest Christian minority in the Middle East.
His name was selected from a glass bowl by a blindfolded boy at a ceremony in Cairo's St Mark's Cathedral. Three candidates had been shortlisted.
The 60-year-old succeeds Pope Shenouda III, who died in March aged 88.
He succeeds as attacks on Copts are on the increase, and many say they fear the country's new Islamist leaders.
The other two candidates were Bishop Raphael and Father Raphael Ava Mina. They were chosen in a ballot by a council of some 2,400 Church and community officials in October.
'In God's hands'
Their names were written on pieces of paper and put in crystal balls sealed with wax on the church altar.
A blindfolded boy - one of 12 shortlisted children - then drew out the name of Bishop Tawadros, who until now was an aide to the acting leader, Bishop Pachomius.
Bishop Pachomius then took the ballot from the boy's hand and showed it to all those gathered in the cathedral.
Strict measures were in place to make sure there was no foul play during the televised ceremony: the three pieces of paper with candidates' names were all the same size and tied the same way.
Copts say this process ensures the selection is in God's hands.
Bishop Tawadros will be enthroned in a ceremony on 18 November.
The new pope has studied in Britain, and has also run a medicine factory, the BBC's Jon Leyne in Cairo reports.
He is a man of broad experience and with managerial skills, our correspondent says, adding that he will need all those talents to lead the Copts as they face an uncertain future in a country now debating the role of Islam following last year's revolution.
Our correspondent says no-one in Egypt expects the new pope to introduce radical changes to the deeply conservative church.
Pope Shenouda died in March. Under his leadership, the Coptic Church expanded significantly, including outside its traditional Egyptian base.
He was a passionate advocate of unity among the Christian churches, and also clashed with then President Anwar Sadat, particularly over their conflicting views on the future of Egypt's relationship with Israel.
Coptic Christians have long complained of discrimination by the Egyptian state and the country's Muslim majority.
But when President Hosni Mubarak was ousted last year and succeeded by the Muslim Brotherhood, their fears grew.
In October 2011, 25 people died in clashes with the security forces after a protest march in Cairo over the burning of a church.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Ablakwa awards 50 tertiary scholarships to support North Tongu students
2 minutes -
T-bills: Government records 19% oversubscription, but interest rates rise
26 minutes -
The Cedi Ressurection: Goldbod didn’t promote galamsey to strengthen it
35 minutes -
INSTEPR says BoG’s gold purchase losses stem from structural challenges, not politics
40 minutes -
Why Sammy Gyamfi is the Peerless Public Servant of the Year
51 minutes -
Bills Microcredit marks strong 2025 performance with employee awards, 10 vehicles and cash prizes
53 minutes -
Mahama enjoys 67% approval as majority of Ghanaians express optimism – Global InfoAnalytics
1 hour -
MTN Ghana spreads Y’ello Cheer to Christmas Babies in Savannah Region
1 hour -
Most Ghanaians say living conditions have improved over the past year – Global InfoAnalytics
1 hour -
Banks and Telcos respect Only Money, not Customers
1 hour -
Majority of voters back extension of presidential term to 5 years – Poll
2 hours -
Kennedy Agyapong has what it takes to defeat NDC if he wins NPP primaries – Aide
2 hours -
Ghana’s Extradition Bid for former Finance Minister faces Probable Cause hurdle in US Federal Courts
2 hours -
Benjamin Asare is 70% ready to return – Didi Dramani
2 hours -
GH₵50 fee dispute turns violent as client assaults sex worker in Sekondi
2 hours
