Saudi Arabia bans National Geographic with Pope Francis on front cover

 facebook/NatGeoAlArabiya

Saudi Arabia has banned National Geographic over its cover story featuring the Pope for "cultural reasons".

The August edition of the Arabic version of the magazine was not allowed to be distributed in the country.

The editor of the magazine, Alsaad Omar al-Menhaly tweeted an explanation: "Dear readers in Saudi Arabia, we apologize that you did not receive August's magazine.

"According to the distribution company, the magazine was refused entry for cultural reasons."

The issue features the Pope and his "quiet revolution" to reform the Catholic Church.

The editor's note in the magazine celebrated the Pope's move to revitalise the Church and engage with culture, and says all world religions could follow his example. 

In Saudi Arabia, mosque and state are closely related. The Wahhabi religious authorities, who believe in Quranic literalism, would reject the notion that religion should be fluid or adaptable according to culture.

The editor suggested that religious institutions must be willing to adapt to the changing world, reported Foreign Policy.

It said religious pillars "are only tools aimed at preserving something, and if they are no longer capable of that, they must be altered."

Wahhabis seek to return to the practices of the first generation Muslims and are strongly opposed to the idea that religion should be reactionary toward culture.

related articles
Leading authority on Islam calls Pope Francis \'immoral\'
Leading authority on Islam calls Pope Francis 'immoral'

Leading authority on Islam calls Pope Francis 'immoral'

Pope Francis: \'There are more martyrs now than in the first centuries\'
Pope Francis: 'There are more martyrs now than in the first centuries'

Pope Francis: 'There are more martyrs now than in the first centuries'

News
Prince and Princess of Wales visit Lambeth Palace to meet new Archbishop of Canterbury
Prince and Princess of Wales visit Lambeth Palace to meet new Archbishop of Canterbury

The Prince and Princess of Wales have paid an official visit to Lambeth Palace.

Pastor, daughter and son-in-law slain in Plateau state, Nigeria
Pastor, daughter and son-in-law slain in Plateau state, Nigeria

Fulani herdsmen last month killed a pastor, his daughter and her husband, leaving the couple’s 3-month-old baby with a machete wound, in Plateau state, Nigeria.

Christian group welcomes British sanctions on Iranians
Christian group welcomes British sanctions on Iranians

Britain stopped shot of designating the Revolutionary Guard a terrorist organisation.

2,000-year-old 'Pilgrim's Path' opens in Jerusalem
2,000-year-old 'Pilgrim's Path' opens in Jerusalem

An ancient road that may have been built in the days of Jesus and led up to the Jerusalem Temple Mount has been opened to the public for the first time.