Source: Archons of the Ecumenical Patriarchate
In a historic moment—1,700 years after the First Council of Nicaea—His All-Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and His Holiness Pope Leo XIV gathered in Nicaea, now Iznik, for a profound display of Christian unity. At the conclusion of the prayer service, they recited the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed together at the very site where it was first proclaimed and prayed: the ancient Basilica of Saint Neophytos.

2 Comments
At least the Creed was not profaned by the “filioque” heresy.
I strongly believe that this so-called unity is not really unity at all. First of all, how could the two leaders recite the Creed when the Orthodox Creed is different than the Roman Creed? Secondly, perfect unity would take so much more than this meeting to be of any worth. The Pope infallibility Issue and the main difference in the two Creeds (the Spirit of Truth proceeds from the Father, not from the Father and the son) leaves much to be desired. Lastly, the time it would take to accomplish true unity is not feasible with such shortness of time, although it appears like a cordial gesture. Just my humble opinion.