Latin America
Related: About this forumPope offers solidarity with Cuba, highlights Hispanics in US
Pope offers solidarity with Cuba, highlights Hispanics in US
Updated: 4:00 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 19, 2015 | Posted: 4:00 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 19, 2015
By NICOLE WINFIELD and MICHAEL WEISSENSTEIN, Associated Press
1 hr ago
By NICOLE WINFIELD and MICHAEL WEISSENSTEIN
The Associated Press
HAVANA
Pope Francis begins a 10-day trip to Cuba and the United States on Saturday, embarking on his first trip to the onetime Cold War foes after helping to nudge forward their historic rapprochement. He will be offering a show of solidarity with Cubans and making clear that Hispanics in the United States are the bedrock of the American church.
The visit boasts several firsts for history's first Latin American pope: Francis will become the first pope to address the U.S. Congress and he will also proclaim the first saint on U.S. soil by canonizing the controversial (and Hispanic) missionary, Junipero Serra.
Francis though will also be following in the footsteps of his predecessors, becoming the third pontiff to visit Cuba in the past 17 years a remarkable record for any country much less one with such a tiny Catholic community. And he will join three of his predecessors in grabbing the world stage at the United Nations to press his agenda on migration, the environment and religious persecution while over 100 world leaders listen in.
It's largely unknown territory for the 78-year-old Argentine Jesuit, who has never visited either country and confessed that the United States was so foreign to him that he would spend the summer reading up on it. His popularity ratings are high in the U.S., but he also has gained detractors, particularly among conservatives over his critiques of the excesses of capitalism.
More:
http://www.krmg.com/news/ap/international/pope-offers-solidarity-with-cuba-highlights-hispan/nnjGB/
LBN:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10141210620
delrem
(9,688 posts)Instead of a Pope embracing Ronald Reagan and chastising Fr. Ernesto Cardinal, we might have had a Pope supporting freedom and human dignity. Going against the stream.
It was back then when I understood how not-Catholic I was, born and bred a Catholic.
Judi Lynn
(160,527 posts)You're so right.
It could have been worth so much to have this voice of authority speaking to the invaders, murderers, thieves, slave-owners, torturers who plagued the Americas up to this very moment.
I just remembered hearing recently that 8,000,000 million slaves have died mining silver in Bolivia. What would life have been for that country's people had these things not happened? They weren't even allowed to walk on the same sidewalks with the European descended people who claimed ownership of their own countries.
I never realized your thought. I'm sure it would have made a big difference had there been someone speaking out for the poor who wasn't murdered like the liberation theology priests in the Americas.